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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69085 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69085)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Women in white raiment, by John Lemley
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Women in white raiment
-
-Author: John Lemley
-
-Release Date: October 1, 2022 [eBook #69085]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Juliet Sutherland, David E. Brown, and the Online
- Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WOMEN IN WHITE RAIMENT ***
-
-
-
-
-
- WOMEN IN WHITE RAIMENT,
-
- BY
-
- JOHN LEMLEY,
-
- EDITOR OF
-
- THE ZION’S WATCHMAN,
-
- AND AUTHOR OF
-
- “THE CHRIST LIFTED UP,” “LAND OF SACRED STORY,”
- “WONDERS OF GRACE,” “PERSONAL
- RECOLLECTIONS,” ETC.
-
- “They shall walk with me in white; for they shall be worthy, ... and
- shall be clothed in white raiment.”--REV. iii: 4, 5.
-
- THE FIRST EDITION.
-
- ALBANY, NEW YORK,
- 1899.
-
-
-
-
- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1898, by
- JOHN LEMLEY,
- in the office of the Librarian at Washington.
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
-
-
- CHARLES VAN BENTHUYSEN & SONS,
- Printers, Electrotypers and Binders,
- ALBANY, N. Y.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- INTRODUCTORY.
-
- WOMEN OWE THEIR ELEVATION TO THE BIBLE--THE CONDITION OF
- WOMEN IN HEATHEN LANDS CONTRASTED WITH THE CONDITION OF
- WOMEN IN BIBLE LANDS--GOD’S THOUGHT OF WOMAN IN THE
- CREATION--HER RIGHTS UNDER THE HEBREW ECONOMY--CHRIST’S
- TENDERNESS TOWARDS WOMANHOOD--BLESSING OTHERS. 7-19
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- The Paradise Home in Eden.
-
- MAN’S FIRST HOME A GARDEN--EVE THE ISHA--THE SCENE OF THE
- TEMPTATION--HIDING FROM GOD--REFUSING TO CONFESS, JUDGMENT
- IS PRONOUNCED--THE SAD RESULTS OF SIN--EVE BELIEVED
- THE PROMISE. 21-35
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- Womanhood in the Patriarchal Age.
-
- SARAH THE BEAUTIFUL PRINCESS--HER FAITH TESTED--THE MISTAKE
- OF HER LIFE--HER LOVELY CHARACTER--REBEKAH--AN ORIENTAL
- WOOING--ELIEZER’S PRAYER--THE BRIDE’S ANSWER--MEETING
- ISAAC--A MOTHER’S LOVE FOR HER SON--JACOB’S
- FLIGHT--REBEKAH, THE BEAUTIFUL SHEPHERDESS--SEVEN YEARS’
- SERVICE FOR HER--LABAN’S DECEPTION--LEAH, THE
- TENDER-EYED--HUMAN FAVORITES--DIVINELY HONORED--RACHEL’S
- TOMB THE FIRST MONUMENT TO HUMAN LOVE. 36-70
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- Womanhood During the Egyptian Bondage and in
- the Desert of Sinai.
-
- JOCHEBED--HER REMARKABLE COURAGE--THONORIS--HER
- COMPASSION--HEROIC LABORS SEEMINGLY UNREWARDED--ZIPPORAH, THE
- MIDIANITE SHEPHERDESS--GLORIFYING DAILY LABOR--AT A WAYSIDE
- INN--MIRIAM--HER SONG OF TRIUMPH AT THE RED SEA--HER
- AFFLICTION AT HAZEROTH--AN EVENTFUL LIFE. 71-89
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- Womanhood During the Conquest and the Theocracy,
- or Rule of the Judges.
-
- RAHAB--GREAT GRACE FOR GREAT SINNERS--THE FALL OF JERICHO--THE
- COVENANT REMEMBERED--DEBORAH--HER REMARKABLE
- COURAGE--SISERA’S IRON CHARIOTS BROKEN--THE DAUGHTER OF
- JEPHTHAH--HER LOVING DEVOTION AND SACRIFICE--THE STORY
- OF NAOMI--ORPAH’S KISS--THE LOVING RUTH--GLEANING
- AMONG THE REAPERS--HER RICH REWARD--HANNAH--HER
- CONSECRATION--YEARLY VISITS TO SHILOH--STITCHING BEAUTIFUL
- THOUGHTS INTO SAMUEL’S COAT--HER BEAUTIFUL LIFE. 90-117
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- Womanhood During the Reign of the Kings.
-
- ABIGAIL--CHURLISH NABAL--CHIVALROUS APPRECIATION--DAVID’S
- MESSENGERS--SAUL’S DAUGHTERS--HIS TREACHERY--MICHAL’S
- STRATAGEM--RIZPAH--HER HEROIC ENDURANCE AND LOVING
- FIDELITY--THE QUEEN OF SHEBA--HER VISIT TO JERUSALEM--THE
- GLORY AND WISDOM OF SOLOMON--THE HALF NOT TOLD--THE
- QUEEN’S ROYAL GIFTS. 118-137
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- Womanhood in the Time of the Prophets and During
- the Captivity.
-
- THE WICKED JEZEBEL--THE WIDOW OF SAREPTA--THE TISHBITE AT
- THE CITY GATE--HIS STRANGE REQUEST--THE WIDOW’S UNFALTERING
- OBEDIENCE--AN APPEAL TO ELISHA--A POT OF OIL--THE
- WIDOW’S WONDERFUL FAITH--THE RICH WOMAN OF SHUNEM--HER
- MODEST LIFE--BARLEY HARVEST--A RIDE TO CARMEL IN
- THE GLARE OF THE SUN--ESTHER--HER BEAUTIFUL TRAITS OF
- CHARACTER--CROWNED AS QUEEN--PLEADING FOR THE LIFE OF
- HER PEOPLE--FOUND FAVOR WITH THE KING. 138-161
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- Womanhood in the Time of the Saviour’s Nativity.
-
- AN ANGEL BY THE ALTAR OF INCENSE--HIS MESSAGE--AN ISRAELITISH
- HOME--IN THE SPIRIT OF ELIJAH--THE DESERT TEACHER--THE
- ANNUNCIATION--THE VISIT OF MARY TO ELIZABETH--MARY’S
- MAGNIFICAT--JOURNEY TO BETHLEHEM--THE NATIVITY--HOME
- LIFE IN NAZARETH--AFTER SCENES IN MARY’S LIFE--HER
- RESIDENCE AND DEATH AT EPHESUS--THE PROPHETESS
- ANNA--HER WAITING FOR REDEMPTION IN JERUSALEM--THE
- LESSON OF HER PURE AND BEAUTIFUL LIFE. 162-189
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- Womanhood During our Lord’s Galilean Ministry.
-
- CHRIST AND WOMANHOOD--NOONTIDE AT JACOB’S WELL--THE LORD’S
- WONDERFUL TACT--FIELDS WHITE TO THE HARVEST--AN UNINVITED
- GUEST AT SIMON’S FEAST--COLD HOSPITALITY--A CONCISE
- PARABLE--FORGIVING SIN--A STREET SCENE--HUMBLE
- CONFESSION--MOST GRACIOUS WORDS--COAST OF TYRE AND
- SIDON--SYRO-PHŒNICIAN WOMAN--STRANGELY TESTED--HER
- HUMILITY--WENT AWAY BLESSED. 190-222
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- Womanhood During Our Lord’s Judean Ministry.
-
- THE SISTERS OF BETHANY--THEIR CHARACTERISTICS--NOT GOOD, BUT
- BEST GIFTS--THE EXTRAVAGANCE OF LOVE--SALOME’S STRANGE
- REQUEST--HER FIDELITY--JOANNA--THE POOR WIDOW’S GIFT--HOW
- ESTIMATED--THE SAVIOUR’S WORDS OF PEACE. 223-244
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- Womanhood During the Apostolic Ministry.
-
- TABITHA--GLORIFIED HER NEEDLE--THE RESULTS OF LITTLE
- ACTS--LYDIA--HER HUMILITY--PHILIP’S FOUR DAUGHTERS--
- PHŒBE--PRISCILLA--EUNICE--LOIS--EUDIA--SYNTYCHE--HULDA--
- THE HEBREW MAID--TAMAR--MOTHERS OF GREAT MEN--THE AUTHOR
- OF THE BIBLE WOMAN’S BEST FRIEND. 245-266
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- PAGE.
-
- THE ACCEPTED OFFERING 31
-
- JACOB’S STRUGGLE AT THE JABBOK 67
-
- THE ISRAELITES IN BONDAGE 73
-
- MOSES RESCUED FROM THE NILE 75
-
- MIRIAM’S SONG OF TRIUMPH 84
-
- THE FALL OF JERICHO 95
-
- RUTH, THE FAITHFUL FRIEND 108
-
- THE BEAUTIFUL ABIGAIL MEETING DAVID 121
-
- SOLOMON’S MERCHANT SHIPS 130
-
- THE QUEEN OF SHEBA 133
-
- HADASSAH IN THE PERSIAN COURT 153
-
- ESTHER PLEADING FOR HER PEOPLE 157
-
- THE ANGEL’S MESSAGE 164
-
- THE MINISTRY AT EPHESUS 181
-
- ANNA, THE PROPHETESS 185
-
- CHRIST AND WOMANHOOD 193
-
- THE NOONTIDE HOUR AT JACOB’S WELL 198
-
- THE UNINVITED GUEST 208
-
- SEEKING THE LIVING AMONG THE DEAD 237
-
- THE CITY BY THE ANGHISTA 253
-
- CORINTH, THE GATE OF THE PELOPONNESUS 260
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTORY.
-
-
-It has long been in our mind to write this book, in which we seek
-to set forth the beautiful lives of representative women of the
-Bible. There has been much written about prophets, kings and priests,
-about our Lord and His Apostles, about scenes, of different types of
-character, customs and manners of Oriental life, but so far as we know,
-nothing has been written about the womanhood of the Bible. We believe
-a study of these lovely Princesses of God will be both profitable and
-instructive.
-
-That we may have a suitable background for our pen pictures of these
-Daughters in Israel, and also, by way of contrast, show what the Bible
-has done for womanhood, let us briefly take a glance into countries
-where the Bible has been a sealed book, for the position of women among
-the Hebrews has always afforded a pleasing contrast with that of their
-heathen sisters. The position of Jewish women is just what we would
-expect among a people who were indebted for their laws to the Creator.
-
-It has always been Satan’s shrewdest trick to degrade motherhood, and
-to cause her to be treated with contempt, knowing that she it is who
-stands at the fountain head of the race, and her hand always shapes
-the life and forms the civilization, hence the universal oppression of
-womanhood in all heathen lands.
-
-The effect of religion (for all nations worship something) upon the
-people affords overwhelming evidence of its origin. In all heathen
-lands the people are exceedingly religious. In India alone they worship
-360,000,000 gods, but they know nothing about morality. Their religion
-offers no light in life and no hope in death. The condition of women
-in India is indescribable. If a man speaks of his wife he never says
-“wife,” but “family”; and if away, he never speaks of going home, but
-he is going to his house. There is no home life, as we look upon it, in
-all that heathen land. Women are considered by the Hindus as a thing
-that exists solely for their use. She is given away like a lifeless
-thing to the man who is to be her husband, but who does not consider
-her his equal. He is commanded by his religion to “enjoy her without
-attachment,” and never to love her or put his confidence in her. Some
-women are set apart religiously for the use of the men of all classes
-and castes. They are consecrated and “married” to the idols in the
-temples, and are brought up from their girlhood to live as prostitutes.
-Hindoo sacred law reaches its climax of cruelty and degradation in the
-rules it lays down for the control of a woman after her husband has
-died. She may be young and beautiful, she may belong to a wealthy and
-powerful family; it matters not; custom is as relentless as death in
-its weight of woe to crush her completely down.
-
-One of the Hindoo sacred books says: “It is unlawful for any man to
-take a jewelless woman,” whose eyes are like the weeping cavi-flower;
-being deprived of her beloved husband, she is like a body deprived of
-the spirit. She may have only been a betrothed infant or a child of a
-few years. It makes no difference. The Shasters teach that if a widow
-burns herself alive on the funeral pile of her husband, even though
-he had killed a Brahmin, that most heinous of deeds, she expiates the
-crime. For long centuries widows have been a literal burnt offering for
-the redemption of husbands.
-
-Another law is laid down after the following fashion: “On the death of
-their attached husbands, women must eat but once a day, must eschew
-betel and a spread mattress, must sleep on the ground, and continue
-to practice rigid mortification. Women who have put off glittering
-jewels of gold must discharge with alacrity the duties of devotion, and
-neglecting their persons, must feed on herbs and roots, so as barely to
-sustain life within the body. Let not a widow ever pronounce the name
-of another man.”
-
-There are, in India, twenty-three millions of widows, of these fourteen
-thousand are baby widows under four years of age, and sixty thousand
-girl widows between five and nine years of age. Nearly one-fourth of
-the whole number of widows are young. Besides, there are many millions
-of deserted wives, whose condition is as bad, and in some cases worse,
-than that of the widows. The lives of many millions of these poor women
-are made so miserable that they prefer death to life, and thousands
-commit suicide yearly.
-
-And all these helpless women have never heard the message of salvation
-from God’s Holy Word.
-
-It so happens in these days of missionary work among the heathen that
-now and then the light of the Gospel finds its way into these benighted
-hearts. Such was the case of a Brahmin widow, who had lived in the home
-of her uncle, but, for a fancied offence, was beaten and turned into
-the street naked. She was a woman of commanding manner and appearance,
-such as few suffering widows possess. She was tall, elegant of bearing,
-and attractive. Her story, in short, is this: “I was married when only
-five years of age. I soon became a widow, and then my father and mother
-took care of me, though I was kept secure in their home. My father and
-mother died, and since I was fifteen years of age I have been with
-their relatives, who let me work in the fields and earn an honorable
-living. Then my mother’s own brother came along, and persuaded me to
-come to his house. I hoped for kindness, but I have been their slave
-from that day.”
-
-When asked whether she had been led astray, she replied, “I might
-have been, and sat with jewels on my neck and arms, with a frontlet
-on my brow, and gems would have bedecked my ears had I yielded to the
-machinations of my uncle and the desires of his friends to betray me
-into a life of glittering slavery! Because I would not, I am in rags,
-and now turned homeless into the streets.”
-
-Such is the suffering of women in India. And the saddest of all is, the
-only heaven they look for after this world, is a place where they can
-be their husband’s servants. Sad and terrible is their state!
-
-The condition of womanhood in China is but little better. In fact she
-is unwelcome at her birth. If she is suffered to live, she is subjected
-to inhuman foot-binding. The feet are supposed to merit the poetical
-name of “golden lilies.” But how sad it is to discover that such a
-result is produced by indescribable torture, and that the part of the
-foot that is not seen is nothing but a mass of distorted or broken
-bones!
-
-This binding process commences when the girl is about six years old.
-There is a Chinese proverb that says, “For every pair of bound feet has
-been shed a _kong_ full of tears.” And yet, the most important part of
-a Chinese girl’s dress is her tiny shoe of colored silk or satin, most
-tastefully embroidered, with bright painted heels just peeping beneath
-the neat pantalets. Missionary ladies tell us how they themselves have
-seen three strong women holding a little girl by force to compel her to
-submit to this awful torture. It is not an uncommon thing for a mother
-to get up in the night and beat a poor child of seven or eight for
-keeping her awake by her stifled sobs from the terrible pain produced
-by the bandages. Through the weary summer days, instead of romping and
-enjoying the fresh air and sports with brothers, the poor little girl
-will lie, restless with fever, upon her little couch, and when the cold
-nights of winter come, she is afraid to wrap her limbs in any covering,
-else they grow warm and the suffering becomes more intense.
-
-At last the much desired smallness is obtained, the feet are deformed
-for life and she is greatly admired by all her friends. If she is not
-betrothed until she is ten or more years of age, one of the first
-questions is, “What is the length of her feet?” Three inches is the
-correct length of the fashionable shoe, but some are only two.
-
-But this has respect only to those girl-babies who are suffered to
-live. The horrors of heathenism permits the new-born girl baby to
-be disposed of. There is outside the city walls of Fuchan, China, a
-structure of stone without doors, but with two window-like openings.
-This well-known and frequently visited building is the baby tower--not
-a day nursery for the care of the infants of the poor, not an orphanage
-where the little waifs are clothed and fed and educated, but a place
-where girl-babies can be thrown and left to die. In larger cities,
-such as Pekin, carts pass through the streets at an early hour of the
-day and gather up the babies abandoned to the streets by their inhuman
-parents.
-
-Women in the common walks of life are the slaves of their husbands.
-The wife rises early in the morning, does the housework for the day,
-and prepares the morning meal for her husband, who always eats it by
-himself while she serves. Having finished her own meal, after her
-husband has eaten his, she cleans up the dishes, and then hastens to
-the fields to toil all day under a burning sun. The husband, meanwhile,
-spends the day in sleeping, or gambling, or when opportunity occurs,
-in thieving or marauding. Sometimes, frequently indeed, the women are
-carried off by other tribes while out in the fields, and are only
-released at a price, varying with the excellencies of the woman in
-question. And yet, if any one were to offer to relieve these women of
-their work, their offer would be rejected, for this life of toil is
-what they have been brought up to and trained in, and they know of
-nothing better. They especially like to be in the fields by themselves,
-for then they are alone, and are free from the hated presence of man
-(curiously enough they are said to hate their men), and surely no one
-would grudge them their liberty.
-
-In dark Africa, where lives one-sixth of the heathen population of the
-globe, human sacrifice is something awful. And the saddest of all is,
-the victims are mostly from the ranks of women. Of the languages and
-dialects, five hundred have never been reduced to writing. What scenes
-of horrors are locked up in oblivion among these wild tribes of that
-dark land. Almost daily, the numerous wives of the rulers, as they
-die, are buried alive in their graves, being compelled to hold the
-dead bodies of their husbands on their laps, until they themselves
-are relieved by death. The witch doctors annually slay thousands of
-innocent women. Among the Masai, a woman has a market value equal to
-five glass beads, while a cow is worth ten of the same.
-
-Woman’s life in the harem of the Mohammedan is but little better. The
-code of morals is a very loose one, and the degradation of women beyond
-our pen to describe. The women of the harems are divided into three
-classes: The Rhadines, or legitimate wives. The Ikbals, or favorites,
-out of whose ranks the Rhadines are chosen, and Ghienzdes or “women
-who are pleasing to the eye of their lord,” and who have the chance
-to advance to the rank of Ikbals. If the wife of a Turkoman asks his
-permission to go, and he says, “go,” without adding, “come back,” they
-are divorced. If he becomes dissatisfied with the most trifling acts of
-his wife, and tears the veil from her face, that constitutes a divorce.
-In the streets, if a husband meets one of his numerous wives, he never
-recognizes her, or ever introduces her to a male friend. A Mohammedan
-never inquires after the female portion of the household of his friend.
-The system is full of cruelty and despotism. In Mohammedan countries
-women suffer from the low opinion held of them by men. The prophet
-said: “I stood at the gates of hell, and lo! most of its inhabitants
-were women!” And yet, strange to say, while the religion of Islam
-denies that woman has a soul, it teaches a sensual paradise.
-
-In fact, in all nations where the Bible is unknown, woman is the slave
-of man’s lust. She is a drudge or a toy, whose reign is as short-lived
-as her personal charms. She may not be trusted out of sight of her
-guardians, though the masculine members of the family are anything but
-choice in their associations. Indeed, in some countries a woman can
-not visit even her own mother without being carried in a palanquin or
-guarded by slaves.
-
-One of the strangest, saddest sights we ever saw was at Mersina,
-in the Levant. Passing a field one day there were six native women
-(noble in form and of beautiful olive complexion) hoeing what looked
-to be cucumbers, while a step or two in their rear stood a negro, a
-full-blooded Nubian, with a long stick, like an ox-goad, in his hand,
-evidently their master.
-
-In Ceylon, when it was proposed by a missionary to teach women to read,
-one native said to another, “What do you think that man is talking
-about? He wants to teach the women to read! He’ll be wanting to teach
-the cows next!”
-
-Such is the disrespect in which women are held by heathen people. Five
-words describe the biography of women in all lands where the Bible is
-not known: Unwelcomed at birth; untaught in childhood; uncherished in
-widowhood; unprotected in old age; unlamented when dead.
-
-Such, in brief, is the treatment of womanhood in lands where the Bible
-is a sealed book, and truly, in comparison with their heathen sisters,
-women living under the blessed teachings of Christianity are “clothed
-in white raiment.”
-
-But, perhaps, we ought not to think it so very strange that men who
-dishonor God, and who want Him blotted out of their thoughts, should
-abuse God’s best gift to man. This much we know, that God created man
-in His own image, in the image of God created He him; male and female
-created He _them_. And God blessed _them_, and God said unto them,
-“Have dominion over every living thing that moveth upon the earth.”
-When the Pharisees, in their malignity, framed the question, “Is it
-lawful for a man to put away his wife for every cause?”--a problem
-beset with many difficulties, our Lord very promptly asked a counter
-question, “What did Moses command you?” Instead of entering into their
-vexed question, He appeals at once to the law and the testimony, and
-requires them to recite the provision made by Moses for such cases;
-not as settling the difficulties, but as presenting the true _status
-quaestionis_, which was not what the Scribes taught or the Pharisees
-practiced, but what Moses meant and God permitted. They said, “Moses
-suffered to write a bill of divorcement, and to put her away.” Quickly
-Jesus replied, “For the hardness of your heart he wrote you this
-precept.” The substance of our Saviour’s answer was, Moses gave you
-no positive command in the case; he would not make a law directly
-opposite to the law of God; but Moses saw the wantonness and wickedness
-of your hearts, that you would turn away your wives without any just
-and warrantable cause; and to restrain your extravagancies of cruelty
-to your wives, or disorderly turning of them off upon any occasion,
-he made a law that none should put away his wife but upon a legal
-cognizance of the cause and giving her a bill of divorce. “From the
-beginning,” that is, in the very act of creation, God embodied the idea
-of equality. Capricious divorce is a violation of natural law.
-
-What a beautiful picture Solomon gives us of womanhood. “Her price,” he
-says, “is far above rubies. The heart of her husband doth safely trust
-in her, so that he shall have no need of spoil. She will do him good
-and not evil all the days of her life. She seeketh wool, and flax, and
-worketh willingly with her hands.” After the grace of God in the soul,
-a good wife, one planned on the Divine model, is the Lord’s best gift.
-To the husband who has such a woman to stand at the head of his home,
-nothing can measure her value. His heart rests safely in her integrity.
-He has no need to add to his wealth by spoils, for she will do him good
-and not evil all the days of his life. She is industrious. She not only
-works into comfort the wool and flax that are at hand; she seeks to
-add to her store from the outside world. She does not ask to be kept
-in idleness. She worketh willingly with her hands. Not content to be a
-consumer, she becomes a producer. Not satisfied with home production,
-she brings suitable comforts and luxuries from afar into her home. She
-is careful in the use of her time. She is not feebly self-indulgent.
-She riseth while it is yet night to look after her domestic affairs.
-She is a business woman, knowing the laws that underlie the rise and
-fall of real estate. She considereth a field, and buyeth it. Then with
-her hands she planteth a vineyard.
-
-She does not produce inferior goods, neither is she cheated in a
-bargain. She perceiveth that her merchandise is good. She loves to
-share her husband’s business burdens, that he may share her society;
-and they twain are one in service and one in recreation. Like our
-Lord, she delights not to be ministered unto, but to minister. She is
-benevolent. Being a recognized producer, she has the luxury of giving
-of her own means to the poor. She provides well for her household,
-keeping her dependents in comfort, and even in luxury. As the Revised
-Version puts it, “She maketh herself carpets of tapestry.” Her own
-clothing is of the best.
-
-The husband of such a wife has the gentle manners that belong with such
-a home, and he can but succeed in life. He is known and honored among
-the best in the land. As her business grows, her products become finer
-and more expensive; and as she puts them upon the market, her profits
-increase. This woman is clothed with strength and honor. She has no
-anxiety about the future. She knows that though her beauty may fade,
-and her social charms become a thing of the past, her strength and
-honor will become richer and more glorious as the years go by. “In her
-tongue is the law of kindness.” She is too busy with her own affairs to
-look after those of her neighbors. In heathen countries it is a great
-disgrace for a woman’s voice to be heard in the presence of men. Where
-women are held back from the real interests that concern them and for
-which they have so often proved themselves fully qualified, what else
-could take up their active minds but the pettiness of gossip?
-
-Such are the beautiful tributes paid to women by Solomon, the wisest
-of men. Nor are the prophets behind in acknowledging the worth and
-quality of women. Eight hundred years before the Christian era, the
-prophet Joel wrote, “And it shall come to pass in the last days, saith
-God, I will pour out of my Spirit upon all flesh: and your sons and
-your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions,
-and your old men shall dream dreams: and on my servants and on my
-handmaidens I will pour out in those days of my Spirit; and they shall
-prophesy.” In the Christian dispensation, the daughters as well as the
-sons were to be filled with the Spirit of God, and the Spirit would use
-their lips in the declaration of His truth as certainly as the lips of
-men, and Paul defined prophecy to be speaking “unto men to edification,
-and exhortation, and comfort.” It has been one of the devices of the
-evil one to padlock the lips of that half of the race who are most
-loyal to God and who have the most helpful knowledge of human nature.
-
-Aside from all these high social and spiritual relations of the Hebrew
-women, they had a legal status. The rights of the Jewish wife were
-carefully guarded. Her husband was not allowed to go to war for a
-year after they were married; and though the eastern institution of
-polygamy was not utterly prohibited, yet it was so restricted that it
-must not in any way invade the rights and privileges of the wife. If a
-husband became jealous of his wife’s fidelity, the legal presumptions
-were all in her favor. The husband was not allowed to inflict summary
-punishment; but she was subjected to an ordeal which could by no
-possibility work injury to her, unless through the guilt of her own
-conscience or the interposition of divine Providence.
-
-As a mother, the Jewish woman must be honored by her children. As a
-daughter, she had rights and an inheritance. If the wife or daughter
-uttered rash and foolish vows, the husband or father had a right
-to disannul them, provided he did it from the day it came to his
-knowledge. Even the Gentile woman taken captive by a young Israelite
-warrior must have been surprised to receive treatment so strangely
-different from that received by captives in her own country, or even
-among modern nations who profess to be civilized. Her captor could
-not offer her an insult; she must be taken, not to a prison, but to
-his home, where she must neither be abused nor outraged, but treated
-with patient consideration; and she could not be taken, even as a
-wife, until a full month had elapsed, during which he might secure her
-affections or reconsider his determination. And if after her marriage
-she was discontented and made herself disagreeable, she could never
-again be held as a servant, but must be allowed to go free. Widows, who
-in heathen lands have been degraded and sometimes murdered or burned,
-were to be treated with the utmost tenderness. They shared in the
-tithes, and were admitted to the public festivities. They had a right
-to glean in the fields and gather up the forgotten sheaves, to gather
-which the owner was not allowed to go back. Injustice against widows
-was treated with fearful punishment. “Thou shalt not take the widow’s
-raiment to pledge” (Deut. xxiv, 17), was a benevolent law which can not
-be paralleled in any modern code. The command to lend to an Israelite
-in his poverty was imperative, but no pledge of raiment could be
-exacted from a widow.
-
-Thus in a variety of ways was the Lord pleased to manifest his kindness
-and compassion for the fatherless and the widow, and in consequence
-womanhood was honored and honorable in the Jewish nation, beyond
-anything known in the heathen world. From the vile and degrading orgies
-of heathenism the women of Israel were exempt. They feared the Lord,
-and at his hand received blessings and mercies without number.
-
-Thus it is seen that Hebrew women had rare privileges. They tower like
-desert palms above the women in pagan lands. In her home she is honored
-and respected. In India a woman eats her first and last meal with her
-husband on her wedding day. In the Hebrew home her children are like
-“olive plants” round her table. In China they may kill their little
-daughters by the thousands. She has legal rights in her Hebrew home. In
-all Mohammedan lands a man has the same power over the life of his wife
-that he has over the life of his horse.
-
-What makes this difference? We answer, It is God’s thought of
-womanhood, for there was nothing in the Hebrew men to bring about such
-thoughtful consideration. There were periods in the history of the
-Hebrew nation when they departed from God, and sank into the vices of
-the heathens around them. It was during these periods that womanhood
-was degraded to that of their pagan sisters. There were times when the
-Hebrews had taken on heathen manners to such an extent as to regard
-it a disgrace for a rabbi to recognize his wife if he met her on the
-street. It was commonly said that he was a fool who attempted the
-religious instruction of a woman, and the words of the law had better
-be burned than given to a woman.
-
-So it was not Hebrew manhood that saved the daughters of Israel from
-the suicidal injustice practiced among the heathens, but the sure Word
-of God. Under its wise provisions and recognized equality they became
-prophetesses, leaders of armies, and judges. And they taught a pure
-morality, trained their children according to principles of justice and
-righteousness, and lived in expectation and hope of the coming of the
-Messiah in whom all the nations of the earth were to be blessed.
-
-And above all, Christ was the true Friend of womanhood. No teacher
-in any age of the world or in any land ever taught woman as He did,
-when He came that glorious morning to Jacob’s well, or in the house
-of Simon the Pharisee, when the sin-stained woman of the street, who
-had unobserved entered the banquet hall, and taken up her position at
-the feet of Jesus, and there poured out the great sorrow of her heart
-in a paroxysm of humble and grateful love, and bathed His feet with
-her tears, and wiped them with the hair of her head, anointing them
-also with ointment, when He personally addressed her and said, “Thy
-sins are forgiven.” How beautiful is all this, and how grandly these
-women showed their gratitude and appreciation by following Him and
-ministering unto “Him of their substance.” They were last at the cross
-and first at the tomb, and first to publish the Saviour’s resurrection.
-
-From that day to this, women owe their spiritual elevation and their
-opportunities of usefulness to the recognition Christ gave them in
-His ministry. In all places untouched by Christian light they are not
-sure that they have souls. Where the light shines clearly they have
-equal rights with the men by whose side they are privileged to labor
-for God’s glory. This being so, how ought they to love God, and in
-every way possible, spread the light of Christianity through all the
-earth. We would say to every woman who loves her Lord, the field is
-wide enough, and opportunities present themselves in every passing
-hour, therefore, if you have a message which will help and bless some
-struggling soul heavenward, tell it.
-
-With these brief, introductory words, we come to our subject proper.
-And should you, dear woman, whom we seek to glorify in the following
-pages, be blessed and comforted in the unfolding of God’s love towards
-womanhood, and your own faith take a firmer hold upon the Father’s
-thought of you, do not, after reading this book, put it away in your
-book-case, but place it in the hands of some tempted, discouraged,
-struggling soul, and thereby let others become sharers of the same
-helpful words, and, possibly, in so doing, you may not only save
-precious souls, but add many stars to your own crown of life.
-
- As ever, respectfully,
-
- THE AUTHOR.
-
- ALBANY, N. Y.
-
-
-
-
-WOMEN IN WHITE RAIMENT.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-The Paradise Home in Eden.
-
- MAN’S FIRST HOME A GARDEN--EVE THE ISHA--THE SCENE OF THE
- TEMPTATION--HIDING FROM GOD--REFUSING TO CONFESS, JUDGMENT IS
- PRONOUNCED--THE SAD RESULTS OF SIN--EVE BELIEVED THE PROMISE.
-
-
-Perhaps there never lived a woman who has been “talked about” so much
-as this first woman in White Raiment, for who has not said, If Eve had
-not been beguiled into a violation of the one commandment by partaking
-of the fruit of the forbidden tree, we would all be as happy and
-sinless as was she and her husband before that act of disobedience. But
-we shall miss the great lesson Eve’s experience intended to convey if
-we fail to recognize that God put humanity on probation, and the fact
-of the first temptation is the symbol of every temptation; the fact of
-the first fall is the symbol of every transgression; the great mistake
-that lay in the first sin is the symbol of every effect of sin.
-
-After the Lord God had formed man, we read that He “planted a garden
-eastward in Eden; and there He put the man.” What pen could describe
-the garden of the Lord’s planting? There were splashing fountains.
-There were woodbine, and honeysuckles, and morning-glories climbing
-over the wall, and daisies, and buttercups, and strawberries in the
-grass. There were paths with mountain mosses, bordered with pearls
-and diamonds. Here and there cooling streams sparkled in the sunlight
-or made sweet music as they fell over ledges and rippled away under
-the overstretching shadows of palm trees or fig orchards, and their
-threads of silver finally lost amid the fruitage of orange groves.
-Trees and shrubs of infinite variety added their beauty to the
-many picturesque scenes everywhere spread out. In the midst of the
-overhanging foliage were all the bright birds of heaven, and they
-stirred the air with infinite chirp and carol. Never since have such
-skies looked down through such leaves into such waters. Never has
-river wave had such curve and sheen and bank as adorned the Pison, the
-Havilah, the Gihon and the Hiddekel, even the pebbles being bdellium
-and onyx stone. What fruits, with no curculio to sting the rind! What
-flowers, with no slug to gnaw the root! What atmosphere, with no frost
-to chill and with no heat to consume! Bright colors tangled in the
-grass. Perfume filled the air. Music thrilled the sky. Great scenes of
-gladness and love and joy spread out in every direction.
-
-We know not how long, perhaps ever since this man had been created in
-the “image” of his God, he had wandered through this Eden home, had
-watched the brilliant pageantry of wings and scales and clouds, and may
-have noticed that the robins fly the air in twos, and that the fish
-swim the waters in twos, and that the lions walk the fields in twos,
-and as he saw the merry, abounding life of his subject creatures, every
-one perfectly fitted to its environment, and each mated with another of
-the same instincts and methods of living, he felt the isolation of his
-own self-involved being, and, possibly, a shadow of loneliness may have
-crept into his face, and God saw it. And so He said, “It is not good
-that the man should be alone.” So “He caused a deep sleep to fall upon
-Adam,” as if by allegory to teach all ages that the greatest of earthly
-blessings is sound sleep.
-
-When he awoke, a most beautiful being, the crowning glory of creation,
-stood beside him, looking at him with heaven in her eyes, her exquisite
-form draped with perfect feminine grace and strength. As Adam looked
-into the face of this immaculate daughter of God, this Woman in White
-Raiment, he said, “This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my
-flesh. She shall be called Woman” (Hebrew Isha), because God had
-clothed in separate flesh the gentler and more conscientious part of
-Adam’s nature, that it might share the work and bliss of Paradise.
-
-How long that first married pair lived in Paradise we are not informed.
-The story of their disastrous disobedience is given in as few words as
-possible. Eve may have sauntered out one beautiful morning and as she
-looked up at the fruit of the various trees of the garden must have
-recognized “the tree of the knowledge of good and evil,” and doubtless
-she had heard Adam say that this was the forbidden tree, and possibly
-may have cautioned her, “For,” said he, the Lord had said, “in the day
-that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die.” As she looked up at
-the tree and saw the beautiful fruit hanging on the branches, she may
-have admired its bright, fresh color without any thought of evil in
-her heart. It is the characteristic of woman to admire the beautiful.
-Indeed her finer feelings can better appreciate than man, the blendings
-of color and shadings that combine to give expression to the beautiful.
-
-But it was Satan’s moment. We do not know how long he had been in
-hiding among the recesses of the garden waiting for just such an
-opportunity. Quickly he entered a serpent, which, it is declared, “was
-more subtle than any beast of the field,” and came up to Eve as she
-admired the tree and its fruit, and in most questioning surprise said,
-“Yea hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?” The
-query is very cautiously made, expressing great surprise: Yea, truly,
-can it be possible? The query, with its questioning surprise, had in it
-now a yes, and now a no, according to the connection. This is the first
-striking feature in the beginning of the temptation. The temptation
-of Christ, in the wilderness, was very similar to this. Satan twice
-challenged our Lord on the point of his divine Sonship: “If thou be
-the Son of God.” As if he had said, “You claim to be the Son of God, I
-doubt it, and challenge the claim. If you are, prove it by doing what
-I suggest.” This was also a blow at the confession of God Himself,
-“This is My beloved Son.” So here, Satan, in the most cautious manner,
-would excite doubt in the mind of Eve. Then the expression also aims to
-awaken mistrust at the goodness and wisdom of God, and so weaken the
-force of the temptation. As if he had said, “What, not eat of every
-tree of the garden? I doubt it. Such a prohibition seems unreasonable.”
-
-Here Eve would assure the tempter that she was not mistaken in regard
-to the prohibition. “We may eat of the fruit of the trees of the
-garden. But of the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the
-garden, God hath said, Ye shall not eat of it, _neither shall ye
-touch it, lest ye die_.” Notice the Italic words are added by Eve to
-the command of God concerning the tree. No doubt, as she stood there
-admiring the tree, the monitor of her heart kept saying, “Don’t touch
-it, don’t touch it,” and, in her guileless simplicity, she adds the
-words to the prohibition. And yet by this very addition does her first
-wavering disguise itself under the form of an overdoing obedience. The
-first failure is her not observing the point of the temptation, and
-allowing herself to be drawn into an argument with the tempter; the
-second, that she makes the prohibition stronger than it really is,
-and thus lets it appear that to her, too, the prohibition seems too
-strict; the third that she weakens the prohibition by reducing it to
-the lesser caution. God had said, “Thou shalt surely die.” She reduces
-it to “_lest ye die_,” thus making the motive of obedience to be
-predominantly the fear of death.
-
-Her tempter, who could quote Scripture to our Lord in his second
-temptation, after he had failed in the first, was quick to take up
-the woman’s rendering of the prohibition, and makes answer, “Ye shall
-not surely die!” What an advance over the first suggestion, “Yea,
-hath God said.” No doubt he had noted her wavering, and, instead
-of turning promptly away from the author of her wavering, saw her
-disposed to inform him of what God had said concerning this “tree of
-the knowledge of good and evil,” and he promptly steps out from the
-area of cautious craft into that of a reckless denial of the truth of
-God’s prohibition, and a malicious suspicion of its object. Eve had
-not repeated the words of the prohibition, and of the penalty, in its
-double or intensive form, but Satan repeats it, in blasphemous mockery,
-as though he had heard it in some other way, and stoutly denies the
-truth of the threatening, that is, the doubt becomes unbelief.
-
-The way, however, is not prepared for the unbelief without first
-arousing a feeling of distrust in respect to God’s love, His
-righteousness, and even His power. So the tempter denies all evil
-consequences as arising from the forbidden enjoyment, whilst, on the
-contrary, he promises the best and most glorious results from the
-same. “Instead of your eyes closing in death,” he said, “they shall
-be opened.” The tempter would have the woman believe that, in eating
-of the fruit, she would become wonderfully enlightened, and, at the
-same time, raised to a divine glory--“shall be as gods, knowing good
-and evil.” And so, in like manner, is every sin a false and senseless
-belief in the salutary effects of sin.
-
-We tremble for Eve at this point of her interview with her tempter. It
-is an awful moment, a moment in which her own happiness and that of her
-husband’s and all the generations of earth are in the balances.
-
-“And when the woman saw.” She was now looking at the tree and its fruit
-from a far different standpoint from that in the morning. She beheld
-it now with a look made false by the distorted application of God’s
-prohibition by her tempter. In fact, she had become enchanted by the
-distorted construction put upon God’s plain commandment. The satanic
-promises seemed to have driven the threatening of that prohibition out
-of her thought. Now she beholds the tree with other eyes. Three times,
-it is said, how charming the tree appeared to her.
-
-But where has Adam been all this time? Doubtless he was busy with
-his duties, for God had set him “to dress and to keep” the garden in
-which he had been placed. He may have seen Eve passing down one of the
-beautiful paths of the garden in her morning walk, beguiled by the
-splash of the fountains, the song of the birds, and the beauty of the
-flowers at her feet. He may have observed her stay longer than usual,
-and so turned aside from his duties to see what had become of her, and
-following down the path over which he had last seen her disappear among
-the trees and shrubbery of the garden, soon came to the place where
-“the tree of the knowledge of good and evil” stood, and then, from
-the lips of his own pure, sweet wife, learned what had taken place.
-Possibly she was holding the very fruit of which she had said, “neither
-shall ye touch it,” in her hands, admiring its beauty and wondering how
-it tasted. And, while examining the fruit, she told her husband what
-had passed between her and her tempter, and as she finished her story
-she said, “I do not think there can be any harm in my just breaking the
-rind of it, to see how it looks inside.” Prompted by womanly curiosity,
-she broke open the fruit, and, before she was really conscious, she
-“did eat!” “Why, how nice!” she exclaimed, at the same time handing the
-other half to her husband. As a good gardener, he would naturally share
-the curiosity of his wife to taste this fruit, “and he did eat!”
-
-The next statement we have, “And the eyes of them both were opened.”
-But how were they opened? Each of them had two good eyes before eating
-the fruit; in fact, Eve had been admiring the fruit as it hung among
-the branches of the tree, and as she had turned it over in her hands.
-Before they tasted they saw with their natural eyes. Now they see with
-a higher knowledge of sense--there is added a con-sense--a conscience
-or self-consciousness. In the relation between the antecedent here
-and what followed there evidently lies a terrible irony. The promise
-of the tempter becomes half fulfilled, though, indeed, in a sadly
-different sense from what they had supposed. They had attained, in
-consequence, to a moral insight. Self-consciousness was awakened with
-their knowledge of right and wrong, good and evil. It belongs to the
-very beginning of moral cognition and development.
-
-How strange it all is. Eden full of trees, fruits of every kind,
-luscious and satisfying, but, excited by false and wicked statements in
-respect to the prohibition of the fruit of one tree, she straightway
-desires to taste for herself, and that curiosity blasted her and
-blasted all nations. And thousands in every generation, inspired by
-unhealthful inquisitiveness, have tried to look through the keyhole of
-God’s mysteries--mysteries that were barred and bolted from all human
-inspection--and they have wrenched their whole moral nature out of
-joint by trying to pluck fruit from branches beyond their reach.
-
-We may also learn that fruits which are sweet to the taste may
-afterward produce great agony. Forbidden fruit for Eve was so pleasant
-she invited her husband also to take of it; but her banishment from
-paradise and years of sorrow and wretchedness and woe paid for that
-luxury.
-
-Sometimes people plead for just one indulgence in sin. There can be no
-harm to go to this or that forbidden place just once. Doubtless that
-one Edenic transgression did not seem to be much, but it struck a blow
-which to this day makes the earth stagger. To find out the consequences
-of that one sin you would have to compel the world to throw open all
-its prison doors and display the crime, throw open all its hospitals
-and display the disease, throw open all the insane asylums and show
-the wretchedness, open all the sepulchres and show the dead, open
-all the doors of the lost world and show the damned. That one Edenic
-transgression stretched chords of misery across the heart of the world
-and struck them with dolorous wailing, and it has seated the plagues
-upon the air and the shipwrecks upon the tempest, and fastened, like
-a leech, famine to the heart of the sick and dying nations. Beautiful
-at the start, horrible at the last. Oh, how many have experienced it!
-Beware of entertaining temptations to first sins! Turn away and flee
-for thy life to the sure and only Refuge--Christ Jesus.
-
-In the cool of the day, as the evening hours drew on, Adam and Eve
-“heard the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden.” They were
-used to hearing that voice walking in the garden in the cool of the
-day. Eden had become a dear spot to the heart of their Father, and
-doubtless He often came down to converse with them. So now He seeks
-companionship with the majestic human masterpieces of His creation. And
-why should he not?
-
-But, passing strange! instead of running to Him out of their Eden
-home, as doubtless they had been wont to do, “Adam and his wife hid
-themselves from the presence of the Lord God amongst the trees of the
-garden.” This act, no doubt, was prompted by self-consciousness and the
-shame and guilt which it brought. So we clearly see that sin separates
-from God. They had pronounced judgment upon their transgression by
-their very conduct. Instead of meeting God as they had been doing, a
-feeling of distrust and servile fear entered their hearts, and a sense
-of the loss of their spiritual purity, together with the false notion
-that they can hide themselves from God. And so it has come to pass
-that ever since the first transgression men have been hiding from God,
-running away from his presence.
-
-“And the Lord God called unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art
-thou?” The Lord is the first to break the silence; the first to seek
-erring humanity. Not for His own sake does God direct this inquiry,
-for He knew where Adam was, but that Adam might take courage and open
-his mouth in confession--it was an invitation to tell the whole sad
-story. But, instead, he multiplies the difficulties by his answer,
-“I was afraid, because I was naked.” That is to say, Adam, instead
-of confessing the sin, sought to hide behind its consequences, and
-his disobedience behind his feeling of shame. His answer to the
-interrogation is far from the real cause of the change that had
-come over his conduct, which was sin, and made his consciousness of
-nakedness to be the reason. To still make Adam see the true reason for
-his hiding, God farther asked, “Hast thou eaten of the tree whereof I
-commanded thee that thou shouldst not eat?” Observe this question is
-so framed as to contain in it the eating and the tree from which he
-ate, and could have been answered with, “Yes!” How easy God made it for
-Adam to confess. But, alas! How far from it. He answered, “The woman
-whom thou gavest unto me, she gave me of the tree and I did eat.” How
-deep the root of sin had taken hold upon Adam’s heart. What does he say
-in this answer? Why this, he acknowledged the guilt, but indirectly
-charges God as the author of the calamity. Eve is referred to as “the
-woman” who is the author of his sin, and, since she was given to him
-by the hand of the Lord, therefore it is the Lord’s fault, for if He
-had not given her to Adam, he would not have partaken of the forbidden
-tree! How passing strange is all this. And yet that is just what men
-are doing after six thousand years of experience with sin. Instead of
-breaking away from it, they say, God put it before them, and they could
-not resist the temptation to sin. The loss of love that comes out in
-this interposing of the wife is, moreover, particularly observable in
-this, that he grudges to call her Eve (Isha--married) or my wife.
-
-Failing to return unto God by way of confession, the Lord next deals
-with Adam in judgment. “Cursed is the ground for thy sake ... thorns
-also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee.” The very soil he had
-been sent to cultivate, and to carry forward in a normal unfolding,
-to imperishable life and spiritual glory, is now cursed for his sake,
-and therewith changed to that of hostility to him. Referring to the
-curse upon mankind, in consequence of the fall, Hugh MacMillan has
-called attention to the remarkable fact that weeds, the curse of the
-cultivator, accompany civilization. “There is one peculiarity about
-weeds which is very remarkable,” says this writer, “namely, that they
-only appear on ground which either by cultivation or for some other
-purpose, has been disturbed by man. They are never found truly wild, in
-woods or hills, or uncultivated wastes far away from human dwellings.
-They never grow on virgin soil, where human beings have never been. No
-weeds exist in those parts of the earth that are uninhabited, or where
-man is only a passing visitant.” And what is true of mother earth is in
-a sense true of the human heart. The youthful mind no sooner awakes to
-thought and reason, than it gives evidence of abundance of weeds. In
-surprise the mother asks where the little one has learned disobedience
-and questions how so young a mind can assert such strong opposition to
-wholesome discipline.
-
-And now, lest a worse calamity should fall on Adam and his wife, by
-stretching forth their hands “and take also of the tree of life, and
-eat, and live forever,” God “drove out the man” from Eden, and placed
-“cherubims, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to keep the
-way of the tree of life.” The act of driving Adam and Eve out of Eden
-has always been looked upon as a harsh measure. If, however, we stop
-to reflect what awful consequences would have followed the rash act of
-eating of the tree of life, we shall see that it was an act of mercy.
-For, after placing himself under the law of sin, what endless sorrow
-would have come upon the race, if men could not be removed by death.
-Think of such human monsters as history has time and again produced.
-Men and women degraded by thousands of years in sin would indeed be
-dangerous characters. So God cut off this possibility by guarding the
-tree of life.
-
-But there came a great change over all life. Beasts that before were
-harmless and full of play put forth claw and sting and tooth and tusk.
-Birds whet their beak for prey, clouds troop in the sky, sharp thorns
-shoot up through the soft grass, blastings are on the leaves. All the
-chords of that great harmony are snapped. Upon the brightest home this
-world ever saw our first parents turned their back and led forth on a
-path of sorrow the broken-hearted myriads of a ruined race.
-
-[Illustration: THE ACCEPTED OFFERING.]
-
-When Eve looked into the face of her first-born, she remembered the
-words of the Lord, in His judgment upon Satan, “I will put enmity
-between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shalt
-bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heel,” and, misunderstanding
-the meaning of the promise, she called him Cain, meaning, “I have
-gotten a man from the Lord,” mistaking him for the Redeemer. But
-how bitter must have been her disappointment as she saw the child
-grow up, saw his characteristics manifest themselves in acts of
-hatefulness and revenge. However, but little is said of Cain and his
-younger brother Abel, until they bring their offerings to the Lord.
-We read that Abel was a “keeper of sheep,” and Cain was a “tiller of
-the ground.” While it is not stated, we must believe these brothers
-knew what was, and what was not, an acceptable offering to the Lord,
-that Cain could easily have exchanged his fruits of the soil for a
-lamb of Abel’s flock. Evidently Cain was lacking in that fine moral
-insight which would lead him to have respect as to the nature of the
-sacrifice necessary to atone for sin. There must be the shed blood of
-the victim, for, “without shedding of blood,” there is no remission.
-Either Cain did not regard himself a sinner, or, if he did, he thought
-one sacrifice as good as another, and so he brings “of the fruit of
-the ground an offering unto the Lord.” God could not accept this act
-of disobedience. Because his offering was rejected, and seeing Abel’s
-offering accepted, Cain rose up and slew his brother. He failed to shed
-the blood of a lamb for his sin, but was quick to shed the blood of his
-brother, and thereby add to his sin. But what a crushing blow was this
-to the hopes of the mother heart who had supposed that her first-born
-was the promised “seed.” How she must have broken down under her
-sorrow, as she saw the blood dripping from Cain’s fingers, and that,
-too, the blood of his own brother. And sadder still as she looked upon
-the face of death for the first time. However she might have understood
-the lying words of her tempter, “Ye shall not surely die,” she now sees
-in the lifeless body of her second child, the awful reality of death.
-And when the first grave was made, how she must have daily wept over
-the precious mound, not only over this her first experience in bitter
-bereavement, but also over the circumstances under which it was brought
-about, and as she plants the flowers on the tomb, she fancies she hears
-the blood of the innocent victim continually crying unto heaven to be
-avenged. Oh, the bitter, bitter fruits of disobedience, who can know to
-what misery they bring us?
-
-And then also observe Cain’s conduct in this awful crime. God’s
-arraignment of this fratricide was analogous to that of Adam and
-Eve. But Cain evades every acknowledgment of it. He not only tells
-a barefaced falsehood, but in a most impudent manner asks, “Am I my
-brother’s keeper?” What a fearful advance on the timid explanations of
-Adam’s transgression as he spoke to the Lord out of his hiding place.
-How men should tremble at the very thought of sin.
-
-But the sorrowing Eve took heart once more in the birth of Seth, “for,”
-said she, “God hath appointed another seed instead of Abel.” So hope
-in the heart, like the perpetual altar fires in the sacrifices of the
-temple, seemed to sing a sweet song of comfort, and every child born
-seemed to outweigh the bitter disappointments in the realization of the
-promised Redeemer.
-
-With this hope in the heart of Eve, and this beautiful language upon
-her lips, the Scripture account closes. How long she lived after the
-birth of Seth we are not informed, but of this we are assured, she
-believed God in His promise of the Messiah. That she misunderstood when
-that promise was to be realized, is quite evident, but there is every
-reason to believe she died in the faith of its ultimate realization,
-for she judged God to be righteous in the promise.
-
-What is the lesson the loss of Paradise has for us? Plainly this: The
-perverted use of things good in themselves. Eve saw that the tree was
-pleasant to the eyes. From that day to this there have been women
-who would throw their health, their home happiness, their chance of
-training their children for God, their life, their honor, their hope
-of heaven, into a cauldron out of which might be brought something
-pleasant to the eyes. Eyes are good, useful and necessary, but we need
-to make a covenant with them not to see more than is good for our souls.
-
-After she saw, she “desired.” This would seem to imply that the real
-source of all sin is in the spirit of our own desires. The last of the
-Ten Commandments strikes down to the very tap-root of all evil, “Thou
-shalt not covet.” All sin commences with the kindling of desire. The
-apostle James gives us the pedigree, “Every man is tempted when he is
-turned away of his own lust and enticed; then, when lust and desire
-hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin, and sin, when it is finished,
-bringeth forth death.” The secret of victory, therefore, is not to
-allow the mind and heart to dwell for a moment upon any forbidden
-thing. The whole modern life is terribly fitted to stimulate unholy
-desire. The little child is taught from infancy to covet the vain and
-glittering attractions of the world--dress, equipage, pleasure, praise,
-fashion, display and a thousand worldly allurements. The city bill
-boards are covered with nude harlots. There are no less than 200,000
-houses for these social outcasts in our fair land. These open gateways
-to immorality, where the virtue of the nation is ground out, are not
-only guarded by police force, but young girls by the 100,000 a year
-are stolen from country homes by the paid agents, and sold into these
-open dens of vice and crime, where these poor girls die in a short
-time, the average length of this life of sin being only five years. And
-still the people have not a word to say for the suppression of these
-crime-breeding dens of vice, but legalize and protect them by law to
-the ruin of our homes. These are the things that are eating out the
-spiritual life of the nation, and for that reason many do not want to
-retain the thought of God in their hearts. Hence the responsibilities
-of life are pressing upon us. As you have seen the child trundling its
-little hoop by touching it on both sides alternately to keep it from
-either extreme, so God teaches us both with warning and with promise,
-as our spiritual condition requires. Sometimes it is warning we need,
-and He shouts in our ear the solemn admonition, as a mother would cry
-to her babe in wild alarm if in danger of falling over the precipice.
-But, again, when we are in danger of being too much depressed, He
-speaks to us with notes of encouragement and promise, and tells us
-there is no real danger of our failing utterly, and that He will never
-suffer us to be tempted above what we are able. And so we hear Him
-saying on one hand, “Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest
-he fall;” but immediately after adding on the other side, “God is
-faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able,
-but will, with the temptation, make a way of escape that ye may be
-able to bear it.”
-
- “Fear not! When temptations try thee
- Trust the Saviour’s loving care;
- No temptation will come nigh thee
- More than thou has strength to bear.
-
- “Fail not! In the hour of testing,
- Christ is pledged to bring thee through
- In His arms securely resting
- There thou shalt thy strength renew.”
-
-We are also impressed with the influence woman has for good or evil.
-What we need as a nation is consecrated womanhood. When at last we come
-to calculate the forces that decide the destiny of nations, it will
-be found that the mightiest and grandest influence came from home,
-where the wife cheered up despondency and fatigue and sorrow by her
-own sympathy, and the mother trained her child for heaven, starting
-the little feet on the path to the celestial city, and the sisters,
-by their gentleness, refined the manners of the brother, and the
-daughters were diligent in their kindness to the aged, throwing wreaths
-of blessing on the road that led father and mother down the steep of
-years. God bless our homes. And may the home on earth be the vestibule
-of our home in heaven.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-Womanhood in the Patriarchal Age.
-
- SARAH THE BEAUTIFUL PRINCESS--HER FAITH TESTED--THE MISTAKE OF HER
- LIFE--HER LOVELY CHARACTER--REBEKAH--AN ORIENTAL WOOING--ELIEZER’S
- PRAYER--THE BRIDE’S ANSWER--MEETING ISAAC--A MOTHER’S LOVE FOR HER
- SON--JACOB’S FLIGHT--REBEKAH, THE BEAUTIFUL SHEPHERDESS--SEVEN
- YEARS’ SERVICE FOR HER--LABAN’S DECEPTION--LEAH, THE
- TENDER-EYED--HUMAN FAVORITES--DIVINELY HONORED--RACHEL’S TOMB THE
- FIRST MONUMENT TO HUMAN LOVE.
-
-
-From the prominence given to Eve in connection with the temptation and
-the overwhelming disasters which followed the loss of the Eden home in
-Paradise, we are surprised the Sacred historian passes over a period
-of about two thousand years without giving us any record of women. The
-names of good men are mentioned. Enoch walked before God for over three
-hundred years, and the walk was such a perfect one, and it pleased God
-so well, that He translated Enoch. Noah also “found grace in the eyes
-of the Lord,” and he was “a just man and perfect in his generations,”
-and “walked with God,” doubtless as Enoch had done. No doubt there were
-others who lived clean, pure lives. Of this number was Lamech, the
-father of Noah, for he was comforted in the birth of his son, saying,
-he “shall comfort us concerning our work and toil of our hands, because
-of the ground which the Lord hath cursed.” Surely such men must have
-had good mothers to train them, and good wives for companions. But
-nothing is said about these women that walked in White Raiment in that
-dark and sinful age, when “all flesh had corrupted his way upon the
-earth,” until Sarah, the fair wife of Abraham, is reached.
-
-We find this beautiful princess willing to leave her home and her
-people in the land of Ur of the Chaldees and journey for more than a
-thousand miles to the land of Canaan. However, this journey was not
-a continuous one, for a long stop was made at Haran, in Mesopotamia,
-perhaps half way between Ur and Palestine.
-
-Of her birth and parentage we have no certain account in Scripture.
-In Gen. xx, 12, Abraham speaks of her as “his sister, the daughter of
-the same father, but not the daughter of the same mother.” The Hebrew
-tradition is that Sarai is the same as Iscah, the daughter of Haran.
-This tradition is not improbable in itself, and certainly supplies the
-account of the descent of the mother of the chosen race.
-
-The change of her name from Sarai to Sarah was made on the
-establishment of the covenant of circumcision between Abraham and God,
-and signifies “princess,” for she was to be the royal ancestress of
-“all families of the earth.”
-
-The beautiful fidelity of this noble woman is shown in her willingness
-to accompany her husband in all the wanderings of his life. Her home
-in Mesopotamia was gladly and willingly exchanged for a tent, and that
-tent was often taken down and set up during the nomadic life which
-formed the basis of the patriarchal age. God intended to set forth in
-Abraham not only the thought that here man has no continuing city, but
-also the life of faith. And this faith of Abraham is distinguished from
-the faith of the pious ancestors in this, that he obtained and held the
-promises of salvation, not only for himself, but for his family; and
-from the Mosaic system, by the fact that it expressly held the promised
-blessing in the seed of Abraham, as a blessing for all people. But this
-faith had not only to be developed, but also tested. It is beautiful to
-read that Abraham believed God, but his faith when he went down into
-Egypt was far from that when he went “into the land of Moriah” to offer
-up Isaac. Nothing is plainer in the Bible than that a man’s faith is
-not a matter of indifference. He can not be disobedient to God’s calls,
-and yet go to heaven when he dies. This is not an arbitrary decision.
-There is and must be an adequate ground for it. The rejection of God’s
-dealings with us is as clear a proof of moral depravity, as inability
-to see the light of the sun at noon is a proof of blindness.
-
-Now let us look at a few of these testings or trials of faith that came
-into the life of this woman in White Raiment, this princess in Israel.
-She was asked to give up her native land. How dear the fatherland is
-to the heart, only those who have passed through the experience can
-realize. This was not all. She was asked to give up her kindred. To
-move away from all the associations of childhood and youth, requires a
-brave heart. But she was also asked to give up her home, and what is
-dearer to a woman’s heart than her home? We have no doubt Sarah’s home
-by the beautiful streams that flow down from the high table-lands of
-Armenia into the rich valleys of Mesopotamia, was a lovely one, and to
-exchange it for tent-life was a brave sacrifice. Her love to God must
-have been deep and constant.
-
-After a long, weary journey through the desert sands, the land
-of promise is finally reached, only to find it afflicted with a
-famine. How often Sarah must have longed for one look out over the
-fig orchards, the olive yards and waving grain fields ripening in
-the summer’s sun of her native Mesopotamia, as she looked out over
-the barren hills, burned-up fields, and dried-up water courses of
-Palestine. Night after night, Abraham’s tent is pitched, only to be
-taken down in the morning, in quest of pasturage for their herds and
-flocks, until the wilderness in the southern extremity of Canaan is
-reached. How all this must have tested their faith. Had they not
-mistaken the call of God? Is it possible that this parched land is the
-land of promise? How disappointments and failures test our faith, and
-the heart of poor Sarah must have been sorely tried.
-
-But there was yet another test, and a humiliating one at that, and
-it seems to look as if their united faith was wavering. She was a
-beautiful woman, and they were now upon the very borders of Egypt,
-and there was no other alternative but to perish with famine or
-to go down into the land of the Pharaohs. Both Abraham and Sarah
-seemed to realize the hazard they were running, for, possibly, the
-bloom and beauty of Sarah’s face might cost Abraham’s life. So they
-agreed between them that Sarah should say that she was his sister,
-lest he should be killed. The declaration was not false. She was his
-half-sister, but it was not the whole truth, and it would seem, from
-their present conduct, that their faith, tested by the famine, was now
-wavering, for, why not appeal their cause to God, instead of taking it
-into their own hands? The reason for resorting to this deception was,
-if she was regarded as his wife, an Egyptian could only obtain her,
-when he had first murdered her husband. But if she was his sister,
-then there was a hope that she might be won from her brother by loving
-attentions and costly gifts, or, if her beauty came to the notice of
-Pharaoh she would be taken to his harem by arbitrary methods. They had
-not reasoned in vain. The princes of the land saw her, “and commended
-her before Pharaoh,” and “Sarah was taken into Pharaoh’s house.”
-
-It is hard for us to understand what a trial of her faith this harem
-life must have been to the pure-minded Sarah. How often her mind must
-have gone out over the stretches of desert wastes to her own land
-abounding with streams and fertility. And to be conscious that the
-charms of her person were the centre of attraction in the court of
-Egypt.
-
-But all this time God’s eye was a witness to all that was passing. When
-we get to the end of self, He always comes to our rescue--our extremity
-is His opportunity. In her resided the religious disposition in the
-highest measure, and just at a time when the nations appeared about
-to sink into heathenism, hence her faith must be saved to the race,
-so “the Lord plagued Pharaoh with great plagues,” that is to say, God
-administered “blow on blow,” and these were of such a nature as to
-guard Sarah from injury. At length the ruler of the land, whose heart
-does not seem to be hardened like the later kings, concludes that his
-punishment is for the sake of Sarah, and restores her to Abraham.
-
-After Abraham had separated from Lot, the Lord again appeared unto him,
-at which time Abraham complained for the want of an heir. So the Lord
-leads Abraham out of his tent, under the heavens as seen by night, and
-in that land of blue skies, the night heavens are beautiful indeed. God
-had promised at first one natural heir, but now the countless stars
-which he sees, should both represent the innumerable seed which should
-spring from this one heir, and at the same time be a warrant for his
-faith.
-
-At this point the human element again seeks to aid in bringing about
-the realization of the divine promise. The childless state of Abraham’s
-house was its great sorrow, and the more so, since it was in perpetual
-opposition to the calling, destination, and faith of Abraham, and was a
-constant trial of his faith. Sarah herself, doubtless, came gradually
-more and more, on account of her barrenness, to appear as a hindrance
-to the fulfillment of the divine promise, and as Abraham had already
-fixed his eye upon his head servant, Eliezer of Damascus, so now Sarah
-fixes her eye upon her head maid, Hagar the Egyptian. It must be this
-maid not only had mental gifts which qualified her for the prominent
-place she occupied in the household, but also inward participation
-in the faith of her mistress. So Hagar is substituted, for, in the
-substitution, Sarah hopes to carry forward the divine purpose of the
-family. In this she certainly practiced an act of heroic self-denial,
-but still, in her womanly excitement, anticipated her destiny as Eve
-had done, and carried even Abraham away with her alluring hope. Though
-she greatly erred in this effort to assist God in bringing in the
-realization of the promise, and thereby revealed a lack of faith in
-the divine appointments, yet we have here a beautiful exhibition of
-her heroic self-denial even in her error. Perhaps, viewed from the
-human standpoint, we should here bring into our narrative also, the
-fact, that they had been already ten years in Canaan, and Sarah was now
-seventy-five years of age, waiting in vain for the heir, through whom
-the great blessing was to come to all the families of the earth.
-
-However, in all this, Sarah, the noble generous hearted, had not
-counted upon the conduct Hagar would assume in her new relation. As
-an Egyptian, Hagar seemed to have regarded herself as second wife,
-instead of recognizing her subordination to her mistress. This
-subordination seems to have been assumed by Abraham, and hence the
-apparent indifference probably was the source of Sarah’s sense of
-injury, when she exclaimed, “My wrong be upon thee.” She felt that
-Abraham ought to have redressed her wrong--ought to have seen and
-rebuked the insolence of the maid. Beyond a doubt, looking at the
-pride and insolence of Hagar, from Sarah’s standpoint, it was very
-trying. The Hebrews regarded barrenness as a great evil and a divine
-punishment, while fruitfulness was held as a great good and a divine
-blessing. The unfruitful Hannah received the like treatment with Sarah,
-from the second wife of Elkanah. It is still thus, to-day, in eastern
-lands. With almost the tenderness of Elkanah to the sorrowing Hannah,
-Abraham says, “Behold the maid is in thy hand.” He regards Hagar still
-as the servant, and the one who fulfills the part of Sarah. But now the
-overbent bow flies back with violence. This is the back stroke of her
-own eager, overstrained course. Sarah now turns and deals harshly with
-Hagar. How precisely, we are not told. Doubtless, through the harsh
-thrusting her back into the mere position and service of a slave. But
-Hagar, it appears, would not submit to such treatment. She, perhaps,
-believed that she had grown above such a position, and fled from the
-presence of Sarah.
-
-What need was there for Sarah to learn the lesson of the patience of
-faith. God had promised her great honors and blessings. There was in
-her nature much that needed toning up by the grace of patience, and
-God would take his own best time in developing her life. Her haste to
-anticipate the blessing promised, not only delayed its realization, but
-brought sorrow to her own heart, and untold trouble to her posterity,
-for Ishmael’s hand has been “against every man, and every man’s hand
-against him.” The Ishmaelites, it is said, “dwelt from Havilah unto
-Shur,” and it is certain that they stretched in very early times across
-the desert to the Persian Gulf, peopled the north and west of the
-Arabian peninsula, and eventually formed the chief element of the Arab
-nation, which has proved to be a living fountain of humanity whose
-streams for thousands of years have poured themselves far and wide. Its
-tribes are found in all the borders of Asia, in the East Indies, in all
-Northern Africa, along the whole Indian Ocean down to Molucca, they are
-spread along the coast to Mozambique, and their caravans cross India
-to China. These wandering hordes of the desert have always and still
-lead a robber life. They justify themselves in it, upon the ground of
-the hard treatment of Ishmael, their father, who, driven out of his
-paternal inheritance, received the desert for his possession, with the
-permission to take whatever he could find. Mohammed is in the line
-of Ishmael, and the followers of Islam, in their pride and delusion,
-claim that the rights of primogeniture belong to Ishmael instead of
-Isaac, and assert their right to lands and goods, so far as it pleases
-them. Vengeance for blood rules in them, and the innocent have often
-fallen victims to their horrible massacres. So that the disaster which
-overtook the race in this premature anticipation of divine Providence
-is second only to the disaster that overtook Eve in the temptation
-and the loss of Paradise. Could Sarah have foreseen all the sad
-consequences of her unseemly haste to pluck the unripened promise God
-meant to give her, she certainly would have cultivated the patience of
-faith.
-
-But the years passed on--fifteen of them nearly--since the child
-Ishmael had been in the home of the patriarch, and the visit of the
-angels under the Oaks in the plain of Mamre. During this time God
-had once more renewed his promise to Abraham, and also the rite of
-circumcision had been established, and, doubtless, the symbolical
-purification of Abraham and his house, opened the way for the friendly
-appearance of Jehovah in the persons of the angels, or men, as the
-patriarch at first thought them to be, as he looked up, while seated
-in his tent door through the heat of the noontide hours.
-
-When he saw the angels, “he ran to meet them,” and, it seems, instantly
-recognized among the three the one whom he addressed as the Lord, and
-who afterwards was clearly distinguished from the two accompanying
-angels. “If now,” Abraham asks, “I have found favor in Thy sight, pass
-not away.” This cordial invitation, while it has in it the marked
-hospitality of Orientals, to the inner consciousness of Abraham it had
-a deeper meaning, the covenant relation between himself and Jehovah,
-that is, he hopes this relation is still continued. His humble and
-pressing invitation, his zealous preparations, his modest description
-of the meal, his standing by to serve those who were eating, are
-picturesque traits of the life of faith as it here reveals itself, in
-an exemplary hospitality. This is the custom still in Eastern lands,
-and is referred to by our Lord in that passage where He speaks of His
-second coming, and shall find His people watching, for He will “make
-them to sit down to meat, and will come forth and serve them” (Luke
-xii, 37), and seems to be one of the countless instances where, in the
-web of the Holy Scriptures, the golden threads of the Old Testament
-are interwoven with those of the New, and form, as it were, one whole.
-And the fact that this beautiful custom of hospitality is still
-observed among the Bedouins, as we can speak from personal knowledge,
-is remarkable, and impresses us with the thought that the covenant
-blessings, like some sweet, heavenly fruitage, refuses to be lost out
-of the lives of that ancient people.
-
-The meal having been served in this beautiful Oriental manner, the
-Lord asks, “Where is Sarah?” Abraham made answer, “Behold, in the
-tent.” Then the Angel of the Lord, not only renews the promise, but
-that it should be fully realized in the birth of Isaac within a year.
-Sarah, behind the tent door, hears this unqualified assurance, but,
-viewing it from nature’s standpoint, rendered doubly improbable from
-her life-long barrenness, “laughed within herself.” We can not regard
-this as a laugh of unbelief, or the scoff of doubt, as some do, but as
-a laugh falling short in her conception of God. The thing which was
-impossible according to the established laws of nature, her faith had
-not yet grasped as being possible with God. But the Lord, nevertheless,
-observed Sarah’s laugh, and this divine hearing on the part of the
-Angel of the Lord, startled her, and had its part in the strengthening
-of her faith. It prepared the way for the question, “Is anything
-too hard for the Lord?” To her own mind one thing, namely, that she
-should be a mother at ninety years of age, seemed too hard. And so
-the question had to do with this very thought, and must be settled on
-the side of her faith. And she grandly and heroically asserted her
-belief that nothing, not even the seeming insurmountable obstacle which
-nature interposed, was too great for God to overcome, and her faith was
-strengthened, for we read, “through _faith_ Sarah received strength
-to conceive seed, and was delivered of a child when she was past age,
-because she _judged_ Him faithful who had promised” (Heb. xi, 11). The
-trial of her patience of faith was a long struggle. It took twenty-five
-years to bring her up to the point where her faith could grasp the
-truth that nothing was too hard for the Lord to perform. But this
-blessed woman at length stood in right relation to God, for, without
-faith, be it observed, it is impossible to please God, or to receive
-anything at His hands.
-
-In due time Isaac was born. It was the great event in Sarah’s life. As
-the mother looked down into the face of the son of her bosom she breaks
-forth in an exultant song of thankfulness, not unlike that of Mary,
-the blessed virgin. The little song of Sarah, it has beautifully been
-said, is the first cradle hymn. Our Lord reveals the profoundest source
-of this joy, when, in addressing the Pharisees, who held Abraham to
-be their father, said, “Your father Abraham rejoiced to see my day.”
-Sarah, in the birth of Isaac, is the ancestress of Christ. Spiritually
-viewed, the birthday of Isaac becomes the door or entrance of the day
-of Christ, and the day of Christ the background of the birthday of
-Isaac.
-
-Another beautiful incident in connection with the childhood of Isaac
-is, that Sarah, his mother, even at her advanced age and exalted
-station in life, did not deem it a burden to nurse him. Calvin has
-well said, “Whom God counts worthy of the honor of being a mother He
-at the same time makes a nurse; and those who feel themselves burdened
-through the nursing of their children, rend, as far as in them lies,
-the sacred bond of nature, unless weakness, or some infirmities, form
-their excuse.”
-
-But along with the growing child is the mocking Ishmael. He was
-fourteen years of age at the birth of Isaac, and therefore in the first
-years of Isaac, appears as a playful lad, and true to his nature,
-doubtless developed a characteristic trait of jealousy which would not
-escape the ever watchful eye of Sarah, as she observed his dancing and
-leaping, and now and then making hateful faces at the mother’s darling,
-mocking his childish fears and appeals to the mother for protection.
-This seems to have been endured by Sarah until the great feast day,
-held to celebrate the weaning of Isaac. Seeing special attention paid
-to Isaac by all the invited guests, his jealousy suddenly developed
-into envy, and this, in turn, found expression in mockery. Sarah
-could endure these mockings no longer, for to her sensitive nature,
-Ishmael’s mocking the child of promise was but the outward expression
-of his unbelief in the faith of his parents, and therefore the word
-and purpose of God. His conduct revealed his unbelief, and hence was
-unworthy and incapable of sharing in the blessing, which then, as now,
-was secured only by faith, and which had already cost her so much.
-Hence she said to Abraham, “Cast out this bondwoman and her son.” The
-treatment may seem harsh, but there could be no peace or happiness in
-that household until the mocking Ishmael was out of it. This mother,
-whose spiritual faith had been quickened in a marvelous manner, was
-clear-sighted enough to see that the purposes of God in reference to
-Isaac could only become actual through this separation. The fact that
-the prompt, sharp determination that “the son of this bondwoman shall
-not be heir” with Isaac, “was very grievous in Abraham’s sight,” shows
-that his prejudice in favor of the rights of the natural first-born
-needed correction. And God confirmed the judgment of Sarah. For the
-exclusion of Ishmael was requisite not only to the prosperity of Isaac
-and the line of the promise, but to the welfare of Ishmael himself. And
-the man of faith, who should later offer up Isaac, must now be able to
-offer up Ishmael also.
-
-After the sending away of Hagar and her son Ishmael, there is but one
-incident recorded in the life of Abraham, namely the treaty or covenant
-of peace with Abimelech, King of Gerar, though probably several years
-passed away between the departure of Hagar and the last great test or
-trial of Abraham in the offering up of Isaac on Mt. Moriah.
-
-The son of promise had grown to be a lad of sixteen or seventeen years
-of age, when the voice of the Lord called unto Abraham, saying, “Take
-now thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou lovest, and get thee into
-the land of Moriah; and offer him there for a burnt offering upon
-one of the mountains which I will tell thee of.” It would seem that
-this message came to Abraham while asleep--in a dream as we would
-say--and therefore all the more trying as such a revelation, under such
-circumstances might well be questioned. Upon waking out of his sleep he
-might reasonably question the import of such a dream, especially since
-Isaac was his only child, and the son of promise. But it appears that
-Abraham did not stop to explain away this command, and we must believe
-that he did not even inform Sarah of this heart-crushing revelation,
-for neither she nor Isaac knew at the time the special object of the
-journey. Promptly Abraham made the necessary preparations, and set
-out on the three days’ journey. His obedience is absolute. There is
-not even a question raised as to his correctly understanding the duty
-required of him. To suppose that Abraham did not have the bleeding
-heart of a father in this great trial, would be to destroy the force
-of this testing of his faith. And the fact that he had three days’ time
-in which he could change his purpose, made the conflict within him all
-the harder.
-
-The lad and the mother could easily see from the wood, and the fire,
-and the knife, that he went not merely to worship, but to sacrifice.
-The testing was still more heart-breaking when, at the end of the
-journey, at the foot of Moriah, while Abraham is in the act of laying
-the wood upon the obedient Isaac, the heir of promise said, “My father,
-behold the fire and the wood, but where is the lamb for a burnt
-offering?” How the bleeding heart of the father must have been touched
-afresh as he looked upon Isaac as “the lamb,” yet, as if the hour for
-the fuller revelation had not yet come, made answer, “My son, God will
-provide Himself a lamb.”
-
-And so the two, the father and the son, slowly climb the rugged sides
-of Moriah to its very summit, and Abraham built an altar, as he so
-often had done before, for, wherever Abraham had a tent, God had an
-altar, and in the building of this altar we may well believe the
-loving, obedient Isaac assisted. Then the wood was laid upon it. All
-was ready for “the lamb!” But God had not yet provided the victim.
-
-What passed between father and son the Sacred record has not revealed.
-However, we must believe it was the Gethsemane struggle with Isaac,
-and that in the end he said to Abraham, as Christ, under similar
-circumstances, said to His heavenly Father, “Thy will be done.” And,
-perhaps, this loving self-surrender of Isaac made it all the harder
-for the father’s heart. But, somehow, we can not understand it, only
-in the light of complete self-surrender to the will of God, he “bound
-Isaac his son, and laid him on the altar upon the wood,” and, nerving
-himself for the last great act, he “stretched forth his hand, and took
-the knife to slay his son.”
-
-But God, during this scene on Mount Moriah, was an interested
-spectator. He saw that the obedience of faith--the complete
-self-surrender of Abraham’s will--was perfect. “And the angel of the
-Lord called unto him out of heaven, and said, ‘Lay not thine hand upon
-the lad, neither do thou anything unto him, for now I know that thou
-fearest God, seeing thou hast not withheld thy son, thine only son,
-from me.’”
-
-It is worthy of observation that, while the command to offer up Isaac
-came in a dream, and therefore open to misgiving, the command to stay
-his hand is spoken by the angel of Jehovah out of heaven. Abraham was
-perfect in his faith, and how far it reached into the great love for
-God and self-surrender to His will, we shall never know. Paul, speaking
-of this wonderful victory over self, said that Abraham accounted that
-God was able to raise up Isaac, “even from the dead; from whence also
-he received him in a figure.” Though all his hope, humanly speaking,
-perished out of his heart when he took up the sacrificial knife on
-Moriah, yet his faith overleaped human limitations into the infinite
-ability of God to raise up Isaac out of the ashes upon his altar.
-
-Such faith was possible for Abraham, for God asks no impossibilities
-at the hands of men, and what was possible for this man of faith is
-possible for any of us, if we are willing to pay the price. Let no one
-think, however, that such fruits of righteousness drop into the lap of
-the faithless.
-
-But through this severe testing, Sarah nowhere appears on the scene. It
-may be, infinite love would spare the mother’s heart. It may be, also,
-the last great trial of her faith took place in the tent, stretched
-under the oaks, in the plain of Mamre. There is a Jewish tradition that
-when Sarah fully learned the nature of the journey to Moriah, and the
-scene which there took place, the shock of it killed her, and Abraham
-found her dead on his return home. This may do as a tradition, but not
-as the _finale_ of God’s dealing with His people. The potter, as he
-fashions the vessel upon the wheel, does not seek to break it. So God
-does not test us beyond our capacity to endure. Then, also, if Isaac
-was born when Sarah was ninety years of age, and she died at the age
-of one hundred and twenty-seven, and the scene on Moriah took place
-when Isaac was a lad of sixteen or seventeen, she lived for twenty
-years after that event, to be a comfort and a blessing in her home.
-
-At length this princess in Israel, tested and tried, and found true,
-died at Hebron at the good age of one hundred and twenty-seven years,
-and Abraham wept over her, and well he might, for she had shared his
-trials and was a good and faithful wife, and she was a mother, even
-more than a wife.
-
-Abraham purchased the cave of Machpelah of Ephron, the Hittite, and
-tenderly laid the remains of this lovely woman to rest in one of the
-chambers of the cave. It is the first burial mentioned in the Sacred
-records. And the tomb remains unto this day, hallowed in the eyes of
-Jews, Christians and Mohammedans alike, and was visited by the writer.
-
-The lesson which God would teach us in the life of this woman in White
-Raiment is that testings are necessary to the development of faith,
-and that these testings come to us in the most ordinary events of our
-daily lives. All Christians surely know by experience that events which
-seemed all darkness at first have ultimately brought them nearer to the
-light. The much-dreaded cloud has proved to be only a veil under which
-God hides His mighty power. His gracious query, “Is anything too hard
-for the Lord?” has comforted us, and has turned what we thought to be
-a curse into a blessing. O, can we not trust Him in the darkness as
-well as in the light, knowing that He can bring calm out of storm, and
-that he often chooses the darkness and the cloud as a special medium by
-which to reveal himself? Could we climb to heaven by some other way,
-and escape the shadows and the storms of life, how much should we miss
-of the blessed manifestations of God’s revelations of His power.
-
-God speaks to listening ears and waiting hearts as truly to-day as He
-did before the tent door under the oaks in the plain of Mamre. He may
-speak to us through his providence, through the voice of a friend,
-through a book or a sermon; but perhaps He does so most frequently in
-the little details of everyday life, in which we can not fail to see
-His dealings with us if our hearts are turned expectantly toward him.
-Only let us be admonished by Sarah’s sad mistake. That she made it,
-proves that she was human. But let us be afraid of sin. The door once
-open, none of us can tell into what endless labyrinths of sorrow it
-will lead us. God wants a tried people, not only for their own sake but
-that they may be a blessing to others.
-
-And now we come to a most beautiful scene in Sacred History. While, as
-a whole, the Bible gives the drama of human sin and divine redemption,
-yet it pauses in its wonderful revelations to let us look into the
-homes of the people who lived ages ago. It somehow touches human life
-on all its sides. Other books which are held sacred by eastern nations,
-give woman only contemptuous mention. This one recognizes the dignity
-and beauty of her life and work. It tells in seven verses the story
-of Enoch, who walked with God three hundred and sixty-five years and
-who was holy enough to escape death, while it gives sixty-six verses
-to the wooing and wedding of Rebekah and Isaac. In the pictures which
-the Sacred Record opens to us of the domestic life of the patriarchal
-age, perhaps this is the most perfectly characteristic and beautiful
-idyl of a marriage, and how it was brought about. In its sweetness and
-sacred simplicity, it is a marvelous contrast to the wedding of our
-modern fashionable life. And surely, since God’s Book gives so much
-time and space to the domestic life of women, the daughters of modern
-Christianity ought to regard themselves and their affairs of the utmost
-importance. For the sake of Him who gave them such prominence and
-recognition, they ought to love Him.
-
-Abraham, the friend of God, understood fully that it would never do
-to have the heir of promise fall into the hands of a heathen wife. He
-could not bear the thought of taking one of the corrupt Canaanites into
-his family, with the chance of her leading Isaac into the abominable
-worship of her gods.
-
-Parents often frustrate the grace of God and mar His plans irreparably
-by being careless of the worldly associations and affinities of their
-children.
-
-Sarah, the beautiful and beloved, had been tenderly laid away in the
-cave of Machpelah, and Isaac is now forty years of age. Forty years,
-however, in those good old times, is yet young, when the thread of
-mortal life ran out to a hundred and seventy-five or eighty years. As
-Abraham has nearly reached that far period, his sun of life is dipping
-downwards toward the evening horizon. He has but one care remaining--to
-settle his son Isaac in life before he is gathered to his fathers.
-
-The scene where Abraham discusses the subject with his head servant
-sheds a peculiar light on the domestic and family relations of those
-days.
-
-Calling Eliezer, his most trusty servant, he discloses to him his
-purpose, and makes him take an oath that he will faithfully carry out
-his wishes. But Abraham’s steward saw the difficulties of such a proxy
-wooing, and expressed a fear that the young woman would object to so
-hazardous a journey to share the home of a man whom she had never seen
-and of whom she had possibly never before heard. So, to make matters
-sure, he asks if it would not be better to take Isaac with him? To this
-request the patriarch replied, “Beware thou that thou bring not my son
-thither again.” Abraham saw that there was too much risk in allowing
-Isaac to go back to the old home. He might have to be scourged out of
-it as was Jacob, the next in the line, a few years later. He must do
-right and trust God. So he told his steward, “The Lord, before whom I
-walk, will send his angel before thee and prosper thy way, and thou
-shalt take a wife for my son of my kindred and of my father’s house.”
-Then, as he saw the ever-present contingency with which human free
-agency may frustrate even Divine Providence, he added, “And if the
-woman will not be willing to follow thee, then thou shalt be clear
-from this thine oath; only bring not my son thither again.”
-
-The picture of the preparations made for this embassy denotes a
-princely station and great wealth. “And the servant took ten camels of
-the camels of his master, and departed; for all the goods of his master
-were in his hand; and he arose and went to Mesopotamia, unto the city
-of Nahor.”
-
-Now comes a quaint and beautiful picture of the manners of those
-pastoral days. He made his camels to kneel down without the city by
-a well of water, at the time of the evening when the women go out to
-draw water. With the kneeling camels around the well, the aged Eliezer
-uncovers his head in the evening twilight, and with closed eyes and
-face raised towards heaven, he talks to God in this simple and yet
-eloquent way, “O, Lord God of my master Abraham, I pray thee, send me
-good speed this day, and show kindness unto my master Abraham. Behold!
-I stand here by the well of water; and the daughters of the men of the
-city come out to draw water: And let it come to pass that the damsel to
-whom I shall say, Let down thy pitcher, I pray thee, that I may drink;
-and she shall say, Drink and I will give thy camels drink also: let
-that same be she that Thou hast appointed for Thy servant Isaac; and
-thereby shall I know that Thou hast shewed kindness unto my master.”
-It is to be observed that this aged servant talked to God with all the
-simplicity and directness of a child with its mother. He told the Lord
-where he stood, and it was in the most likely place about an Oriental
-city at evening time, for all the damsels come out to the well at that
-hour of the day to draw water. He did not doubt that there was a bride
-for Isaac in the town; and he wanted to find the right one immediately.
-The care of Abraham’s affairs pressed him, and he wanted to get through
-the matter with as little waste of time and sentiment as possible.
-That he might not make any mistake in his delicate mission, he tells
-the Lord of a little test he thought of using. He needed a sign from
-God to select the bride from among the women who should come to the
-well. He used his own judgment as far as it went; but it stopped short
-of a decision. He specified that the chosen one should be industrious,
-hospitable, deft, courteous. She should be qualified to stand at the
-head of a princely establishment.
-
-His prayer was speedily granted, for thus the story goes on, “And
-it came to pass, before he had done speaking, that, behold Rebekah
-came out, who was born to Bethuel, son of Milcah, the wife of Nahor,
-Abraham’s brother.”
-
-It is noticeable, how strong is the sensibility to womanly beauty in
-this narrative. This young Rebekah is thus announced: “And the damsel
-was very fair to look upon, and a virgin, and she went down to the
-well, and filled her pitcher, and came up.” Drawn by the bright eyes,
-and fair face, the old servant hastens to apply the test, doubtless
-hoping that this lovely creature is the appointed one for his young
-master.
-
-“And the servant ran to meet her, and said, Let me, I pray thee, drink
-a little water of thy pitcher. And she said, Drink, my Lord; and she
-hastened, and let down her pitcher upon her hand, and gave him drink.”
-
-She gave with a will, with a grace and readiness that outflowed the
-request, and then it is added: “And when she had done giving him drink,
-she said, I will draw water for thy camels also, until they have done
-drinking. And she hastened and emptied her pitcher into the trough, and
-ran again unto the well to draw water, and drew for all his camels.”
-Let us fancy ten camels, all on their knees, in a row, at the trough,
-with their long necks, and patient, care-worn faces, while the pretty
-young damsel, with cheerful alacrity, is dashing down the water from
-her pitcher, filling and emptying in quick succession, apparently
-making nothing of the toil; the gray-haired old servant, looking on in
-devout recognition of the answer to his prayer, for the story says:
-“And the man, wondering at her, held his peace, to wit (know) whether
-the Lord had made his journey prosperous or not.”
-
-There was wise penetration into life and the essentials of wedded
-happiness in this prayer of the old servant. What he asked for his
-young master was not beauty, or talent, but a ready and unfailing
-outflow of sympathy and kindness. He asked not merely for a gentle
-nature, a kind heart, but he asked for a heart so rich in kindness that
-it should run even beyond what was asked, and be ready to anticipate
-the request with new devices of helpfulness; the lively, lighthearted
-kindness that could not be content with waiting on the thirsty old man,
-but with cheerful alacrity took upon herself the care of all the ten
-camels. This was a gift beyond that of beauty, yet when it came in the
-person of a maiden exceedingly fair to look upon, no marvel that the
-old man wondered joyously at his success.
-
-Instantly, as the camels had done drinking, he produced from his
-treasury golden earrings and bracelets with which he adorned the
-maiden. We can easily imagine the maidenly delight with which she ran
-to exhibit the gifts of jewelry that thus unexpectedly descended upon
-her.
-
-Nor does Eliezer fail to offer up a prayer of thanksgiving for divine
-guidance. In this he set a worthy example to all who seek direction
-from God. He said, “I, being in the way, the Lord led me.” A free
-translation would be, “I used my own judgment as far as it would go,
-which was a long distance from a safe conclusion, and the Lord led me
-the rest of the way.”
-
-Bethuel, when he saw the gifts and heard the words of Rebekah, hastened
-to the well and said to Eliezer, “Come in, thou blessed of the Lord;
-wherefore standest thou without? for I have prepared the house, and
-room for the camels. And the man came into the house: and he ungirded
-the camels, and gave straw and provender for the camels, and water to
-wash his feet, and the men’s feet that were with him. And there was set
-meat before him to eat: but he said, I will not eat, till I have told
-my errand. And he said, Speak on.”
-
-He then related the purport of his journey, of the prayer that he had
-uttered at the well, and of its fulfillment in a generous-minded and
-beautiful young maiden, and thus he ends his story: “And now, if ye
-will deal kindly and truly with my master, tell me: and if not, tell
-me; that I may turn to the right hand or to the left.”
-
-Bethuel answered, “Behold, Rebekah is before thee; take her, and go,
-and let her be thy master’s son’s wife, as the Lord hath spoken.”
-
-“And it came to pass, that when Abraham’s servant heard their words, he
-worshipped the Lord, bowing himself to the earth.”
-
-And now comes a scene most captivating to female curiosity. “The
-servant brought forth jewels of silver, and jewels of gold, and
-raiment, and gave them to Rebekah; he gave also to her brother and
-to her mother precious things.” The scene of examining jewelry and
-garments and rich stuffs in the family party would have made no mean
-subject for a painter. No wonder such a suitor sending such gifts found
-welcome entertainment. So the story goes on: “And they did eat and
-drink, he and the men that were with him, and tarried all night; and
-they rose up in the morning and he said, Send me away unto my master.
-And her brother and her mother said, Let the damsel abide with us a few
-days, at the least ten, and after that she shall go.”
-
-“And he said unto them, Hinder me not, seeing the Lord hath prospered
-my way; send me away, that I may go to my master. And they said, We
-will call the damsel and inquire at her mouth. And they called Rebekah,
-and said unto her, Wilt thou go with this man? And she said, I will
-go.” Her prompt reply to this important question was an index to her
-character. The Divine approval of her ready obedience gave her a grand
-prophetic Messianic promise that thousands of millions should be
-gathered into His Kingdom from the conquest “of those which hate them.”
-This extra Hebrew prophecy was a flash of God’s light on the fact that
-our Lord should be the Saviour, not only of the Jews, but of the entire
-world.
-
-Thus far this wooing seems to have been conceived and conducted in that
-simple religious spirit recognized in the words of the old prayer,
-“Grant that all our work may be begun, continued and ended in thee.”
-The Father of nations has been a never-failing presence in every turn.
-
-“And Rebekah arose, and her damsels, and they rode upon the camels, and
-followed the man; and the servant took Rebekah, and went his way.”
-
-It was a long way from the city of Nahor, in Mesopotamia to Hebron
-in the southern borders of Palestine, and between the Euphrates and
-the land of promise stretched leagues of hot desert sands, through
-which the camels slowly and patiently toiled day after day with their
-precious burden. But at length Damascus with its refreshing streams,
-and Mt. Hermon with its dome lifted among the clouds, were passed, and,
-towards evening of the last day, just as they reached the head of the
-valley of Eschol, from the summit of which opens a magnificent view
-through the whole length of the valley, “Rebekah lifted up her eyes,
-and when she saw Isaac she lighted off the camel. For she had said unto
-the servant, What man is this that walketh in the field to meet us? And
-the servant had said, It is my master; therefore she took a veil and
-covered herself.”
-
-Doubtless for days Isaac had walked the mile and a half from his
-mother’s tent to where the valley of Eschol forms a junction with the
-plain of Mamre, from whence he could look up the narrow valley and
-view the approaching caravan at a considerable distance. The expectant
-bridegroom, brought up with the strictest notions of filial submission,
-waits to receive his wife dutifully from his father’s hand, and yet, we
-fancy, day after day he goes out to meet her, and now the long-expected
-caravan, with Eliezer, his father’s most trusted servant, at its head,
-is approaching at eventide, and he quickens his step to meet his bride.
-
-From what we have already seen of Rebekah, she is lively, lighthearted,
-kind, possessed of an alert readiness, prompt to see and do what is
-to be done at the moment. No dreamer is she, but a wideawake young
-woman who knows her own mind exactly, and has the fit word and fit
-action ready for each short turn in life. She was quick, cheerful
-and energetic in hospitality. She was prompt and unhesitating in her
-resolve; and yet, at the moment of meeting, she knew the value and
-propriety of the veil. She covered herself that she might not unsought
-be won.
-
-“And Isaac brought her into his mother Sarah’s tent.” Tent life in
-the days of Abraham, in our estimation, must have been not only
-desirable, but grand and glorious. Living, as they did, so closely in
-contact with nature, as God made it, fresh, pure air, babbling brooks,
-rippling streams, and blue skies, theirs was a happy life. They were
-not confined in crowded cities, surrounded by dismal walls, but on the
-hillsides, the open valleys and the unbounded plains. Their tent was
-pitched in a clump of oaks, near a living stream, and overlooked the
-plain of Mamre--a beautiful picture of freedom, ease and comfort. To
-such a place he took Rebekah, and she became his wife; and he loved
-her; and Isaac was comforted after his mother’s death. So ends this
-most charming story of domestic life in the patriarchal age. For
-beauty, simplicity and directness it has no equal. We also see, in
-the closing words, one of those delicate and tender natures that find
-repose first in the love of a mother, and when that stay is withdrawn,
-lean upon a beloved wife.
-
-So ideally pure, and sweet, and tenderly religious has been the whole
-inception and carrying on and termination of this wedding, that Isaac
-and Rebekah have been remembered in the wedding ritual of Christian
-churches as models of a holy marriage according to the divine will.
-
-Though for nineteen years Rebekah was childless, yet retained she her
-husband’s love. This may have been a trial to Isaac, since the line of
-the blessing was to pass through him. That he thought much about it is
-evident, for, at length, he “entreated the Lord for his wife,” and his
-intercession was based upon a divine foundation in Jehovah’s promise.
-And, possibly, even Isaac had to be educated up to this point, namely,
-that the seed of promise must be sought from God, so that it should be
-regarded, not as the fruit of nature, but as the gift of divine grace.
-
-In due time Esau and Jacob were born, and they were twins, but with
-natures and characteristics marked more for their contrasts than
-similarity. Beyond the bare statement, “And the boys grew,” nothing is
-said of their childhood and youth--the formative periods of their lives.
-
-When they had grown to manhood’s estate, we are informed that “Esau
-was a cunning hunter, a man of the field; and Jacob was a plain man,
-dwelling in tents.” The free and easy life in the chase developed in
-Esau a robust appearance, and for that reason, and also “because he
-did eat of his venison,” Isaac loved Esau. Jacob is represented to
-us as of a more delicate make-up and naturally appealed more to the
-mother heart. “Rebekah loved Jacob.” From merely a parental standpoint,
-both were wrong. Even though the characteristics of these boys were
-wide apart, the parents should have been united in their love, and
-impartially discharged their duties, and let God, in his own good
-time, make His selection. But here, as in the lives of Abraham and
-Sarah, Isaac and Rebekah delayed the blessing God designed they should
-have, and brought sorrow into their own lives. It is evident that
-the ardent Rebekah, by her animated, energetic declarations, formed
-a very significant complement to Isaac, confiding more in the divine
-declarations as to her boys than Isaac did, and therefore better able
-to appreciate the deeper nature of Jacob. But when Isaac shows his
-preference for Esau to be the heir, the courageous woman forgets her
-vocation, and with artifice counsels Jacob to steal the blessing from
-Isaac--a transgression for which she had to atone in not seeing her
-favorite son after she sent him away, out of reach of his brother’s
-anger. She had only Esau left, and he must have made her feel that it
-was her partiality that had robbed him of what he prized most highly.
-His heathen wives had been a “grief of mind” to her. She said, in her
-diplomatic effort to get Jacob off to a place of safety, “I am weary of
-my life because of the daughters of Heth. If Jacob take a wife from the
-daughters of Heth, such as these which are the daughters of the land,
-what good shall my life do me?” Probably Esau did not mend matters by
-adding to his family the Ishmaeltish woman.
-
-Rebekah’s habit of managing affairs may be more common than we
-think. It is the fault of energetic souls. She loved Jacob with the
-passionate, tropical strength of her fervid heart. She would not trust
-God to give him what she believed he ought to receive. It is very hard
-for such as she to wait patiently for the Lord when His delays are
-developing faith.
-
-However, viewed from a human standpoint, her faith in the divine
-purposes was much more clear-sighted than that of Isaac. Consenting
-to be laid on the altar as a sacrifice to God, Isaac had the stamp
-of submission early and deeply impressed on his soul. Hence, in the
-spiritual aspect of his character, he was the man of patience, of
-acquiescence, of susceptibility, of obedience. Rebekah, on the other
-hand, was energetic, intensely active, self-confident, a most excellent
-manager, even tricky, but nevertheless capable and efficient. She had
-the faults which usually go with such traits of character. Taking
-things into her own hands, she even meddled with Providence.
-
-But was she not provoked to this act by Isaac himself? Isaac’s willful
-act does not consist alone in his arbitrary determination to present
-Esau with the blessing of the theocratic birthright, although Rebekah
-received that divine sentence respecting her children before their
-birth, and which, no doubt, she had mentioned to him, but the manner in
-which he intends to bless Esau. He arranges to bless him in unbecoming
-secrecy, without the knowledge of Rebekah and Jacob. The preparation
-of the venison, in its main point of view, is an excuse to gain
-time and place for the secret act. In this point of view, the act of
-Rebekah appears in a different light. His well-calculated prudence was
-skillfully caught in the net of Rebekah’s shrewdness.
-
-A want of divine confidence may be recognized through all his actions.
-Rebekah, however, has so far the advantage of him that she in her
-deception has the divine assurance that Jacob was the heir, while Isaac
-has only his human reason without any inward spiritual certainty.
-Rebekah’s error consists in thinking that she must direct divine
-Providence by means of human deception. The divine promise would have
-been fulfilled without her assistance. Of course, when compared with
-Isaac’s fatal error, she was right. Though she deceived him greatly,
-misled her favorite son, and alienated Esau from her, there was yet
-something saving in her action according to her intentions. For to Esau
-the most comprehensive blessing might have become only a curse. He was
-not fitted for it.
-
-Viewed from Rebekah’s point of view, the lesson for us is, we are not
-to do evil, that good may come. The sinful element in her act was the
-wrong application of her assurance of faith, for which she suffered,
-perhaps, many long years of melancholy solitude.
-
-Had this noble woman in White Raiment not erred she would not have been
-human. As a whole, she has a beautiful character--beautiful in its
-generous helpfulness, in its prudence, in its magnanimity, and in her
-theocratic zeal of faith.
-
-Here Rebekah obviously disappears from the stage of life. It has
-been conjectured that she died during Jacob’s sojourn in Padan-aram,
-whither she had sent him to escape the tragic consequences of her hasty
-conduct, for she is not mentioned when Jacob returned to his father,
-nor do we hear of her burial till it is incidentally mentioned by Jacob
-on his deathbed. She was buried in the cave of Machpelah, by the side
-of Sarah.
-
-After Jacob had obtained the theocratic birthright he fled from his
-father’s home in Beer-sheba to Padan-aram, or the city of Haran, in
-Mesopotamia. Haran was situated about four hundred and fifty miles
-north-east from Beer-sheba. If the young man walked thirty miles a day,
-for he performed this long journey over the mountains and through the
-desert on foot, it took him fifteen days. No doubt, as he drew near the
-well, before the city, he was footsore, dust-covered, homesick, and
-greatly depressed in mind, for the occasion of his sudden departure and
-the anger of his brother Esau were still fresh in memory.
-
-But what a quaint, picturesque scene of Oriental life is presented to
-our view. It is yet early evening. The shepherds, with their flocks,
-are moving from various points over the plain to one common centre.
-Three of the shepherds had already arrived, and Jacob salutes them,
-and asks, “My brethren, whence be ye?” And they answered, “Of Haran.”
-Then he inquired, “Know ye Laban?” They made reply, “We know him,”
-then, pointing to a shepherdess slowly leading her flock over the plain
-towards the well, said, “Behold Rachel, his daughter, cometh with the
-sheep.” While he was yet talking with the shepherds, Rachel drew near
-“with her father’s sheep.” Jacob saw his opportunity, for the great
-stone over the mouth of the well had not been removed, and, though it
-was the work of three men to remove the stone, he hastens to perform
-this task for the beautiful shepherdess alone, and does for her what
-his mother had done for Eliezer’s camels, watered her flock. Clearly,
-it was love at first sight. Rachel must have deeply impressed him. And
-what could have been her thoughts as she stood by her flock and saw
-this youth pour bucketfull after bucketfull into the stone troughs for
-her sheep? It was certainly an impressive introduction.
-
-The sheep watered, and before he made himself known, he stepped up
-to the bewitching shepherdess, and kissed her. This story of Rachel,
-the pretty shepherdess of the plains of Mesopotamia, who took with a
-glance the heart of the loving, homesick Jacob, and held it to the end
-of her days, has always had a peculiar interest, for there is that in
-it which appeals to some of the deepest feelings of the human heart.
-The beauty of Rachel, the deep love with which she was loved by Jacob
-from their first meeting by the well of Haran, when he showed to her
-the simple courtesies of the desert life, and kissed her and told
-her he was Rebekah’s son; the long servitude with which he patiently
-served for her, in which the seven years “seemed to him but a few days,
-for the love he had to her;” their marriage at last, after the cruel
-disappointment through the fraud which substituted the elder sister
-in the place of the younger; and the death of Rachel “in the way to
-Ephrath, which is Bethlehem,” when she had given birth to Benjamin,
-and had become still more endeared to her husband; his deep grief and
-ever-living regrets for her loss--these things make up a touching tale
-of personal and domestic history which has kept alive the memory of
-Rachel through all the long centuries down to the present time. Her
-untimely death has been likened to a “bunch of violets pulled up by
-the roots, with the soil clinging to them--their exquisite perfume
-reminding one of the leafy nook in which they grew.”
-
-What a mystery is love! We can not define it. It can only be unlocked
-by the key of experience. Love is not a product of the reason. It is
-the free play of the spiritual sensibilities in the possession of its
-object. And if human love is inexplicable, divine love is an ocean too
-deep for the plummet of man, and by far too broad to be bounded by the
-thought of the loftiest intelligence in the universe.
-
-Chaste human love is a beautiful thing, by which conjugal love is
-afterwards more and more strengthened and confirmed. And, in this scene
-at the well, we have emphasized the fact that virtuous maidens do not
-need to attend large, exciting assemblies or popular resorts, to get
-husbands. If they are true to themselves, they can safely trust God,
-who is able to give them pious, honorable and upright husbands.
-
-As soon as Rachel learned that Jacob was her father’s nephew, and that
-he was Rebekah’s son, “she ran and told her father.” When Laban heard
-Rachel’s story, he hastened to meet Jacob, and brought him to his house.
-
-After a short stay as the guest of the family, it seemed best to Laban
-that wages should be given to Jacob for his services, but instead of
-wages he desires Rachel, and, instead of service for an indefinite
-time, he promises a service of seven years. Jacob’s service, it is
-thought by some writers, represents the price which was usually paid
-for the wife. Doubtless, Rachel was worth to Jacob the years of service
-he paid, but doubtless then, as now, prices varied according to age and
-beauty, and in some Eastern countries the prices are higher than in
-others. The custom still exists. A man without means serves from three
-to seven years for his bride. To Jacob, these years of service seemed
-but a few days. His love for Rachel made his long service a delight to
-him. He was cheerful and joyful in hope.
-
-At the end of the years of service Laban made a great nuptial feast.
-These Oriental weddings last seven days. Doubtless Laban arranged this
-feast, the better to facilitate Jacob’s deception by the coming and
-going of guests, and the general bustle and noise characteristic of
-such occasions. The deception was also possible through the custom,
-namely, the bride was led veiled to the bridegroom and the bridal
-chamber. Laban probably believed, as to the base deception, that he
-would be excused, because he had already in view the concession of the
-second daughter, so Leah, the elder daughter, was substituted. The
-motive for this is not stated. Perhaps Laban recognized a skillful and
-useful shepherd in Jacob. He may also have acted from regard to his
-own interest, especially since he knew that Jacob possessed a great
-inheritance at home.
-
-The substitution of Leah for Rachel is the first retribution Jacob
-experienced for the deceitful practices of his former days. He had,
-through fraud and cunning, secured the place and blessing of Esau--he,
-the younger, in place of the elder. Now, by the same deceit, the elder
-is put upon him in the place of the younger. God has somehow so
-arranged the affairs of men, that what a man sows, that shall he also
-reap. Sin is often punished with sin.
-
-When Laban was asked for an explanation of his conduct, he replied that
-it was not the custom in his country to give the younger into marriage
-before the first-born, a bit of information he should have given Jacob
-when he first made suit for Rachel. His excuse does not justify in the
-least his deception, but there was, however, a sting for Jacob in his
-reply, namely, in the emphasis of the right of the first-born.
-
-There was, therefore, nothing left for Jacob but to give another seven
-years’ service for Rachel. So, at the end of the marriage week or
-feast of Leah, the second wedding followed, and the years of service
-were rendered afterwards. We do not know why Rachel was affectionately
-loved, while Leah held but an indifferent place in Jacob’s heart. But
-then there is no accounting for, or explaining, love. Leah, it is
-said, was “tender-eyed,” that is to say, weak-eyed. This, however,
-does not necessarily mean she was sore-eyed or blear-eyed, but simply
-they were not full, clear, and sparkling, not in keeping with the
-Oriental idea of beauty, though otherwise she might have been comely.
-But to an Oriental, black eyes, clear, lustrous, full of life and fire,
-especially, when in addition to all these, the eye is expressive,
-are considered the principal part of female beauty. Rachel was the
-fortunate possessor of all these charming qualities of Eastern beauty,
-and so must have charmed, captivated, and held Jacob in spite of all
-other obstacles.
-
-That Leah tried to win his affections is evident from what she says in
-connection with the birth of Reuben, her first born. “Now therefore,”
-she says, “my husband will love me.” No doubt, during the seven years
-that Jacob was in the home of Laban, her love for him became deep
-and strong, which had, no doubt, induced her to consent to Laban’s
-deception. So, after the birth of the first son, she hoped to win,
-through her child, Jacob’s love in the strictest sense. After the
-birth of the second, she hoped to be put on a footing of equality
-with Rachel, and to be delivered from her disregard. After the third
-one, she hoped at least for a constant affection. At the birth of the
-fourth, she looked entirely away from her surroundings to Jehovah by
-calling him Judah--praised be Jehovah.
-
-If Rachel obtained Jacob’s affections because of her beauty and
-loveliness, and he refused to bestow upon Leah that affectionate
-consideration for which she was grieving her life away, it may be a
-comfort to those who suffer as Leah did, to know that God does not look
-for beauty from man’s standpoint, and that the sweet graces of mind and
-heart go farther than personal charms, for He certainly conferred more
-honor upon her than He did upon Rachel. He gave her more children than
-to Rachel. She was also, through her posterity, the mother of Moses,
-David, John the Baptist, and the greatest honor of all, was the mother
-of our precious Lord Jesus Christ. Leah was not an idolator, so far as
-we know, while the beautiful Rachel was tainted with this abomination,
-and it seems to have clung to her posterity, for it was the tribe of
-Ephraim that led Israel in the sin of idol worship. So that while Leah
-may not have been as beautiful as her fair sister, she was more loyal
-to God, and doubtless was, on that account, so greatly honored of Him.
-
-But the fair, clear-eyed, beautiful Rachel, like the lovely Sarah
-and sprightly Rebekah, was barren and childless, and because of this
-became very much dejected, and exclaimed, “Give me children or else I
-die!” From this expression we are to understand, she would die from
-dejection. Doubtless this dejection led to the substitution of her maid
-Bilhah. Her jealous love for Jacob is overbalanced by her envy of her
-sister. The favored Rachel desired children as her own, at any cost,
-lest she should stand beside her sister childless. The ambition to be
-among the progenitors of the Messiah made Hebrew women eager to have
-children. Rachel was not willing to leave the founding of the people
-of God to her sister only, but wished also to become an ancestress, as
-well as Leah, but in very deed, not until Joseph’s birth, her very own,
-could she say, “Now God has taken away my reproach.”
-
-At length, after a service of twenty years or more, God called Jacob
-to return to his own people. Laban had been a hard master, not only to
-Jacob, but to his own daughters. “Are we not counted of him strangers?”
-said they in their conference with Jacob concerning the return. He
-had sold them as strangers, more as slaves, for the service of their
-husband. Hence they had nothing more to hope for from him, for this
-very price, that is, the blessing resulting from Jacob’s service, he
-had entirely consumed. The daughters had received no share of it. Hence
-it is evident that they speak with an inward alienation from their
-father, and are quite willing to go with Jacob to the land of promise.
-
-The time set for the departure was the feast of sheep-shearing.
-Either Laban had not invited Jacob to this feast, or Jacob took the
-opportunity of leaving, in order to visit his own flocks. As the
-sheep-shearing lasted several days, the opportunity was very favorable
-for his flight.
-
-“But Rachel had stolen the images,” the Penates or household gods,
-which were honored as guardians, and as oracles. From this incident we
-may infer that she was not altogether free from the superstitions and
-idolatry which prevailed in the land whence Abraham had been called,
-and which still, to some degree, infected even those families among
-whom the true God was known. It is thought she was actuated to steal
-them with the superstitious idea that her father, being prevented from
-consulting them as oracles, would not be able to pursue Jacob. This
-act, however, as also the well-planned and ready dexterity and presence
-of mind with which she concealed her theft, and prompt denial to her
-father, reveals a cunning which is far more befitting the daughter of
-Laban than the wife of the prudent patriarch.
-
-Jacob continued his journey without interruption until the fords of
-the Jabbok were reached. While at Mahanaim he sent messengers to
-Esau, with a view of bringing about a reconciliation with his grieved
-brother. When he reached the Jabbok the messengers returned and brought
-the alarming intelligence that Esau was coming to meet him, and four
-hundred men were with him. This greatly distressed Jacob, and led him
-to divide his family and his flocks, and to send them in bands before
-him. Once more, in a critical time, when he expected an attack from
-Esau, his discriminate regard for Rachel is again shown by placing Leah
-and her children in the place of danger, in advance of Rachel and her
-child.
-
-[Illustration: JACOB’S STRUGGLE AT THE JABBOK.]
-
-Having thus disposed of his family and his flocks, Jacob remains behind
-to pray. It was the great struggle of his life. And the burden of
-that midnight cry was, “Deliver me, I pray Thee, from the hand of my
-brother, from the hand of Esau; for I fear him, lest he will come and
-smite me, and the mother with the children.” At length the angel of the
-Lord said, “Let me go, for the day breaketh!” But Jacob, as if his life
-hung on the issue, which it doubtless did, replied, “I will not let
-Thee go, except Thou bless me!”
-
-God heard his prayer and delivered him out of the hands of his brother,
-Esau.
-
-As Jacob passed over the Jabbok “the sun rose upon him,” and he set
-forward on his journey a changed man.
-
-In due time Jacob reached the Jordan at Succoth, thence to Shechem, and
-then to Bethel. At each of these places he halted.
-
-It seems that for a considerable time after the return to Palestine,
-the images, or household Penates, which Rachel had stolen from her
-father, remained in the family, perhaps connived at by Jacob, till,
-on being reminded by the Lord of the vow which he had made at Bethel
-when he fled from the face of Esau, and being bidden of Him to erect
-an altar to the God who appeared to him there, Jacob felt the glaring
-impiety of thus solemnly appearing before God with the taint of
-idolatry cleaving to his beloved Rachel, said, “Put away the strange
-gods from among you.” After thus casting out the polluting things from
-his house, Jacob, at Bethel, amidst its sacred associations, received
-from God an emphatic promise and blessing.
-
-After his spirit had been purified and strengthened by communion
-with God, by the assurance of the divine love and favor, by the
-consciousness of evil put away and duties performed, it was, as he
-journeyed away from Bethel, that the chastening blow fell and Rachel
-died. Doubtless the blessings that came as a result of the cleansing
-and purging from idolatry at Bethel had their effect in bringing Rachel
-to a higher sense of her relation to that Jehovah in whom her husband,
-with all his faults of character, so firmly believed.
-
-Five miles south of Jerusalem, and a mile and a half from Bethlehem,
-in the way to Hebron, is a beautiful chapel, sacred to the memory of
-Rachel. This is the place where beautiful Rachel surrendered her own
-life for the life of her second son, whom she named Ben-oni (son of my
-pain). The wish she had uttered at Joseph’s birth, that God would give
-her another son, now, after a long period, perhaps sixteen or seventeen
-years, is at last realized.
-
-Rachel held Jacob’s love to the last, and even down to his old age he
-mourned her loss. The stone pillar which he set up at her grave is the
-first recorded instance of the setting up of a sepulchral monument;
-caves having been up to this time spoken of as the usual places of
-burial. The tomb of Rachel is one of the shrines which Mohammedans,
-Jews and Christians unite in honoring, and concerning which their
-traditions are identical. At the time of our visit, it happened to be
-the time of new moon, when the chapel was open and all lighted up with
-olive oil lamps, and the chapel and crypt filled with weeping women.
-The lamentations were real and sincere, and, had we remained very
-long, we should have wept out of very sympathy for the grief-stricken
-mourners of this princess of Israel. The thought that here this lovely
-woman in White Raiment sacrificed her own life for another was in
-itself depressing. This first mortuary monument, sacred to the memory
-of a great love and a great sorrow, has come down to us through more
-than three thousand years. One may see it “but a little to come to
-Ephrath.”
-
- “Tell me, ye winged winds,
- That round my pathway roar,
- Do ye not know some spot
- Where mortals weep no more?
- Some lone and pleasant dell,
- Some valley in the west,
- Where, free from toil and pain,
- The weary soul may rest?
- The loud wind dwindled to a whisper low,
- And sighed for pity as it answered, ‘No!’”
-
-Leah probably lived for some years after Jacob reached Hebron. Whether
-she ever found grace in his sight is not stated. However, in Jacob’s
-differences with Laban both Leah and Rachel appeared to be attached to
-him with equal fidelity, while later, in the critical moment, when he
-expected an attack from Esau, his discriminate regard for the several
-members of his family was again shown by his placing Rachel and her
-child hindermost, in the least exposed situation, Leah and her children
-next, and the two hand-maids, with their children, in front. Of her
-death nothing is said. From the expression, “There I buried Leah,”
-(Gen. xlix, 31), we are led to believe that she died at Hebron before
-Jacob went down into Egypt. She was buried in the family sepulchre,
-“in the field of Machpelah, which is before Mamre.” Since Hebron is
-only twenty-five miles from Rachel’s tomb, near Bethlehem, it is quite
-strange that Jacob did not bury his beloved Rachel in the family
-sepulchre, along with Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebekah, and Leah,
-and where he was himself finally buried.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-Womanhood During the Egyptian Bondage and in the Desert of Sinai.
-
- JOCHEBED--HER REMARKABLE COURAGE--THONORIS--HER COMPASSION--HEROIC
- LABORS SEEMINGLY UNREWARDED--ZIPPORAH, THE MIDIANITE
- SHEPHERDESS--GLORIFYING DAILY LABOR--AT A WAYSIDE INN--MIRIAM--HER
- SONG OF TRIUMPH AT THE RED SEA--HER AFFLICTION AT HAZEROTH--AN
- EVENTFUL LIFE.
-
-
-The history of the human race runs on from the tomb of Rachel for
-over four hundred years without bringing to our notice any woman in
-White Raiment until Jochebed, the mother of Moses, is reached. In the
-meantime, the dreams of Joseph are told, his wandering in the fields
-of Shechem, and the finding of his brethren in Dothan, the heartless
-transaction with the Midianites, who, in turn, sold Joseph into Egypt,
-his prison life followed by his elevation next to the throne and a
-seven years’ famine, when Jacob and his sons, as Abraham had done
-before them, went down into Egypt, the years of favor in the house of
-Pharaoh, and the bondage, bitter and hard, all are told. But, in spite
-of all, the suffering Israelites, because blessed of God, prospered and
-“increased abundantly, and multiplied, and waxed exceedingly mighty;
-and the land was filled with them.”
-
-The reigning Pharaoh became alarmed at this state of affairs, and, to
-repress the Israelites, “made their lives bitter with hard bondage,
-in mortar, and in brick, and in all manner of service in the field.”
-But, as a stream in a spring freshet bursts through every obstruction,
-so the Israelites overleaped every barrier thrown in their way by the
-Egyptian taskmasters. At length a decree was issued that every son born
-to the Israelites should be cast into the Nile.
-
-But there was at least one woman in the house of bondage who feared
-the Lord more than she feared Pharaoh. Her name was Jochebed, which
-means, whose glory is Jehovah. If ever a name had attached with it the
-characteristic of the person bearing it, it was Jochebed, the wife of
-Amram, and daughter of Levi. That the glory of this woman in White
-Raiment was Jehovah, is evident from the fact the hard circumstances in
-which she was placed by the command of Pharaoh could not make her lose
-faith in God. Others might obey the unwarranted and heartless, as well
-as wicked decree, she would not, for she believed it was better to obey
-God rather than man, and to this belief her faith was anchored, and
-held steady amid the awful wail of bereaved motherhood as it ascended
-into the ear of God from the fields of Goshen.
-
-Jochebed was already the mother of Miriam and Aaron, and, since Aaron
-was three years older than Moses, the decree that all Hebrew male
-children should be cast into the Nile could not have been in force at
-Aaron’s birth, or at least had not reached its dangerous climax. As a
-member of the house of Levi, Jochebed shows the daring and energetic
-boldness for which her tribe had become distinguished, and indicated
-the qualities needful for the future priesthood. That the child was
-so fair, she recognized in it as a good omen. Josephus traces this
-intuition of faith, which harmonized with the maternal feeling of
-complacency and desire to preserve his life, to a special revelation.
-The means of preservation chosen by Jochebed is especially attributed
-to her genius and courage. It was all the more daring, since in the use
-of it she seemed to have, from the outset, the daughter of Pharaoh in
-mind.
-
-Prompted by an heroic faith, this poor Hebrew slave woman, in the house
-of a cruel and heartless bondage, dared to disobey the royal decree,
-trusting in God to carry her through the perilous enterprise of saving
-the life of her well-favored child. The chrism of hot tears which
-fell on the babe’s forehead, set him apart to the tremendous task of
-leading up to nationhood a race of degraded slaves whose hands were
-horny with unpaid toil, whose faces had grown scowling and knotted
-under the overseer’s lash.
-
-[Illustration: THE ISRAELITES IN BONDAGE.]
-
-Jochebed held the boy hard against her heart when she found she could
-no longer hide him, and said, more to herself and God than to any human
-helper, “My baby shall not die.” The resolution once formed in the
-mother’s heart, the next task was to carry it into effect. Then came
-the gathering of the papyrus leaves, the getting of the bitumen, the
-building of the little ark, and the finding of the best place for it
-among the flags of the Nile.
-
-At length the little craft, with many a scalding tear mingled with the
-bitumen, was found waterworthy. Then, with many a prayer and heartache,
-and no small faith in the righteousness of her act, the dear child of
-promise, with many a passionate kiss, such as mothers only can give,
-was laid asleep in as soft a nest as the loving hands of mother could
-devise. Then the little craft, baby and all, was carried to the great
-river of Egypt, “and she laid it in the flags by the river’s brink.”
-Quickly the mother walked away, though her heart was crushed and
-bleeding, for how could she look upon her child if any disaster should
-overtake his small boat on the bosom of the mighty Nile? But her faith
-in God was sure. Her good sense had done its best. Her courage made her
-equal to facing the anger of the king; and she would leave the care of
-her little darling to the God of her fathers.
-
-But the mother-love could not wholly abandon the little craft to its
-fate, without at least knowing how it fared with the child. So, back
-a little from the river, where the tall flags formed a gracious shade
-over the little brother, and her body concealed in the rank grass, the
-large, bright eyes of Miriam were fixed on the babe’s hiding-place,
-and the swift feet of the sister were ready to run to tell the mother
-whatever might happen.
-
-Pretty soon the watchful eyes of Miriam saw a royal retinue issue from
-the palace gate, and as it drew near the river’s brink she discerned
-that it was Thonoris, the daughter of Pharaoh, and her maidens, come
-down to the Nile to bathe in the open stream, as was the custom of
-ancient Egyptians. As the princess and her maidens walked along the
-river’s side, she saw the little ark among the flags, and sent one of
-the maids to fetch it. And when she saw the child she had compassion on
-it, and said, “This is one of the Hebrew’s children.” But the eyes of
-Miriam, the faithful sister, closely watched the scene, and when the
-little ark was safely drawn to shore by the maids of Thonoris, she ran
-up to the Egyptian princess and said, “Shall I go and call to thee a
-nurse of the Hebrew women, that she may nurse the child for thee? And
-Pharaoh’s daughter said to her, Go. And the maid went and called the
-child’s mother.”
-
-[Illustration: MOSES RESCUED FROM THE NILE.]
-
-The compassion of the princess towards the beautiful child led her to
-adopt him; and when she did so, making him, therefore, prospectively
-an Egyptian, she did not need, we may well believe, to educate him
-secretly. The taking of the child into the royal household, doubtless
-rendered the cruel edict less severe, if not wholly inoperative.
-
-All this reads like a fairy tale, but there is no end of the wonders
-wrought by our God on behalf of those who trust His love and power.
-
-“And the child grew.” Of course it would under the watchful care of
-such a nurse. One can easily see how during those years in which
-Jochebed was nursing her boy as the adopted son of the Egyptian
-princess, she made the most of her opportunity. In a tongue not
-understood in the palace she taught the child of Him who should redeem
-the race. She held him loyal to the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
-Her instruction had been careful, thorough, and direct from her father,
-Levi, the son of Jacob; and she was true to her faith from her very
-heart’s core. So that, with the very life of his mother, the growing
-boy had drank in the Hebrew spirit.
-
-At first it must have been a surprise to the young heir to the Egyptian
-throne when his Hebrew nurse unfolded to him the secret of his descent.
-That while legally and formally he was the son of the Princess
-Thonoris, inwardly he was the son of another mother, and belonged to
-another race, not of the dominant, but of the servile, race; not a
-worldly, but a spiritual prince. Probably he had the usual struggle
-with self. It was no easy matter to lay aside the flattering prospect
-of one day sitting on the throne of Egypt, to forever renounce the
-glory and glitter of an earthly court, and to identify himself with the
-slave people whose lives were made bitter in all manner of service.
-Surely, Jochebed must not only have been a loving mother, but a wise
-spiritual teacher to thus gain the surrender of all that was dear to
-her child of the earthly life, that he might gain the heavenly. He must
-have been completely regenerated when he refused to be called the son
-of Pharaoh’s daughter, but chose to suffer affliction with the people
-of God. Only a personal knowledge of the Redeemer could have brought
-him to esteem the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures
-of Egypt.
-
-No better compliment could have been paid Jochebed than the fact that
-in that corrupt, magnificent, heathen court she was able to do her work
-so well. Her son’s flawless choice of the Divine will made him the
-greatest man, the Son of God excepted, ever veiled in human flesh. That
-was the best possible sign and seal of her capability and faithfulness.
-
-When her child had passed beyond the years of childhood, and, as a
-nurse, could no longer retain him, “she brought him unto Pharaoh’s
-daughter,” and Thonoris, with almost infinite care, completed the
-boy’s education by instructing him in all the wisdom of Egypt; hence
-Moses was prepared both negatively and positively for his life work.
-Positively by his great-hearted mother, Jochebed; negatively by the
-Egyptian princess Thonoris, thereby, by her own hand, brought up the
-deliverer and avenger of the oppressed Israelites.
-
-At this point Jochebed is lost to view. She drops out of history, and
-nothing more is known of her. Hers emphatically was a work of faith,
-for in all probability she died while Moses was under discipline in the
-land of Midian. Her people, for whom she had wrought so heroically,
-were still serving “with rigor” in building for Pharaoh the “treasure
-cities Pithom and Raamses.” The son from whom she had hoped so much
-as the crown prince of the land was in exile in the back side of the
-desert; yet her faith held steady as she said with her parting breath,
-“God will deliver His people. He saved Moses from the wrath of Pharaoh
-and from the reptiles of the Nile; He will yet bring him back to lead
-Israel out of this cruel bondage.”
-
-How many a mother has gone down to her grave in sorrow without
-realizing the fruit of her toil, perhaps broken-hearted, as Jochebed
-may have done, when she saw her son hastening into the desert to escape
-the vengeance which would surely have overtaken him for smiting the
-Egyptian. Doubtless she never again saw his face, and may have wondered
-to what purpose was all her labor. It is difficult to conceive of a
-grander purpose in motherhood than that of sending out into the world
-young men spiritually, morally and physically healthy, with correct
-principles and holy purposes; and it is one of the saddest spectacles
-in life when these preparations are cast aside by ungrateful or wayward
-acts. All human help is vain, her sorrow and her anguish are too deep
-to be reached by sympathy. God alone is her refuge. She is often at
-the throne of grace with strong cries and tears, and with a faith that
-will not shrink. Doubtless such were the last days of the brave, the
-courageous, the heroic Jochebed, as she saw the form of her beloved
-Moses disappear in the desert of Midian. But God honored her faith as
-no woman’s faith had ever been honored in the life and works of Moses,
-the great law-giver, and leader of Israel’s hosts out of the land of
-bondage.
-
- “Faithful, O Lord, Thy mercies are,
- A rock that can not move:
- A thousand promises declare
- Thy constancy of love.”
-
-But though Moses had fled from the face of Pharaoh because, in his
-effort to defend a Hebrew who was being smitten by an Egyptian, slew
-the oppressor, he had not gone into the land of Midian so far but His
-eye followed the young refugee.
-
-Away in the south-eastern part of Arabia, toward the close of what
-we may well believe to have been a long day’s travel through the
-burning sand of that arid country, the young refugee sat down under
-the grateful shade of a cluster of palm trees that flourished by the
-side of a well. As he sat there resting, possibly quite homesick, the
-daughters of Jethro, a Midianite sheik and priest, came with their
-father’s flock to the well to water them. The fact that it took seven
-of these daughters to lead the flock to the well, shows that the
-Midianite was wealthy. These maidens lowered their buckets into the
-well and then drew them up brimming full of water, and poured it out
-into the stone troughs. They did this again and again, while Moses was
-a silent observer. It does not appear that he in any way interrupted
-the work.
-
-But scarcely had the panting nostrils of the flocks begun to cool
-a little in the brimming troughs than some rough Bedouin shepherds
-came with their flocks and drove the maidens and their flock from the
-well. This was too much for Moses. His face began to color up, and
-his eyes flash with indignation, and all the gallantry of his nature
-was aroused. He naturally had a quick temper, as he demonstrated in
-the case of the Egyptian oppressing an Israelite, and as he showed
-afterward when he broke all the Ten Commandments at once by shattering
-the two granite slabs on which the law was written. Hence the harsh
-treatment of the girls sets him on fire. The injustice of these Bedouin
-shepherds was more than he could bear, and he came to the rescue of the
-maidens of the Midianite sheik. Driving the shepherds away, he told
-the daughters of Jethro to gather their flock once more and bring them
-again to the watering troughs. Here the beautiful character of Moses
-comes out, and shows that the careful training of his faithful mother
-had not been in vain. Though brought up as a prince in the court of
-Egypt, he takes hold of the water buckets and draws water from the
-well, and waters the immense flock which had taken seven maidens to
-drive to the well! What a sight it must have been to these daughters
-of the priest of Midian as they stood by and saw this brave, unselfish
-act. What wonder that Zipporah fell in love with such a young man?
-
-Hard as the task must have been, it was quickly finished and the flock
-early sheltered in the fold. So much so that Jethro asked of his
-daughters, “How is it that ye are come so soon to-day?” They answered,
-“An Egyptian delivered us out of the hand of the shepherds, and also
-drew water enough for us, and watered the flock.” Jethro further
-inquired, “Where is he? Why is it that ye have left the man?”
-
-We confess it was a somewhat ungrateful act on the part of these girls
-not to invite the young man to their father’s home, but it only shows
-that they were so modest as to be too bashful to make such an advance.
-
-So Moses was invited to the home of the Midianite sheik, and in due
-time Zipporah was given to him in marriage, and she became the mother
-of his two sons, Gershom and Eliezer.
-
-The Bible does not record much of Zipporah’s life, but, evidently
-from the fact that she was a shepherdess, she was industrious,
-notwithstanding the great wealth and influence of her father. What
-was the use of Zipporah’s bemeaning herself with work when she might
-have reclined on the hillside near her father’s tent, and plucked
-buttercups, and dreamed out romances, and sighed idly to the winds, and
-wept over imaginary songs to the brooks. But no. She knew that work
-was honorable, and that every girl ought to have something to do, and
-so she led her father’s flock to the fields, to the watering troughs,
-and to the safe shelter of the fold. In how many households are there
-young women without practical and useful employments? Many of them
-are waiting for fortunate and prosperous matrimonial alliance, but
-some lounger like themselves will come along, and after counting the
-large number of father Jethro’s sheep and camels will make proposal
-that will be accepted; and neither of them having done anything more
-practical than to chew chocolate caramels, the two nothings will start
-on the road of life together, every step more and more a failure.
-Not so with the daughter of the Midianite sheik. Moses found her at
-the well drawing water. And Zipporah soon learned that Moses could
-also draw water. Ye daughters of idleness, imitate Zipporah. Do
-something helpful. The reason that so many men now condemn themselves
-to unaffianced and solitary life is because they can not support the
-modern young woman--a thousand of them not worth one Zipporah. There
-needs to be a radical revolution among most of the prosperous homes
-of America, by which the elegant do-nothings may be transformed into
-practical do-somethings. Let useless women go to work and gather the
-flocks. The stranger at the well may prove to be as good a man as was
-Moses to Zipporah.
-
-Still further, watch this spectacle of genuine courage. No wonder when
-Moses scattered the rude shepherds he won Zipporah’s heart. Sense of
-justice fired his courage; and the world wants more of the spirit that
-will dare almost anything to see others righted. There are many wells
-where outrages are practiced, the wrong herd getting the first water.
-Those who have the previous right come in last, if they come it at all.
-Thank God we have here and there a strong man to set things right!
-
-This child of the desert, full of industry and energy, very naturally
-had a quick temper, and, for once at least, it came out in her life.
-Moses was on his way to Egypt, as the deliverer of Israel. Zipporah
-and sons set off to accompany him, and went part of the way. While
-stopping for the night at a wayside inn the Lord suddenly withstood
-Moses. It appears, for some reason, possibly because Zipporah opposed
-it, their sons, Gershom and Eliezer, had not been circumcised. And,
-since the neglect of this rite would cut them off from God’s covenanted
-people, the Lord suddenly afflicted Moses so that his life must have
-been despaired of by the wife and mother. In her distress, to save the
-life of her husband, she herself performs this rite. The expression,
-“took a sharp stone,” means a sharp stone-knife (more sacred than a
-metallic knife, on account of the tradition). Under the trying ordeal,
-and notwithstanding the life of her husband was still in the balance
-between life and death, she was unable to conceal her ill-humor, and
-charged him with being “a bloody husband.” Which may mean that the rite
-of his people was distasteful to her, and doubly so since she had to
-perform it with her own hand to save the life of Moses.
-
-It appears, probably on account of the performance of this rite upon
-their two sons, she had to return to her father’s house, as the
-children would not be in a condition to continue the journey into
-Egypt, and Moses had to perform the remainder of the way alone.
-
-The only other incident recorded in Zipporah’s life is the bringing
-of herself and her two sons to Moses by her father, when the host of
-Israel had reached the Peninsula of Sinai, after they had departed out
-of the land of Egypt.
-
-It has been suggested that Zipporah was the Cushite (A. V. Ethiopian)
-wife who furnished Miriam and Aaron with the pretext for their attack
-on Moses. (Num. xii, 1). The death of Zipporah is not mentioned, but
-undoubtedly it occurred before Moses took the Cushite to be his wife.
-
-It has also been thought that Jethro and his house, before his
-acquaintance with Moses, was not a worshipper of the true God. Traces
-of this appear in the delay which Moses had suffered to take place in
-respect to the circumcision of his sons. But the fact that Zipporah
-started from her home in Midian to accompany her husband upon his
-mission in Egypt, and of her joining him when he had reached the
-wilderness, upon his return, shows that she was in sympathy with his
-work, and, doubtless, if up to the time the Lord suddenly withstood
-Moses at the wayside inn, she was not fully in accord with him in her
-faith, that this incident fully established her in the true faith.
-There is a legend which, if not true, is characteristic of the priest
-of Midian. This Midrash tale relates that Jethro was a counselor of
-Pharaoh, who tried to dissuade him from slaughtering the Israelitish
-children, and consequently, on account of his clemency, was forced to
-flee into Midian, but was rewarded by becoming the father-in-law of
-Moses.
-
-The wife of so excellent and remarkable a man as Moses, and one who
-possessed so many womanly qualities as did this shepherdess whom Moses
-found by the well in Arabia, in the faithful discharge of her duties,
-deserves a place in the galaxy of Women in White Raiment.
-
-The hospitality, freehearted and unsought which Jethro at once extended
-to the unknown, homeless wanderer, on the relation of his daughters
-that he had watered their flock, is a picture of Eastern manners no
-less true than lovely, and gives us a fine view of the quaint habits
-and honest simplicity of the Oriental people.
-
-We now pass to the daughter of Jochebed, namely, Miriam. She first came
-to our notice when the little ark of Moses was placed among the flags
-of the Nile. Her mother set her to watch the little craft as it floated
-on the bosom of the great river. When the princess Thonoris, Pharaoh’s
-daughter, discovered the child and sent her maid to rescue him from
-his perilous surroundings, Miriam, then probably a young girl, appeared
-before the Egyptian princess, and asked if she should call a nurse for
-the child. In reply to this question, Thonoris said to her she might
-find for her a nurse. And Miriam hastened to the home of her parents,
-“and called the child’s mother.”
-
-This act shows that Miriam was not only quick-witted, but had the
-courage to carry her convictions into effect. Though very human, as
-fully demonstrated in after years, she was faithful to her mother when
-she watched the boat woven of river plants and made water-tight with
-asphaltum, carrying its one passenger. And was she not very courageous
-and did she not put all the ages of time and of a coming eternity under
-obligation when she defended her helpless brother from the perils of
-the Nile? She it was that brought that wonderful babe and its mother
-together, so that he was reared to be the deliverer of his nation. What
-a garland for faithful sisterhood!
-
-What part Miriam took in the care of her illustrious brother while in
-the arms of his mother-nurse, we are not told, but we may well believe
-her sisterly love was strong and unwavering during the years while the
-precious charge was in the care of the mother.
-
-But there was a long period of eighty years between the infancy of
-Moses and his return from the desert of Midian, so that the clear-eyed
-and sprightly girl had grown away from the buoyancy of youth during the
-years of his exile, and must have been nearly, if not quite, a hundred
-years old, when God’s chosen people were led out of the iron furnace
-of bondage, a fact we must not lose sight of in the brief narrative
-of this noble woman in White Raiment. Her age may, in part at least,
-account for the high position given her. “The sister of Aaron,” is her
-biblical distinction which she never lost. In Numbers xii, 1, she is
-placed before Aaron, and in Micah vi, 4, reckoned as one of the three
-deliverers of God’s chosen people, “I sent before thee Moses and Aaron
-and Miriam.” Hence it is quite evident that she had no small part in
-the redemption of the house of Israel from the land of oppression.
-Whether or not the prejudices of that day gave her full honor, the Lord
-admitted her to the triumvirate of deliverance, the three children of
-the brave, faithful Jochebed.
-
-She was also the first person in her father’s house, and the first
-woman in the history of God’s people to whom the prophetic gifts
-are directly ascribed. “Miriam the prophetess,” is her acknowledged
-title in Exodus xv, 20. She stood, as the leader of Hebrew women,
-appropriately by the side of the future conductor of the religious
-service.
-
-[Illustration: MIRIAM’S SONG OF TRIUMPH.]
-
-In the song of triumph which the children of Israel sang after their
-passage of the Red Sea, Miriam, with cymbal in hand, led the women in
-their part of the glad song of deliverance. It does not appear how far
-the Hebrew women joined in the song, that is, the part led by Moses,
-but in the antiphony, Miriam repeats the opening words, in the form
-of a command to the women, saying, “Sing ye to Jehovah, for he hath
-triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider hath He thrown into the
-sea.”
-
- “Sound the loud timbrel o’er Egypt’s dark sea!
- Jehovah has triumphed, His people are free!
- Sing, for the pride of the tyrant is broken;
- His chariots, his horsemen, all splendid and brave;
- How vain was their boasting! the Lord hath but spoken,
- And chariots and horsemen are sunk in the wave.
-
- “Sound the loud timbrel o’er Egypt’s dark sea!
- Jehovah has triumphed, His people are free!
- Praise to the Conqueror, praise to the Lord!
- His word was our arrow, His breath was our sword.
- Who shall return to tell Egypt the story
- Of those she sent forth in the hour of her pride?
- For the Lord hath looked out from His pillar of glory,
- And all her brave thousands are dashed in the tide.
- Sound the loud timbrel o’er Egypt’s dark sea!
- Jehovah has triumphed, His people are free!”
-
-Miriam must have been exempt from the infirmities of age to a
-remarkable degree, to be able at her advanced years to lead the host of
-Hebrew women and maidens in the music and songs of triumph and general
-rejoicings over the mighty deliverance out of the hand of Pharaoh on
-the farther shores of the Red Sea. The victory, however, was such a
-marked one, and the deliverance so great as to cause old age, for the
-time being, to be swallowed up in the youth of praise and thanksgiving.
-
-Taking up their line of march from the shores of the Red Sea, we do not
-learn anything farther concerning Miriam until Hazeroth is reached.
-Here she seems to have been the instigator of an insurrection against
-Moses. In some respects it must have been grievous to him, all the more
-so, from the fact that Aaron had also suffered himself to be carried
-away by his sister’s fanaticism. By virtue of their office as prophet
-and prophetess, in the minds of the people, they held almost equal rank
-with Moses.
-
-The occasion of this insurrection was a marriage which Miriam regarded
-as objectionable, though, notwithstanding, she had the example of
-Joseph, who married an Egyptian woman, before her, and which marriage
-did not prove to be antitheocratic. Moses had married a Cushite. It is
-true the prohibition to marry with the daughters of other than their
-own people had special reasons of religious self-preservation, and for
-that reason the High Priest was allowed to marry only a Hebrew virgin,
-but that was a limitation belonging to his symbolic position. The
-prophetic class, on the other hand, had the task of illustrating the
-greatest possible letting down of legal restraint. The union of Moses
-with this Cushite may have symbolized the future calling of the Gentile
-nations, a sort of first fruit, as Rahab and Ruth later on proved to
-be, and it offers a remarkable parallel that the next greatest man of
-the law, Elijah, lived for a considerable time as the table companion
-of a heathen widow of Zarephath.
-
-It is manifest that Moses endured in silence the domestic obliquity
-which his sister drew down upon him, patiently committing his
-justification to God, until her would-be pious zeal assumed a more
-alarming aspect. Since Aaron had made common cause with Miriam, Aaron,
-who wore the breast-plate, Urim and Thummim, and Miriam, who, as a
-prophetess, had already led the chorus of the women of Israel, must
-have held high places in the minds of the people; hence, when they
-raised the question, “Hath the Lord indeed spoken only by Moses? hath
-he not spoken also by us?” there is no telling where this sedition of
-Miriam and Aaron might have ended, had not the Lord Himself taken it
-promptly in hand.
-
-But the Lord heard that complaint, which implied that the prophetic
-gift was exercised by them also, that they were prophets, vested with
-authority, and if they even suffered Moses, since his objectionable
-marriage, to remain in the prophetic college, they could at least
-outvote him. So Moses, Aaron and Miriam were suddenly cited to the
-tabernacle of the congregation. When the three presented themselves at
-the place appointed, the Lord came down in a cloud at the door of the
-tabernacle, and “called Aaron and Miriam” apart from Moses, and there,
-at the door of the tabernacle, administered a stern rebuke to both of
-them. They had lived with Moses so long, and yet knew so little of his
-exalted position. As a brother he stood too near to them, and they
-themselves, with their self-consciousness, stood too much in their own
-light.
-
-“And the cloud departed from off the tabernacle.” As Aaron saw the
-cloud lifting up and moving off, he must have been inwardly crushed
-at this punishment. The fires on his altar went out, the pillar of
-smoke no longer mounted up as a token of grace, the divine presence
-was withdrawn, and it was as if an interdict of Jehovah lay on the
-services of the Sanctuary. But this was not all. “Miriam became
-leprous, white as snow.” There seems to be a singular connection
-between the punishment of Aaron as the representative of the Church,
-and Miriam, who had thought herself and Aaron above Moses, snow-white
-in righteousness, while she looked down on him as unclean. She would
-dominate the Church, for she dominated Aaron, and now, as a leper, she
-must be excluded from the Church.
-
-When Aaron looked upon his afflicted sister, though High Priest,
-the Lord having withdrawn the symbol of his favor from the altar of
-sacrifice, was as helpless as Miriam, and he now implores Moses, as his
-superior, to intercede. Here only the spiritual high priesthood of a
-divine compassion can deliver the helpless High Priest himself and his
-unfortunate associate in the prophetic office. In his appeal, Aaron
-almost speaks as if Moses could heal the leprosy. Moses, however,
-understood it as an indirect request to intercede for Miriam.
-
-“And Moses cried unto the Lord, saying: Heal her now, O God, I beseech
-thee.” The Lord granted the request, accompanied with a sharp reproof,
-“If her father had but spit in her face, should she not be unclean
-seven days?” The figurative expression compares her, who desired to be
-the prophetic regent of the nation, to a dependent maiden in whose face
-her father had spit on account of unseemly behavior. Such a one must
-conceal herself seven days on account of her shame. The same treatment
-was dictated for Miriam, and she was “shut out from the camp seven
-days.” The silent grief of the nation must have been profound, for the
-people remained encamped at Hazeroth during the seclusion of Miriam,
-and not until she was pronounced clean, and the prescribed sacrifices
-required on her reception back again, were made, did the Lord’s host
-depart from their encampment. All these are proofs of the high place
-she held in the affections of the people.
-
-This sad stroke, and its most gracious removal, is the last public
-event of Miriam’s life. She died toward the close of the wilderness
-wanderings at Kadesh, and was buried there. According to Jewish
-tradition, the burial took place with great pomp on a mountain in the
-edge of the wilderness of Zin, and the mourning of the whole camp of
-Israel lasted for thirty days, Jerome tells us that her tomb was shown
-near Petra.
-
-According to Josephus she was the wife of Hur and the grandmother of
-Bezaleel, the inspired artisan of the Tabernacle. According to the
-Targum, the miraculous supply of water at Rephidim was given in her
-honor. It failed when she died at Kadesh, and was restored only at the
-second stroke of Moses’ rod, and later, by the digging of the princes
-with their staves of office, while the people sang a hymn of praise and
-faith.
-
-These traditions are of but little value except to show in what high
-esteem she was held.
-
-A long, beautiful, eventful, inspired life--one of patient waiting,
-intense activity, deep enthusiasm and triumphant faith--transformed
-the brave little slave girl into the mighty princess and leader of the
-Lord’s hosts. But for the one assumption of unwarranted authority at
-Hazeroth, her record would have come down to us untarnished.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-Womanhood During the Conquest and the Theocracy, or Rule of the Judges.
-
- RAHAB--GREAT GRACE FOR GREAT SINNERS--THE FALL OF JERICHO--THE
- COVENANT REMEMBERED--DEBORAH--HER REMARKABLE COURAGE--SISERA’S IRON
- CHARIOTS BROKEN--THE DAUGHTER OF JEPHTHAH--HER LOVING DEVOTION
- AND SACRIFICE--THE STORY OF NAOMI--ORPAH’S KISS--THE LOVING
- RUTH--GLEANING AMONG THE REAPERS--HER RICH REWARD--HANNAH--HER
- CONSECRATION--YEARLY VISITS TO SHILOH--STITCHING BEAUTIFUL THOUGHTS
- INTO SAMUEL’S COAT--HER BEAUTIFUL LIFE.
-
-
-After the death of Miriam at Kadesh, on the borders of Zin, and the
-death of Aaron on Mount Hor, and of Moses on lofty Pisgah, Joshua “sent
-out of Shittem two men to spy secretly, saying, Go, view the land, even
-Jericho. And they went, and came into an harlot’s house, named Rahab,
-and lodged there.”
-
-The occupation of this woman has called out much comment, and many
-attempts have been made to clear her character of the stains of vice
-by affirming that she was only an inn-keeper, and not a harlot. No
-doubt there is much truth in this statement, for we can not entertain
-the thought that two pure-minded young men sent out by a leader like
-Joshua would pass by an inn and purposely seek an house of ill repute.
-It is also possible that to a woman of the age in which she lived,
-such a calling may have implied a far less deviation from the standard
-of morality than it does with us, with nearly two thousand years of
-Christian teaching. We must not forget that Rahab was a heathen; and
-the heathen knew very little of the simplest principles of truth and
-purity. In the first chapter of Paul’s Epistle to the Romans he gives a
-life picture of pagan morals. Even among the polished Greeks, loyalty
-to their religion made personal purity impossible. The Canaanites were
-so vile that, in the emphatic language of Scripture, the land vomited
-them out. The glimpse we catch of Lot’s neighbors may show in what a
-cesspool of vice Rahab was brought up. But even if we judge this woman
-by our modern standards, and admit that she was all that is implied in
-the opprobrious term, the fact that she is listed among God’s elect
-women shows the wondrous power of divine grace. God can save a great
-sinner just as easy as a small one. Notwithstanding she carried the
-double disability, that of being a heathen and a great sinner, her
-story is told in full. She has honorable mention by the Apostle James
-as an illustration of the works that show strong faith; and by the
-spirit of inspiration in the Epistle to the Hebrews, giving her a
-place among the mighty heroes and heroines who wrought marvels through
-confidence in God.
-
-At the time when the Israelites were encamped in Shittem, ready to
-cross the Jordan and enter the land of promise, Jericho was the
-strongest fortified city in Canaan, and, as the key to Western
-Palestine, commanded the two mountain passes which led into the land
-that was to be possessed. It was to be taken; but how? Joshua sent two
-of his most trusted men to spy out the land, remembering, no doubt with
-much trepidation, the failure of forty years before, which made them go
-back and die in the desert.
-
-The life of the spies, the success of the enterprise, and the courage
-their report would give the Israelites, all turned on the faith and
-skill of Rahab. She saved to God’s people the battle they had lost
-forty years before. No wonder that Hebrew writers have thrown the
-glamor of romance over her story.
-
-Her house was situated on the wall, probably near the city gate, so as
-to be convenient for persons coming in and going out of Jericho. She
-seems not only to have kept an inn for wayfaring men, but also to have
-been engaged in the manufacture of linen and the art of dyeing, for
-which the Phœnicians were early famous, since we find the flat roof of
-her house covered with stalks of flax, put there to dry, and a stock
-of scarlet or crimson line in her house, a circumstance which, coupled
-with the mention of Babylonish garments as among the spoils of Jericho,
-indicates the existence of a trade in such articles between Phœnicia
-and Mesopotamia. It also appears she had a father and mother, brothers
-and sisters, who, if they were not living in the same house with her,
-were dwelling in Jericho.
-
-Traders coming from Mesopotamia, or Egypt to Phœnicia, would frequently
-pass through Jericho, situated as it was near the fords of the Jordan,
-and, according to the customs of the times, these travelers would seek
-a public inn.
-
-These men, coming and going, would naturally enough carry the news of
-current events with them. Rahab therefore had opportunity to be well
-informed with regard to the events of the Exodus. As we learn from her
-own story, she had heard of the passage through the Red Sea, of the
-utter destruction of Sihon and Og, and of the irresistible progress
-of the Israelitish host. The effect upon her mind had been what one
-would not have expected in a person of her way of life. It led her to
-a firm faith in Jehovah as the true God, and to the conviction that He
-purposed to give Canaan to the Israelites. She may have thought long
-and deeply on these strange events, and, possibly, her better nature
-may have loathed the vices of her people, in which she herself had
-become involved, and longed for the pure worship of the wonder-working
-God of whom she had heard.
-
-When, therefore, the two spies sent out by Joshua, who must have been
-men of moral character and worthy of so important a commission, came to
-Jericho, no doubt they were divinely directed to her house, who alone,
-of the whole population, was friendly to their cause. Her heart, at all
-events, was prepared to receive the message with which they intrusted
-her, and she gave them the information they sought. And such faith had
-she in the purposes of God to give the land to the hosts of Joshua that
-she made a covenant with these representatives of his army, to save her
-and her family when the city fell into their hands.
-
-The coming of these spies, it seems, was quickly known, and the king of
-Jericho, having received information of it while at supper, according
-to Josephus, sent that very evening to require her to deliver them up.
-It is very likely that, her house being a public one, some one who
-resorted there may have seen and recognized the spies, and at once
-reported the matter to the authorities. But not without awakening
-Rahab’s suspicions, and she was courageous enough to hide them under
-the flax on the roof, and throw the officers off their suspicion, while
-she let the Hebrews down over the wall and hurried them away to the
-mountains, to stay till the hunt was given up and the guards had come
-back from the fords of the Jordan, thus allowing them to escape across
-the river to their camp.
-
-For her kindness to them she had asked that when the city should be
-taken, her life and the lives of all that belonged to her should be
-spared, and it was agreed that she should hang out her scarlet line at
-the window from which the spies had escaped.
-
-The event proved the wisdom of her precautions. The pursuers returned
-to Jericho after a fruitless search, and the spies reached the
-encampment of Israel in safety. The news they brought of the terror of
-the king and citizens of Jericho doubtless inspired the Israelitish
-host with fresh courage, and, within three days of their return, the
-passage of the Jordan was effected.
-
-No one could have been more interested than Rahab during those eventful
-days. Perhaps, from the window of her dwelling on the city wall, she
-saw the waters of the Jordan piled on each other, and stretching back
-over the plain as far as the eye could see--a sight she had never
-seen, and equal to the dividing of the Red Sea. Toward evening she saw
-the advance guards of Joshua’s host, and then the white-robed priests
-bearing the ark, followed by the army and people, and encamping at
-Gilgal, within two miles of Jericho, and in full view of the city.
-
-After having carefully reviewed her household to assure herself that
-her father and mother, brothers and sisters, were all there--for this
-was the covenant she had made with the spies--she probably seated
-herself at the window from which hung the scarlet cord, to watch the
-strange procession that marched around the city seven days. Each
-morning it came filing up from Gilgal in solemn silence, except as the
-white-robed priests blew their trumpet-blasts.
-
-No one can tell what risk Rahab took, or what indignities she suffered
-in convincing her relatives that they must be in the covenanted place
-when the city fell. On her part it was a beautiful faith. Perhaps she
-recounted to them the ten awful plagues that fell on the Egyptians,
-the deliverance of His people from the house of bondage, the disaster
-to Pharaoh and his army at the Red Sea, the opening of streams in the
-desert, the nightly dewfall of food, the lofty column of cloud that
-shaded and led by day, and the pillar of fire that kept them safe from
-night enemies, human and bestial. All this she told to the assembled
-household as the ground of her faith, with which she would inspire
-them. No doubt this woman of Jericho, sick at heart on account of her
-own past life, and the wickedness of her city, thirsted for a fuller
-knowledge of the true and holy God whose name she hardly dared to take
-on her sin-polluted lips, and yet, strange as it may seem, she had the
-strength and honesty to succeed in the preaching of righteousness to
-her friends.
-
-Day after day she watched the strange procession marching around the
-closely shut and guarded city. Joshua and the soldiers were at its
-head; then came the priests with their trumpets, and after them the Ark
-of the Covenant, hid from view with coverings, and carried reverently
-on men’s shoulders, while soldiers guarded it from real dangers.
-
-Jericho breathed a little more freely when it saw that the strange
-desert people marched around the city day after day without striking a
-blow; but Rahab’s faith held steady, and the scarlet cord swung from
-her window. That cord may have meant to her the blood of the Redeemer
-cleansing from sin. No doubt, like Moses, she knew the meaning of the
-“reproach of Christ.”
-
-The seventh day she was found early at her window, with a sense of
-completeness in her obedience and faith. Again the Hebrews filed forth
-from their camp and marched around the city; but this time they kept
-on till they had gone around the wall six times. The seventh round,
-the voice of the old captain at the head of the host rang along the
-line--“Shout! for Jehovah hath given you the city.”
-
-[Illustration: THE FALL OF JERICHO.]
-
-Before Rahab fully realized the meaning of this strange command, her
-ears were filled with the crash of falling walls. In the dust and din,
-the cries, the shrieks, the terror, but little could be distinctly
-remembered, only that the desert soldiers who were taking the town were
-leading her and her kindred forth to a place of safety.
-
-The narrator adds, “and she dwelleth in Israel unto this day,” meaning,
-the family of which she was reckoned the head, continued to dwell among
-the Lord’s people. May not the three hundred and forty-five “children
-of Jericho,” mentioned in Ezra ii, 34, and “the men of Jericho” who
-assisted Nehemiah in rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem, have been the
-descendants of her kindred?
-
-As regards Rahab herself, we learn from Matt, i, 5, that she became
-the wife of Salmon the son of Naasson, and the mother of Boaz, the
-grandfather of Jesse. It has been conjectured that Salmon may have
-been one of the spies whose life she saved, and that gratitude for so
-great a benefit led to their marriage. But, however this may be, it
-is certain that Rahab became the mother of the line from which sprang
-David, and eventually Christ.
-
-Distasteful as it may be to goody-good people, the fact remains that
-Rahab believed God, and when He delivered her out of her heathen
-surroundings, she entered upon a pure life. Whom God pardons, He
-justifies. Whom he justifies, He brings to that relation with Himself
-that would have been held if the sin had never been committed. He does
-not doom man or woman to life-long penance for sins that have been
-washed away by the blood of the Lamb.
-
-It is not accidental that Matthew traces the Saviour’s genealogy
-through four women, namely Thamar, Rachab, Ruth, and Bathsheba, who
-were not of the Israelitish stock, three of whom were of doubtful
-morals, and one, Rachab, who carried a double disability. Christ came
-to save humanity, and that He might be an all-sufficient Saviour, He
-abased Himself--took us at our worst--that no human soul, however sunk
-in sin, might despair. And Rahab the harlot was transformed into Rahab
-the saint, cleansed and purified, and clothed in White Raiment.
-
-From the thrilling incidents just related, the history of God’s chosen
-people runs on for a hundred years or more before Deborah comes to view
-on the stage of life. In the meantime Joshua had led the Israelitish
-hosts to victory, had subdued the several kings, and divided the
-land among the tribes. Then came years of rest and prosperity, and,
-strange to say, a turning away from the Author of all their blessings.
-These departures from their national faith brought down upon them the
-judgments of God.
-
-The Israelites were now ruled by judges, and at the time Deborah comes
-to our notice, Barak seems to have been the executive head of the
-nation.
-
-Deborah was probably a woman of the tribe of Ephraim. Her tent was
-spread under the palm-tree between Ramah and Bethel in Mount Ephraim,
-and she was a prophetess, in whom was combined both poetry and
-prophecy. Deborah stands before us in strong contrast with the customs
-and prejudices of her time. God’s people were being oppressed by the
-Canaanites. In the midst of this great national crisis she was called
-to stand at the head both of statesmanship and the terrible exigencies
-of war.
-
-Sisera, the general of Jabin’s army, with nine hundred iron war
-chariots, and a multitude had assembled in the western extremity of
-the great plain of Jezreel, near the brook Kishon that flows along the
-northern base of Mount Carmel. Barak, the executive head, was either so
-timid or apprehensive that the campaign would fail, and thus fasten the
-tyrant’s chain yet more strongly, that the people looked to Deborah for
-judgment. She tried to arouse Barak’s courage. She even appealed to the
-prejudices that were strong in those times, namely, that the victory
-would be given to a woman if he refused to go. But in vain. He would
-not move without her. She knew, far better than he, that the battle was
-not theirs, but God’s. The Lord alone could give victory. Faith was
-easier to her than to Barak, for she had the spiritual insight that
-knows the utter nothingness of human help.
-
-For twenty years God’s people had been oppressed by their enemies.
-At last they had repented of the sins that made necessary their
-captivity, and the Lord had inspired Deborah to rally them to resist
-their oppressors. Perhaps Barak hesitated, because, viewed from a human
-standpoint, he may have felt the utter inadequacy of the Hebrew army
-to cope with the Syrians and their nine hundred iron war chariots. But
-just there lies the secret of all success. Only when we are weak, are
-we strong. This is the victory, even our faith. We have not that faith
-till we get to the end of our own resources and trusts.
-
-But while Deborah put Barak at the head of the army, she bravely stood
-by him with her counsels, her prayers, her faith, and her wholesome
-reproof, for Deborah was a practical and sensible woman. Her name
-signifies “the bee,” and she was well provided with the sting as well
-as the honey, and knew how to stir up Barak by wholesome severity as
-well as encourage him by holy inspiration. He is a very foolish man who
-refuses to be helped by the shrewd intuitive wisdom of a true woman,
-for while her head may not be so large, its quality is generally of
-the best; and her conclusions, though not reasoned out so elaborately,
-generally reach the right end by intuitions which are seldom wrong.
-Woman’s place is to counsel, to encourage, to pray, to believe, and
-pre-eminently to help. This was what Deborah did.
-
-Barak, however, was not always weak. As soon as he had recovered
-himself from the surprise of the unexpected call to lead the little
-army of ten thousand against the myriads of Sisera, he consented on
-condition that the courageous Deborah go with him. By this timidity he
-lost not a little of the honor that he might have won, and his sharp
-and penetrating leader plainly told him that the victory should not be
-wholly to his credit, for God should deliver Sisera into the hands of a
-woman; and so there were really two women in this struggle for liberty,
-and Barak was sandwiched in between them. With Deborah in front, and
-Jael in the rear, and Barak in the midst, even poor, weak Barak became
-one of the heroes of faith who shine in the constellation of eternal
-stars, upon which the Holy Spirit has turned the telescope of the
-eleventh chapter of Hebrews.
-
-How the inspiring faith of Deborah must have nerved Barak for heroic
-action. Her message to him is all alive with the very spirit and
-innermost essence of the faith that counts the things that are not
-as though they were. “Up,” she cries, as she rouses him by a trumpet
-call from his timorous inactivity; “for this is the day,” she adds,
-as she shakes him out of his procrastination, “in which the Lord hath
-delivered Sisera into thine hand.” She goes on to say, as she reckons
-upon the victory as already won, “Is not the Lord gone out before
-thee?” She concludes, as she commits the whole matter into Jehovah’s
-hands, and bids him simply follow on and take the victory that is
-already given.
-
-Is it possible for faith to speak in plainer terms, or language to
-express with stronger emphasis the imperative mood or the present tense
-of that victorious faith, for which nothing is impossible?
-
-Again, we have here the lesson of mutual service. This victory was
-not all won by any single individual, but God linked together as He
-loves always to do, many co-operating instruments and agents in the
-accomplishment of His will. There was Deborah representing the spirit
-of faith and of prophecy. There was Barak representing obedience
-and executive energy. There were the people that willingly offered
-themselves; the volunteers of faith. There were the yet nobler hosts
-of Zebulun, and Naphtali, that jeoparded their lives unto the death,
-the martyrs who are the crowning glory of every great enterprise. And
-there was Jael, the poor heathen woman away out on the frontiers of
-Israel, who gave the finishing touch, and struck the last blow through
-the temples of the proud Sisera, while high above all were the forces
-of nature, and the unseen armies of God’s providence; for the stars in
-their courses fought against Sisera, and the flood of the Kishon rolled
-down in mountain torrents and swept the astonished foe away.
-
-Sisera’s iron chariots were broken and scattered; but his will and
-prowess would soon have another army in the field, more terrible than
-the first. To answer fully the faith that took hold of God’s strength,
-the Canaanitish general must die. But not by the hand of Barak. His
-wavering faith had forfeited that honor. That last act which should
-bring victory to the army of Israel would be performed through the
-courage of a woman. The woman who was to complete the deliverance was
-the wife of an Arab sheik, of a family descended from Jethro, Moses’
-father-in-law.
-
-The tribe of Jael and of her husband, Heber, was encamped under the
-“Oak of the Wanderers.” These Arabs were on good terms with both
-Hebrews and Syrians; but Jael must have had the spiritual sense to
-see that the Lord had taken in hand the freeing of Israel, and she
-must use the opportunity to further His plans. So when Sisera left his
-unmanageable chariot and escaped from the battle on foot, he came to
-her tent worn out with the fatigue of the fight and flight, and she
-gave him the hospitality for which he begged; but while he was in the
-deep sleep of exhaustion, she drove a tent pin into his temple. His
-death made impossible the rallying of the host against God’s people.
-Better far that one man should die, than that thousands of both Hebrews
-and Syrians should fall on the battlefields of prolonged warfare.
-
-Jael has honorable mention in Deborah’s superb song of triumph. Stanley
-says of that pæan of victory: “In the song of Deborah we have the only
-prophetic utterance that breaks the silence between Moses and Samuel.
-Hers is the one voice of inspiration (in the full sense of the word)
-that breaks out in the Book of Judges.”
-
-Jael is the only woman mentioned in the Bible who ever took a human
-life. We confess that the exploit seems unwomanly, but we must not
-forget there is no sex in right or wrong-doing, though it may be long
-before we can rid ourselves of the habit of requiring a higher morality
-in a woman than in a man.
-
-In this heroic effort on the part of Deborah to throw off the yoke of
-a cruel oppressor, we see the curse of neutrality, and the pitiful
-spectacle, which seems always to be present, of the unfaithful,
-ignoble and indifferent ones who quietly looked on while all this
-was happening, and not only missed their reward, but justly received
-the curse of God’s displeasure and judgment. And so, in the Song of
-Deborah, we hear of Reuben’s enthusiastic purposes, but does nothing.
-We see her fiery scorn for those who strayed among the bleatings of
-the sheepfolds, rather than the trumpet of the battle. We see her
-sarcasm strike the selfish men of Gilead who abode beyond Jordan; the
-careless Danites who remained in their ships, and men of Asher who,
-secure in their naval defences, stayed away up yonder on the seashore,
-and took refuge in their ports and inland rivers, while, above all the
-echoes of her denunciations, rings out the last awful curse against the
-inhabitants of Meroz, a little obscure city that probably had taken
-refuge in its insignificance, because its inhabitants had refused to
-come up to the help of the Lord against the mighty.
-
-Finally, this scene is a pattern page from God’s book of remembrance.
-Some day we shall read the other pages and find our names recorded
-either with the inhabitants of Meroz and Reuben, or with the victors of
-faith who stood with Deborah, and Barak, and Jehovah, in the battles of
-the Lord. Oh, shall we shine now like stars in the night, and then like
-the sun in the kingdom of our Father?
-
-Passing on in our narrative from the brave deeds of Deborah, we next
-come to one of the most heroic daughters in Israel, and her great act
-of utter abnegation to save a father’s vow is so beautiful that, like
-the good Samaritan in our Lord’s touching parable, uttered in answer to
-the question, Who is my neighbor? the name is lost in the fragrance of
-the deed. She is simply Jephthah’s daughter.
-
-It was during that stormy period in the history of Israel, when again
-and again they had fallen into the idolatrous practices of their
-heathen neighbors around them. These unlawful acts had often called
-down the judgments of God upon them. In the time of Jephthah, the
-Israelites were smarting under the oppression of an Ammonitish king.
-The unsettled character of the age was such that the elders of the
-people sought in vain for a suitable leader, who could command the
-confidence of his countrymen.
-
-There was one man, however, a native of Gilead, who was a brave and
-successful leader. This was none other than Jephthah, but, because he
-had been born a child of misfortune, his brethren disowned him, and
-had cast him out. In most persons such treatment develops a spirit of
-misanthropy and bitterness which often find expression in revenge.
-
-But Jephthah seemed to have possessed a much sweeter disposition than
-his brethren. His faith seems to have been anchored to God, and, as is
-usually the case, when all else forsook him then the Lord took him up,
-and, trusting in Jehovah, he lived to have a glorious revenge upon his
-unkind people by bringing them a blessing instead of the curse that
-they had given him.
-
-We have a little touch of his character in the name he gave his new
-home. He called it the land of Tob. Tob means “good,” and this is but a
-little straw to tell how the wind blew in Jephthah’s life.
-
-And so the day came when Jephthah’s brothers were glad to send
-for him to be their deliverer, and Jephthah had the high honor of
-returning good for evil, and saving the people that once despised
-him. He consented to become their leader on the condition, which was
-solemnly ratified before the Lord in Mizpah, that in the event of his
-success against the Ammonitish king he should still remain as their
-acknowledged head. This is the way that God loves to vindicate us, to
-make us a blessing to those that hated us and wronged us. His promise
-is, “I will make them to come and worship before thy feet, and to know
-that I have loved thee.”
-
-When Jephthah responded to their appeal, and came for their help, we
-see in his very words and acts the spirit of godliness and a lofty
-faith. We are told explicitly that all his words to his own people
-were “before the Lord.” He spoke as in Jehovah’s presence. He also went
-against his adversaries in the name of Jehovah God. The battle was not
-his, but the Lord’s, and such faith never can be confounded. It was
-not long before Jephthah returned in triumph from the slaughter of his
-enemies. His country was delivered, his claims vindicated, and his
-enemies were destroyed.
-
-But now we come to the great trial in Jephthah’s life, which shows
-not only the loftiest faith, but the sublimest faithfulness. In the
-hour of peril he had vowed a vow unto Jehovah, pledging that when he
-returned in victory the first object that he met should be dedicated to
-the Lord, an offering to Him. As he came back amid the acclamations of
-universal triumph, the first who met him when he approached his home
-was his beautiful daughter, and as he realized all that his vow had
-meant, he was overwhelmed for a moment with the deepest emotion. But
-not for an instant did he hesitate in his firm and high purpose, nor
-once did that dear child shrink back from the sacrifice imposed upon
-her, but stood nobly with her father, demanding that he should fulfill
-his vow to the utmost.
-
-The scene is very graphically described: When “Jephthah came to Mizpah
-unto his house, behold, his daughter came out to meet him with timbrels
-and with dances; and she was his only child; beside her he had neither
-son nor daughter. And it came to pass, when he saw her, that he rent
-his clothes and said, Alas, my daughter! thou hast brought me very low,
-and thou art one of them that trouble me, for I have opened my mouth
-unto the Lord, and I can not go back.”
-
-This noble child of faith certainly was equal to her father’s trial,
-and lovingly replied, “My father, if thou hast opened thy mouth unto
-the Lord, do to me according to that which hath proceeded out of thy
-mouth.”
-
-There has been much discussion as to the real meaning of Jephthah’s
-vow, and the real fate of his lovely, obedient daughter. That the
-daughter of Jephthah was really offered up to God in sacrifice, slain
-by the hand of her father and then burned, is a horrible conclusion,
-and contrary to all we know of his life, upon which we have dwelt at
-some length in order to bring out its characteristics. With such a
-sweet trust and confidence in God as is manifest in his every act, we
-can not believe that either Jephthah meant to make a human sacrifice,
-or that his daughter so understood it. There are several passages and
-constructions which can leave no doubt in the mind of the candid reader
-that such was not the literal intention, and that this fair child
-of faith and obedience was not to be slain upon the altar like the
-children of Ammon before their god of fire, but that her fresh life was
-given in all its purity as a living sacrifice of separation and life of
-service to Jehovah.
-
-In the eighteenth chapter of Deuteronomy we find the most solemn
-warnings given to Israel against imitating in the least degree the
-cruel and wicked rites of the Ammonites, especially in offering human
-sacrifices. Now these Ammonites were the very people against whom
-Jephthah had gone forth to war, and as godly follower of Jehovah
-he must have been familiar with the commandments of the book of
-Deuteronomy. For him, therefore, to directly disobey these solemn
-injunctions would have been to prove false to all his character and all
-the meaning of his victory in the name of Jehovah.
-
-Again, in the twelfth chapter of Exodus, it is clearly taught that
-the first-born of Israel were all to be recognized as the Lord’s, and
-liable, therefore, to death, like the Egyptian first-born. But, instead
-of their lives being literally required, they were redeemed by the
-blood of a lamb, and the Paschal lamb was offered instead of the life
-of the Hebrew, and that life was still regarded as wholly the Lord’s,
-given to Him in living consecration, of which the whole tribe of Levi
-was regarded as the type, and therefore it was separated unto the
-service of the Lord as a substitute for the lives of the first-born.
-
-In all this was clearly taught the lesson that what God required
-from His people was not a dead body, but a “living sacrifice.” It is
-much harder to live for God than to die for God. It takes much less
-spiritual and moral power to leap into the conflict and fling a life
-away in the excitement of the battle than it does to live through
-fifty years of misunderstanding, pain and temptation. It would have
-been easier for Jephthah’s daughter to have lain down amid the flowers
-of spring, the chants and songs of a religious ceremonial, the tears
-and songs of the people who loved her, and know that her name would
-be forever enshrined, than to go out from the bright circle of human
-society and all the charms of youth and beauty and domestic and social
-delight, and live as a recluse for God alone, giving up the dearest
-hope of every Hebrew woman, not only to be a mother, but to be the
-mother of the promised Christ; giving up also, along with her father,
-the fond desire of a son to share his honor and his sceptre, to prolong
-his name. All this it meant. This was the sacrifice she made. And so we
-read that she did not go aside to bewail her approaching death, but she
-went aside for two months to bewail her “virginity,” the loneliness of
-her own life, then gladly gave her life a living sacrifice to God.
-
-There are several other considerations that might be added if necessary
-to establish this construction of the passage. It is enough to briefly
-refer to the fact that the phrase in the eleventh chapter of Judges,
-verse thirty-nine, is in the future tense, and refers to her future
-virginity and not her past, and also that the translation of the
-fortieth verse in one of our versions, is that the daughters of Israel
-went yearly “to talk” with the daughter of Jephthah four times in a
-year. It is not necessary to pursue the argument further. Enough for
-our present purpose that we catch the inspired lesson. That lesson is
-supreme, unqualified, unquestioning fidelity to God.
-
-How tender and beautiful the lesson which this passage gives to the
-young as well as the old! Just as Isaac stands out in the older story
-in a light as glorious as Abraham in yonder sacrifice on Mount Moriah,
-so Jephthah’s daughter’s sacrifice must not be forgotten in the honor
-we pay her father. Sweet child of single-hearted consecration! God help
-her sisters and her followers to be as true. Oh, beloved, do not wait
-until desire shall fail and age chill the pulses of ardent youth, and
-the world fall away from you itself. But when the flowers are blooming,
-and the cup is brimming, and the heart beats high with earthly love
-and joy and hope, then it is so sweet, it is so wise, it is so rare,
-to pour all at His blessed feet, as Mary poured her ointment on His
-head, and some day to receive it back amid the bloom and peals of
-yonder land, where they that have forsaken friends and treasures, fond
-affections and brightest prospects for His dear sake, shall receive a
-hundredfold, and shall have the still richer joy of knowing that they
-have learned His spirit and understood His love.
-
-Following the story of Jephthah’s daughter and her heroic
-self-sacrifice, we next come to the touching scenes and incidents
-related in the life of Ruth and her mother-in-law, Naomi. This is,
-confessedly, one of the sweetest idyls ever written. As a singular
-example of virtue and piety in a rude age and among an idolatrous
-people; as one of the first fruits of the Gentile harvest gathered
-into the Church; as the heroine of a story of exquisite beauty and
-simplicity; as illustrating in her history the workings of Divine
-Providence, and the truth of the saying, “the eyes of the Lord are
-over the righteous;” for the many interesting revelations of ancient
-domestic and social customs which are associated with her story, Ruth
-has always held a foremost place among the Women in White Raiment.
-
-The story begins at Bethlehem, so dear to the Christian heart. A famine
-had occurred, and even the fertile plains of Bethlehem Ephratah (the
-fruitful) failed to give sufficient food to its inhabitants. On this
-account Elimelech, an Ephrathite, left his home with his wife and
-two sons and went to sojourn in the land of Moab, the hilly region
-south-east of the Dead Sea, where the descendants of Lot dwelt. Here
-Elimelech died, and Naomi, his wife, was left a widow with her two
-sons, Mahlon and Chilin.
-
-The young men, when grown, took them wives of the women of Moab.
-Probably this was another severe trial to Naomi, for she had doubtless
-warned them that it was contrary to God’s law that they should marry
-daughters of the heathen. Other strokes came quickly upon her, for her
-two sons died also. Naomi, notwithstanding her nationality, had won the
-respect and warmest attachment of her sons’ wives; and now, when death
-had desolated their homes and laid in the dust the strong men to whom
-they had clung, they only drew the closer to each other.
-
-At the end of ten years, and having heard that there was plenty again
-in Judah, Naomi resolved to return to Bethlehem. Orpah and Ruth also
-purposed to accompany her. We can imagine the sad farewell visit to the
-graves of the beloved dead, and then together set out on foot for the
-land which the Lord had blessed.
-
-After they had gone on their way for some distance, Naomi, with
-heartfelt acknowledgment of their fidelity to her, endeavored to
-persuade them to return to their own kindred. But they both declared
-that they would cleave to her. And so they trudged on until probably
-the borders of Moab were reached, when Naomi once more urged them to
-return to their people. Orpah this time yielded to Naomi’s urgent
-request, and giving her a kiss of farewell, returned to her people.
-Ruth, however, still clave to Naomi, with self-sacrificing love.
-Pointing to the form of Orpah, Naomi entreated Ruth to follow her
-sister’s example.
-
-This was the crisis in Ruth’s life, on which her future destiny was to
-turn. But the clinging nature of Ruth refused to be separated from the
-warm heart of Naomi, and no one can fail to be moved by the pathos of
-her reply, “Entreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following
-after thee; for whither thou goest I will go; and where thou lodgest, I
-will lodge; thy people shall be my people, and thy God, my God; where
-thou diest, I will die, and there will I be buried: the Lord do so to
-me, and more also, if aught but death part thee and me.” This tender
-loyalty and undying love must have touched the strong, brave heart of
-Naomi, for Ruth’s noble plea covered every possible condition in life
-through which they might be called to pass, and refused to be separated
-even in death.
-
-[Illustration: RUTH THE FAITHFUL FRIEND.]
-
-The decision was so firmly, so solemnly stated that there was nothing
-more to be said, and Naomi, doubtless glad in her loneliness to retain
-the treasure of such a true and loving heart, made no further effort
-to alter her purpose, and so the two journeyed on together towards
-Bethlehem.
-
-There were two things in conflict, one with the other, at this stage in
-the experience of these women. 1. Ruth had learned to know and to love
-the true God, and we must believe she loved him with the intensity of
-her nature. The opportunity was offered, and she determined to forsake
-her heathen idols, and to unite herself with the people of Jehovah, and
-to rest within the shadow of the wings of the God of Israel, regardless
-of trials or poverty that might await her in the future. 2. On the
-other hand, Naomi was brave to take Ruth with her, for she knew the law
-that excluded the Moabite, and it is marvelous that Ruth was received
-into the Hebrew nation, for her people were specially interdicted, and
-doubtless this was the reason why Naomi sought and urged Orpah and Ruth
-to turn back.
-
-At length, after days of travel, the two lone women, weary and
-footsore, arrived at Bethlehem, and all the city was moved about the
-event, and as they looked into the face of the elder woman and saw the
-deep lines of sorrow, they said, “Is not this Naomi?” Yes, it was Naomi
-(which means delightsome), in her youth, before her life became blasted
-with sorrow and want. In her destitution her name seems to her to be
-a mockery, and she exclaims, “Call me Mara!” that is, bitterness. She
-went out with her husband and sons full of hope, now she has returned
-with only the bitter recollection of three graves in the land of Moab,
-and herself in abject poverty.
-
-No one seemed to have helped Naomi in her sorrow and distress. But
-Ruth, true to her declaration, clung to Naomi, and bravely took it upon
-herself to provide for both. It was the time of the barley harvest, and
-the brave girl went out into the fields to glean after the reapers, a
-privilege that the law of Moses allowed to the poor of the land.
-
-“Her hap” was to enter the field of Boaz. It was a “hap” so far as
-Ruth was concerned, but back of it was the ordering of Him who is the
-husband of the widow and the Father of the fatherless. Boaz came into
-the field, and after the good manners of those times, exchanged pious
-and kindly salutations with his reapers. Now Boaz was a near kinsman of
-Ruth’s deceased husband, and a man of wealth and consideration, but of
-course knew nothing about this Moabitess. However, having learned that
-she was the companion of Naomi, he generously permitted her to glean
-among the sheaves, and instructed his reapers to let drop a handful now
-and then on purpose for her.
-
-And so this loving heart gleaned through the hot hours of the day until
-evening, and then she beat the barley from the straw, and the result
-proved she had “about an ephah” (over a bushel) of barley.
-
-With the result of her day’s labor under her arm, she hastened home,
-and when Naomi saw it, she asked, “Where hast thou gleaned to-day?”
-
-Ruth replied that the name of the man in whose field she had gleaned
-was Boaz.
-
-Naomi loved her beautiful, widowed daughter-in-law; and she was eager
-for her to have a happy home, claiming in Israel the inheritance of the
-departed, and so she told Ruth of the relation in which Boaz stood to
-her, and instructed her to claim at the hands of Boaz that he should
-perform the part of her husband’s near kinsman, by purchasing the
-inheritance of Elimelech, and taking her to be his wife. But there
-was a nearer kinsman than Boaz, and it was necessary that he should
-have the option of redeeming the inheritance for himself. He, however,
-declined, fearing to mar his own inheritance. Upon which, with all due
-solemnity, Boaz took Ruth to be his wife, amidst the blessings and
-congratulations of their neighbors.
-
-The most sweetly primitive and poetic touch of all this story is the
-blessing of the women upon Naomi, when the babe that had been given
-Ruth after her marriage to Boaz was laid in the mother-in-law’s bosom:
-“Blessed be the Lord, which had not left thee this day without a
-kinsman, that his name may be famous in Israel. And he shall be unto
-thee a restorer of thy life, and a nourisher of thine old age; for thy
-daughter-in-law, which loveth thee, which is better to thee than seven
-sons, hath borne him.”
-
-Ruth, by birth, was a heathen. As such, she was excluded from God’s
-covenanted people. But, in her case, love was mightier than law. In the
-fullness of time it was shown to be the fulfillment of law. Though her
-people were specially interdicted, she was admitted to the first rank
-and led by Providence into the line of the world’s nobility. Her life
-shows how God values beautiful, loving character even more than great
-deeds. As her name indicates, she was a “faithful friend.” It was what
-she was, rather than what she did, that brought her the high honor
-of being the mother of Obed, and the ancestress, not only of David
-and Solomon, the greatest Jewish kings, but of Christ Himself. To a
-believing people like the Hebrews, who lived for the future, that was
-the climax of Divine approval.
-
-What amazing results have been accomplished by women of faith. It will
-be well for us to study and emulate the sweet, obedient faith of this
-beautiful Moabitess. We must remember that it is not the quantity,
-but quality, of our service that pleases most our heavenly Father;
-not what we do, but what we are. We may never do great things, but,
-through grace, we can all be faithful. We may pass from the stage of
-action, but the splendid deeds wrought in faith will remain, shedding
-their influence across the bosom of a sinful world, like so many beacon
-lights guiding a guilty race back to a Father’s love, and the world’s
-final redemption.
-
-We now come to Hannah, the last woman in White Raiment under the
-Theocracy. The mother of the great and good Samuel will ever stand in
-history as among the purest of women. It often happens that the mother
-is lost sight of in the fame of her son. This is quite true in the life
-of Samuel. He stands out the great Reformer of his time, lifting his
-people out of the Dark Ages of the Old Testament and leading them into
-the Golden Age of David’s kingdom and Israel’s pre-eminence among the
-nations.
-
-But while Samuel ranks with Joseph, and Joshua, and Daniel, in the
-blamelessness of his life, let us not forget that back of that great
-life was a woman’s broken heart, a woman’s tears, a woman’s life made
-bitter by disappointment and humiliation, made so by a polygamous
-system whose fruit must ever be jealousy and sorrow--ever a sign of a
-low condition of social morality.
-
-Poor, heart-broken Hannah was one of the two wives of Elkanah, an
-Ephrathite. However, the record does not show that she was unloved by
-her husband. Indeed, it appears that he tried to comfort her, gallantly
-asking her if he were not more to her than ten sons. But her sorrow
-that she had no children made her countenance sad, and took away her
-appetite for food. At length, however, out of her crushed heart came
-the believing prayer that brought her victory and consolation.
-
-It was the fixed habit of Elkanah to go with his family “yearly to
-worship and to sacrifice unto the Lord of Hosts in Shiloh.” On one of
-these yearly visits, Hannah poured out her prayer in great sobs and
-tears. She was very definite in her petition. She asked for a son,
-not that she might know the joy of motherhood, but that God might be
-glorified. She promised that she would “give him unto the Lord all the
-days of his life.” And so earnest was she in pressing her suit, that
-Eli the priest thought her drunk, and reproved her for her conduct.
-But she bravely told him her story. She said she was a “woman of a
-sorrowful spirit.” She had drunk neither wine nor strong drink, but had
-poured out her soul before the Lord.
-
-The spirit of prophecy came upon the good old man, and though he knew
-nothing of the nature of her prayer, he promised its fulfillment. “Go
-in peace: and the God of Israel grant thee thy petition that thou hast
-asked of Him.” Hannah believed, and she “went her way, and did eat, and
-her countenance was no more sad.”
-
-After her beautiful boy was born, and began to show his charming baby
-ways, she trembled under his dainty caresses, and the kisses of his
-pure, sweet mouth, for she remembered her vow; but she was true and
-faithful.
-
-It is a brave, strong, submissive mother who can give up without a
-murmur the child that God takes to Himself; but to know that he is
-alive somewhere, and at that very hour may be grieving for lack of the
-love and care that only a mother can give, O how that ordeal must rend
-the heart! Just that was the test of Hannah’s loyalty. In just that
-severe balance of obedience and trust was she weighed, and she was not
-found wanting.
-
-When her child was old enough to be left without a mother’s watchful
-care she took him to the Tabernacle and gave him to Eli, to be brought
-up as a child of the sanctuary. “I have lent him to the Lord,” she
-said, “and as long as he lives he shall be lent unto the Lord.” Not for
-a few days or weeks did she give him up, but she gave him wholly and
-with a sacrifice that only a mother could understand, she consented
-that the little feet for whose pattering she had longed should be heard
-no more in her cottage, that the prattle for whose music her lonely
-heart had waited a lifetime should sound no more in her ears, but that
-she should live on till the end alone, glad to know that he was all the
-Lord’s, and was giving back to God the blessing which he had brought
-to her. This is love and this is the difference between the love of
-earth and the love of heaven. Earthly love loves for the pleasure it
-can find in loving. Heavenly love loves for the blessing it can give to
-the loved one. Hannah knew that her sacrifice was best for Samuel, and
-that in giving him to God she was getting more for him than a mother’s
-selfish fondness could ever have bestowed.
-
-And yet there was still the sweet thought behind it all that he was
-hers. She was not losing him but lending him, and God counted her
-sacrifice a real service, and some day would restore the loan with
-infinite and eternal additions.
-
-When Hannah had triumphed over her own heart, and her boy was safely
-under the care and instruction of Eli, to be used to the utmost in
-the Lord’s service, she sung her song of thanksgiving for the birth
-of her son. Her hymn is in the highest order of prophetic poetry.
-Its resemblance to that of the Virgin Mary has been noticed by
-Bible students, and is specially remarkable as containing the first
-designation of the Messiah under that name. Though written in the days
-of scant literary attainment, the song of Hannah is an exquisite piece
-of composition. It is full of keen insight and superb power. Besides
-what was written by Moses, men wrote but little poetry in that early
-time. The hymns of Miriam, Deborah and Hannah have rare beauty. It was
-the daughters rather than the sons who prophesied in song.
-
-But while the child Samuel, “girded with a linen ephod,” “ministered
-before the Lord,” in the Tabernacle, in Shiloh, the loving mother
-heart, in her home, was stitching her beautiful thoughts year after
-year into the little coat which she annually brought to him, “when
-she came up with her husband to offer the yearly sacrifice.” And we
-may well believe that Hannah’s loyalty and good sense made plain,
-serviceable garments, so that the mind of the young Samuel was not
-diverted from his Tabernacle duties to gay and bright colors in his
-tunics, and so his young heart was kept from the blight of pride. This
-was the lad’s high privilege. He was always a holy child. He never
-knew the defiling breath of wickedness. This may be the privilege of
-your child, Christian mother. God help you to protect your innocent
-babe from the foul breath of sin’s contamination and always to shelter
-that trusting life under the protecting wings of God. This may be your
-privilege, happy Christian child, who perchance may read these lines
-to-day. Oh, let God have your earliest years and may you never know the
-mystery of iniquity and the memories of sin and shame which, though
-they may be forgiven, yet come back to defile and distress the heart.
-
-But Samuel was not holy and good by natural birth or disposition. It
-was not because that he was good anyhow by temperament. The keynote of
-his life was, “Speak, Lord, for Thy servant heareth.” At first even he
-made some mistakes and misunderstood the voice that spake to him so
-gently in his little chamber. Three times it called to him in vain, and
-he thought it was the old priest’s message, but even when he understood
-not he still responded and sprang to his feet, ready instantly to obey.
-
-The very peculiarities of Samuel’s call lingered in his later life in
-his messages to Saul, “Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and
-to hearken than the fat of rams.” All his blessings had come to him
-by hearkening and obeying, and all Saul’s calamities had come to him
-because he willfully took his own way and refused to listen to God.
-
-From Hannah’s consecration of her child we may learn two excellent
-lessons, embodying the greatest principles that underlie the human side
-of the redemption of the race: First, the mother’s power; and second,
-the child’s ability to know God. She had so thoroughly lent Samuel to
-the Lord that he held true to God in the degeneracy of Eli’s judgeship
-and the slackness of the priesthood, as illustrated in the family of
-Eli. The social condition of the age was a shocking exhibition of low
-sensuality, licentiousness and cupidity that would disgrace even the
-grossest heathenism. Eli himself, while a just and holy man in his own
-private character, was weak and inefficient as a judge and a priest,
-and utterly failed to restrain his ungodly family or exercise any just
-administration of public affairs. The whole nation was, therefore, in
-a most pitiable condition, at the mercy of its foreign oppressors and
-so enfeebled that a few years later we find there was not a sword in
-Israel, and they had even to go to the grindstones of the Philistines
-in order to grind their plough coulters for the ordinary operations of
-husbandry. It was at such a time as this that God called Samuel to be
-at once the pattern and deliverer of his country.
-
-In the very outset, the Lord had some very unpleasant work for Samuel
-to do, which must have tested his obedience. While yet quite young he
-had a hard, sad message to deliver to his old friend and instructor,
-and it was no easy task to go to Eli and tell him all that God had
-spoken against his house. It was the hard test which often came again
-in his later ministry as the messenger of God to sinful man. Again and
-again did he have to go to those he loved and say to them the thing
-which nearly broke his heart.
-
-When this child of promise finally passed from under the watchful care
-of the devoted Hannah, we are told, “the Lord was with Samuel,” and he
-“let none of his words fall to the ground, and all Israel knew that
-Samuel was established to be a prophet of the Lord.”
-
-The life of Samuel marks a transition period in the history of Israel
-from the time of the Judges to the kingdom of Saul and David. His was
-an epoch life like Abraham’s, Joshua’s and John the Baptist’s.
-
-He also enjoyed the distinguished honor of being the founder of the
-school of the prophets and the first in that glorious succession of
-holy men who spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost, and who formed
-the only unbroken line of truth and righteousness in the history of
-God’s ancient people. From the days of Samuel the prophets formed a
-distinct class, and had a regular school of training, corresponding
-somewhat to our theological seminaries and training institutes, and
-Samuel had the pre-eminence of being the founder of these prophetic
-schools. Later in his life he went about the country as a pastor and
-overseer, visiting the towns and villages, holding conventions, from
-place to place and instructing the people in the law of God and the
-schools of the prophets in the principles of the kingdom.
-
-But, above all his public ministries and even his national influence,
-Samuel was himself a beautiful and spotless character. In an age of
-almost universal corruption he lived a life of blameless piety, and at
-a later period, when bidding farewell to the nation as their judge, he
-could truly call upon them to witness to his uprightness and integrity.
-“Behold,” he said, “I am old and gray-headed, and I have walked before
-you from my childhood unto this day. Behold, here I am; witness against
-me before the Lord and before His anointed. Whose ox have I taken?
-or whose ass have I taken? or whom have I defrauded? whom have I
-oppressed? or of whose hand have I received any bribe to blind mine
-eyes therewith? and I will restore it to you.” And they said, “Thou
-hast not defrauded us nor oppressed us, neither hast thou taken aught
-of any man’s hand.”
-
-Samuel stands forth as one of the blameless lives of sacred history;
-human no doubt in his infirmities, but no fault has been recorded
-against him, and his personal character is the most eloquent testimony
-of all his history.
-
-We have been permitted to trace this beautiful life to its source. Some
-characters, like Elijah’s suddenly burst upon our vision and we only
-know them in the public and closing chapters of their history. Some,
-however, are like a beautiful river that you can trace to its crystal
-fountain and follow all through its winding channel until, like our own
-Hudson, it pours its volume into the sea. Thus we have been permitted
-to stand by Samuel’s cradle and even to know something of his prophetic
-future before his very birth. We enter into the joys and sorrows and
-the believing prayers of Hannah, the devoted mother, who was the real
-fountain, not only of his natural life, but also of his piety and holy
-power. And we walk side by side with him through his childhood and
-his youth until, at last, we meet him in the busy activities of his
-manhood and follow him until he lays down his ministry and passes to
-his honored rest.
-
-What a touching story is the life of Hannah of motherly consecration of
-herself and her Samuel. If all who wear the crown of motherhood were as
-noble, as loyal, as self-giving and trustful as Hannah was, and brought
-up their children to know and obey the voice of the Lord, what a world
-this would be. O that our land were filled with Hannahs, then would we
-have more Samuels.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-Womanhood During the Reign of the Kings.
-
- ABIGAIL--CHURLISH NABAL--CHIVALROUS APPRECIATION--DAVID’S
- MESSENGERS--SAUL’S DAUGHTERS--HIS TREACHERY--MICHAL’S
- STRATAGEM--RIZPAH--HER HEROIC ENDURANCE AND LOVING FIDELITY--THE
- QUEEN OF SHEBA--HER VISIT TO JERUSALEM--THE GLORY AND WISDOM OF
- SOLOMON--THE HALF NOT TOLD--THE QUEEN’S ROYAL GIFTS.
-
-
-Passing out from under the Theocracy, or rule of the Judges, the first
-woman in White Raiment that appears on the page of the Sacred Record
-is Abigail. She was the wife of Nabal, a wealthy owner of goats and
-sheep in Carmel, not the Mount Carmel of Central Palestine, between
-the maritime plain of Sharon on the south, and the great inland
-expanse known as the plain of Esdraelon on the north, but a town in
-the mountainous country of Judah, to the west of the lower end of the
-Dead Sea. She was a woman of good understanding and of a beautiful
-countenance--a fit combination.
-
-Her character had written its legend on her face. The two things do not
-always go together. There are many beautiful women wholly destitute
-of good understanding, just as birds of rarest plumage are commonly
-deficient in the power of song. But a good understanding, which is
-moral rather than intellectual, casts a glow of beauty over the
-plainest features.
-
-But Abigail’s husband was a churl. The great establishment over which
-she presided would be called, in our modern times, a sheep ranch, and,
-under the management of such a man as Nabal, the servants doubtless
-often echoed the ill-temper of their master, and her wits would be
-often sharpened to the utmost to keep all within the limits of safety
-and comfort.
-
-Evidently, at her birth, Abigail had been a welcomed child in a happy
-home, amid plenty and even luxury, such as the times in that rude age
-of the world could give. Her parents named her “Source of joy.” She
-had grown up in a glad, breezy confidence that made her equal to any
-emergency. Since God has floods of glory for the gloomiest souls, why
-will not parents keep their children in the clear, warm sunshine of
-joyful love? Many drudge early and late to provide culture and comfort;
-but they withhold a better, richer gift. They becloud hopelessly the
-dear young lives with their own disappointments, and foredoom them to
-despondency.
-
-This sprightly, happy, beautiful Abigail at length married the selfish,
-churlish Nabal. When we look over society to-day, it is remarkable how
-many Abigails get married to Nabals. God-fearing women, tender and
-gentle in their sensibilities, high-minded and noble in their ideals,
-become tied in an indissoluble union with men for whom they can have no
-true affinity, even if they have not an unconquerable repugnance. In
-Abigail’s case this relationship was, in all probability, not of her
-choosing, but the product of the Oriental custom which compelled a girl
-to take her father’s choice in the matter of marriage. As a mere child
-she may have come into Nabal’s home, and become bound to him by an
-apparently inevitable fate. In other ways which involve equally little
-personal choice, compelled by the pressure of inexorable circumstances,
-misled by the deceitful tongue of flattery, her instinctive hesitancy
-overcome by the urgency of friends, a woman may still find herself in
-Abigail’s pitiful plight. To such a one there is but one advice--you
-must stay where you are. The dissimilarity in taste and temperament
-does not constitute a sufficient reason for leaving your husband to
-drift. You must believe that God has permitted you to enter on this
-awful heritage, partly because this fiery ordeal was required by your
-character, and partly that you might act as a counteractive influence.
-It may be that some day your opportunity will come, as it came to
-Abigail. In the meantime do not allow your purer nature to be bespotted
-or besmeared. You can always keep the soul clean and pure. Bide your
-time; and, amid the weltering waste of inky water, be like a pure
-fountain rising from the ocean depths.
-
-But if any young girl of good sense and earnest aspirations, who reads
-these lines, secretly knows that, if she had the chance, she would wed
-a carriage and pair, a good position, or broad acres, irrespective of
-character, let her remember that to enter the marriage bond with a man,
-deliberately and advisedly, for such a purpose, is a profanation of the
-Divine ideal, and can end only in one way. She will not raise him to
-her level, but she will sink to his.
-
-There came a time when Nabal had an opportunity to show kindness, to
-pay back, in part at least, his appreciation for the protection David
-and his men had given Nabal’s shepherds from Bedouin and other desert
-robbers. It was sheep-shearing time, a season of gladness and of
-feasting. David and his men were shut up in the wilderness of Engedi,
-driven thither by the persecutions of Saul. Doubtless they were in need
-of food, and David thought that the owner of three thousand sheep, and
-a thousand goats, in the very midst of the sheep-shearing festivities,
-could send him a token of remembrance in his hunger and need. So David
-sent ten of his young men with salutations of peace and prosperity, and
-a request for any favor he felt disposed to give. But Nabal answered
-the young men saying, “Who is David? and who is the son of Jesse? there
-be many servants nowadays that break away every man from his master.
-Shall I then take my bread, and my water, and my flesh that I have
-killed for my shearers, and give it unto men, whom I know not whence
-they be?”
-
-The young men returned to David with the message of Nabal, and,
-naturally enough, David felt insulted and outraged. Taking a band of
-four hundred men, he resolved to impress upon Nabal who the “son of
-Jesse” was, and to make him pay dearly for his foolhardy conduct.
-
-But, in the meantime, one of Nabal’s servants told Abigail how David’s
-young men had been treated. Evidently this thoughtful and prudent
-servant knew the excellency of his mistress, and could trust her to
-act wisely in the emergency which was upon them. So he told her all.
-Told how David and his men had been “a wall” unto the shepherds “both
-by night and by day,” and for all this kindness Nabal, his master, had
-“railed” upon David’s messengers.
-
-[Illustration: THE BEAUTIFUL ABIGAIL MEETING DAVID.]
-
-Abigail immediately grasped the situation and at once despatched a
-small procession of provision-bearers along the way David would come.
-In this she did not even take Nabal into her counsel, and she prepared
-to pay bountifully for the conduct of her foolhardy husband.
-
-The band had scarcely started when she followed after, and, as she
-expected, met the avenging warriors by the covert of the mountain, and
-the interview was as creditable to her woman’s wit as to her grace
-of heart. The lowly obeisance of the beautiful woman at the young
-soldier’s feet; the frank confession of the wrong that had been done;
-the expression of thankfulness that so far he had been kept from
-blood-guiltiness and from avenging his own wrongs; the depreciation
-of the generous present she brought as only fit for his servants; the
-chivalrous appreciation of his desire to fight only the battles of
-the Lord and to keep an unblemished name; the sure anticipation of
-the time when his fortunes would be secured and his enemies silenced;
-the suggestion that in those coming days he would be glad to have no
-shadow on the sunlit hills of his life, no haunting memory--all this
-was as beautiful and wise and womanly as it could be, and brought David
-back to his better self. Frank and noble as he always was, he did not
-hesitate to acknowledge his deep indebtedness to this lovely woman, and
-to see in her intercession the gracious arrest of God. “And David said
-to Abigail, Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel, which sent thee
-this day to meet me; and blessed be thy wisdom, and blessed be thou,
-which has kept me this day from blood-guiltiness, and from avenging
-myself with my own hand.”
-
-What a revelation this is of the ministries with which God seeks
-to avert us from our evil ways! They are sometimes very subtle and
-slender, very small and still; sometimes a gentle woman’s hand laid on
-our wrist, the mother reminding us of her maternity, the wife of early
-vows, the child with its pitiful, beseeching look; sometimes a thought,
-holy, pleading, remonstrating. Ah, many a time we have been saved from
-actions which would have caused lasting regret. And above all these
-voices and influences there has been the gracious arresting influence
-of the Holy Spirit, striving with passion and selfishness, calling
-us to a nobler, better life. Blessed Spirit, come down more often by
-the covert of the hill, and stay us in our mad career, and let us not
-press past thee to take our own wild way, and we shall have reason for
-ceaseless gratitude.
-
-Only ten days after Abigail’s womanly intercession Nabal died by the
-judgments of God.
-
-When David heard of Nabal’s death, he was very grateful indeed that
-he had been restrained by the prudent words of Abigail, and sent
-messengers to her at Carmel, asking her hand in marriage. And this is
-the touching reply she sent back to David, “Behold, let thine handmaid
-be a servant to wash the feet of the servants of my lord.”
-
-“And Abigail hasted, and arose, and rode upon an ass, with five damsels
-of hers that went after her; and she went after the messengers of
-David, and became his wife.” After her marriage, she accompanied David
-in all his fortunes; and no doubt her shrewd business sense was of
-great service to her husband. The words she told David while he was
-sinking under discouragement from Nabal’s ingratitude, that he would be
-“bound in the bundle of life with the Lord his God,” became prophetic
-of her own after life. She proved that--
-
- “They who get the best are those
- Who leave the choice to Him.”
-
-We next come to Michal. As Abigail had saved the life of Nabal, so
-Michal had saved the life of David. She was the younger of the two
-daughters of Saul, the first king in Israel. David had been very
-successful in the slaughter of the Philistines, and on his return
-the women came out singing songs of welcome, in which they chanted,
-“Saul hath slain thousands, and David ten thousands.” Saul was highly
-displeased with this popular welcome to David and said, “What can he
-have more but the kingdom?”
-
-But, with a view of exposing the life of David, Saul promised his elder
-daughter, Merab, in marriage, if he would fight his battles. However,
-in this Saul had missed his calculations, for the Philistines were not
-able to take the life of David. So, no doubt, in order that he might
-have one more opportunity of exposing David to the dangers of war,
-he gave Merab to Adriel, the Mehoathite, to wife. It was a treachery
-such as Saul frequently practiced upon David. So he offered Michal,
-the second daughter, in marriage, fixing the price for her hand at no
-less than the slaughter of a hundred Philistines. David, by a brilliant
-feat, doubled the tale of his victims, and Michal became his wife.
-
-Michal was not averse to the good luck of David, for she had so
-appreciated him that she had fallen violently in love with the young
-hero. It was not long, however, before the strength of her affections
-was put to the proof. After one of Saul’s attacks of frenzy, in which
-David had barely escaped being transfixed by the king’s spear, Michal
-learned that the house was being watched by Saul’s soldiers, and that
-it was intended on the next morning to attack her husband as he left
-his door. Michal seemed to have known too well the vacillating and
-ferocious disposition of her father when in these demoniacal moods, so,
-like a true soldier’s wife, she met stratagem by stratagem. She first
-provided for David’s safety by lowering him out of the window by means
-of a rope. To gain time for him to reach the residence of Samuel at
-Ramah, she dressed up the bed as if still occupied by him, by placing
-a teraphim in it, its head enveloped, like that of a sleeper, in the
-usual net used for protection from gnats--a sore pest in Palestine.
-
-It happened as Michal feared. Her father sent officers to take David.
-Michal made answer that her husband was ill and could not be disturbed.
-At last Saul would not be longer put off, and ordered his messengers
-to force their way into David’s apartment, when they discovered the
-deception which had been played so successfully, Saul’s rage knew no
-bounds, and his fury was such that Michal was obliged to resort to
-another deception by pretending that David attempted to kill her.
-
-When Michal let David down by a rope through a window on that memorable
-night in which she saved his life, it was the last time she saw her
-husband for many years. When the rupture between Saul and David became
-open, Saul gave Michal in marriage to Phaltiel, of Gallim, a village
-not far from the royal residence at Gibeah.
-
-After the death of Saul, Michal and her new husband moved with the
-royal family to the east of Jordan.
-
-It was at least fourteen years since she had watched David’s
-disappearance down the rope into the darkness of the night and had
-imperilled her own life to save his. During all these years, it would
-seem, his love for his absent wife had undergone no change, for he
-was eager to reclaim her when the first opportunity presented itself.
-That opportunity came when Abner revolted from Ishbosheth. Important
-as it was to him to make an alliance with the court of Ishbosheth,
-established at Mahanaim, and much as he respected Abner, he would
-not listen for a moment to any overtures till his wife was restored.
-And David sent messengers to Ishbosheth saying, “Deliver me my wife
-Michal.” There seemed to be no alternative, and Michal was taken from
-Phaltiel. That she had equally won the love of Phaltiel is manifest
-from the sad scene when she was taken from him, and now under the joint
-escort of David’s messengers and Abner’s twenty men, _en route_ from
-Mahanaim to Hebron, he followed behind, bewailing the wife thus torn
-from him, and would not turn back until commanded to do so by Abner.
-
-But when Michal was received into the royal home, then at Hebron, she
-was not the affectionate companion of David’s youth. And, doubtless,
-he was no longer to her what he was before she had bestowed her love
-upon another. They were no longer what they had been to each other.
-The alienation was probably mutual. On her side must have been the
-recollection of the long contest which had taken place in the interval
-between her father and David; the strong feeling in the palace at
-Hebron against the house of Saul, where every word she heard must
-have contained some distasteful allusion, and where at every turn
-she must have encountered men like Abiather the priest, or Ismaiah
-the Gibeonite, who had lost the whole or the greater part of their
-relatives in some sudden burst of her father’s fury. And more than
-all, perhaps, the inevitable difference between the husband of her
-recollections and the matured and occupied warrior who now received
-her. The whole must have come upon her as a strong contrast to the
-affectionate Phaltiel, whose tears had followed her along the road over
-Olivet until commanded to return home.
-
-It also seems she did not enter into David’s religious sympathies.
-When he brought the Ark of Jehovah into Jerusalem, after the seat of
-government was transferred from Hebron to that city, Michal watched
-the procession approach from the window of the royal palace, and when
-she saw David in the triumphal march, “she despised him in her heart.”
-It would have been well if her contempt had rested there; but it was
-not in her nature to conceal it, and when the last burnt offering had
-been made, and the king entered his house to bless his family, he was
-received by his wife not with the congratulations which he had a right
-to expect and which would have been so grateful to him, but with a
-bitter taunt which showed how incapable she was of appreciating either
-her husband’s devotions, or the importance of the service in which he
-had been engaged. David’s answer showed that they were as wide apart
-religiously as he and her father had been politically. He said, “It was
-before the Lord, which chose me before thy father, and before all his
-house, to appoint me ruler over the people.” This reproof gathered up
-all the differences between them which made sympathy no longer possible.
-
-We must think of Michal what she was to David in her youth, and what
-she might have been had she not been given to another, perhaps against
-her own will. Thus David lost her womanly affection, which he so much
-needed, and Michal lost his brave, heroic but devout spirit, which
-would greatly have helped her to a correct knowledge of God, for, from
-the fact that she had a teraphim in her house, would indicate she was
-not wholly free from idolatry, and this doubtless accounts for her
-lack of sympathy with David in his religious nature, for his devotions
-to God were unquestioned. Her surroundings from childhood were bad
-every way, and her want of religious sympathy was not so much the want
-of faith as the lack of opportunity to know God. We give her a place
-here for what she was in her youth, in saving the life of David, and
-what she would have been could she have grown up under the religious
-influences of David.
-
-Upon the death of Saul, the first king in Israel, Rizpah, a secondary
-wife, and mother of his two sons Armoni and Mephibosheth, appears on
-the stage of action. After Saul was defeated and met with death on
-Mount Gilboa and the Philistines occupied the country west of the
-Jordan, the seat of government was transferred from Gibeah to Mahanaim
-for greater protection, and Rizpah accompanied the inmates of the royal
-household to their new residence.
-
-Ishbosheth, the youngest of Saul’s four legitimate sons, and his
-rightful heir to the throne, had been proclaimed king in place of his
-father. Abner, Saul’s uncle, however, had command of the army, and had
-much to do in administering the affairs of the kingdom; and, because
-of this relation, and for reasons not stated, he seemed to have had
-frequent consultations with Rizpah, and this excited Ishbosheth’s
-jealousy. Among those primitive people, to take the widow of a deceased
-king was to aspire to the throne. Ishbosheth accused Abner of that
-ambitious design, and the captain, in his resentment, replied, “Am I
-a dog’s head, which against Judah do shew kindness this day unto the
-house of Saul thy father, to his brethren, and to his friends, and
-have not delivered thee into the hands of David, that thou chargest me
-to-day with a fault concerning this woman?” Abner was so wroth that
-he left Ishbosheth and went over to David--a piece of spite which led
-first to Abner’s death through Joab’s treachery, and ultimately to the
-murder of Ishbosheth himself.
-
-We hear nothing more of Rizpah till the three years’ famine made it
-necessary to settle an old score against the house of Saul for that
-king’s wicked dealings with the Gibeonites. According to the crude,
-rough justice of the times, they demanded the death of seven of Saul’s
-descendants. The two sons of Rizpah and five of Saul’s grandsons were
-handed over to them for crucifixion.
-
-Here Rizpah’s love, and endurance is brought to our notice. The seven
-crosses to which her two sons and her five relatives were fastened,
-were planted in the rock on the top of the sacred hill of Gibeah. The
-victims were sacrificed at the beginning of barley harvest--the sacred
-and festal time of the Passover--and in the full blaze of the summer
-sun they hung till the fall of the periodical rain in October. During
-the whole of that time Rizpah remained at the foot of the crosses on
-which the bodies of her sons were exposed. She had no tent to shelter
-her all those months from the scorching sun which beats on that open
-spot all day, or from the drenching dews of night, but she spread on
-the rock summit the thick mourning garment of black sackcloth, which,
-as a widow, she wore, and, crouching there, she kept off bird and beast
-till their bodies could have honorable burial.
-
-At length the heroic actions of Rizpah were brought to the notice of
-David, who, with his usual kindness, had the bodies of Saul and his
-friend Jonathan brought from Jabesh-Gilead, and the bodies taken from
-the crosses and sepulchred in the family tomb of Kish.
-
-Rizpah, by birth was a Hivite, and probably had not the sustaining
-grace which God alone can give. She had trained her sons for the
-splendors of a court. They were cut off in their prime, and her
-desolate heart had only its pride to sustain her during her superhuman
-anguish and endurance. Her loving, passionate nature was a bright light
-in a rude, dark age. With such a beautiful example before us, we need
-never say the circumstances of our life forbid the possibilities of
-living for God. The blacker the cloud the brighter may be the rainbow.
-The harder our situation the more can our life become a protest against
-it. The lighthouse needs the midnight darkness and the storm-beaten
-shore to bring out its value and its purpose, and there is no situation
-so trying and difficult but God can sustain us in it, and when we have
-learned our lesson enable us to triumph over it.
-
-Rizpah’s loving fidelity has placed her in the front ranks of Bible
-women whose holy ministries have made them famous. She may very justly
-be characterized as the _Mater Dolorosa_ of the old dispensation. Her
-fidelity to the memory of departed loved ones has no equal in the
-history of the world. And all this without the sustaining grace of
-God, for it must be remembered poor Rizpah was but a heathen woman, in
-a rude, dark age of the world. How glad we should be, that in a world
-where there is so much to sadden and depress, we have a Saviour to go
-to who knows all about our sorrow, and is touched with the feeling of
-our infirmities, and have blessed communion with Him in whom is the one
-true source and fountain of all true gladness and abiding joy! In a
-world where so much is ever seeking to unhallow our spirits, to render
-them common, how high the privilege of entering into the secret of His
-pavilion, and there, by consecration and prayer, receive strength for
-days to come. Such was not Rizpah’s privilege, hence her devotion is
-all the more remarkable.
-
-The history runs on. David had established his throne, and the visit of
-the Queen of Sheba marks the climax of the greatness of that kingdom,
-and the glory and wisdom of Solomon. It is a remarkable proof of the
-new spirit that had come upon the nation. Hitherto the people of Israel
-had been wholly agricultural. The great peculiarity of their country
-was its isolation, situated in the very midst of the nations of the
-earth, yet it was curiously shut in and shut out. A seaboard without
-a single navigable river, with a vast desert on the south, a lofty
-mountain range on the north, and that strange descent of the Jordan
-valley in the east going down more than a thousand feet below the
-level of the sea. But Solomon changed all that. His enterprise did
-not exhaust itself in building the Temple and palace of Jerusalem. He
-actually crossed the great desert to the south and at the head of the
-gulf that runs up to the east of the Arabian peninsula he made a harbor
-and himself superintended the building of a fleet of ships, and sent
-them to traffic in the east, and brought home the sandalwood and many
-of the treasures of the Indies, with which he enriched the palace and
-the garden.
-
-[Illustration: SOLOMON’S MERCHANT SHIPS.]
-
-Thus his merchants went away to strange lands, carrying with them
-wherever they went the tidings of their great king, of the Temple that
-he had built to Jehovah, the God of Israel; of the palace splendors; of
-his throne of state in the cedar Judgment Hall, a throne of ivory with
-golden lions on each step, and a footstool of gold.
-
-Now of the countries that they visited one was famous for its gold
-and frankincense and precious stones. It was the land of Sheba to the
-south. Thither came the captains and crews of Solomon’s ships, and the
-queen heard of the strangers who had come to trade with them in their
-vessels from afar, men of a strange language. She sent for them to the
-court to hear from their own lips the wonderful things they had to tell
-of their great king, and of their God, and of Jerusalem.
-
-The mere pageantry of the visit to Jerusalem has hidden from us the
-true queenliness and spirit of this woman. It was no idle curiosity
-that prompted a journey involving so much risk and difficulty. Her very
-throne itself was imperilled by her departure and long absence. It
-is a proof of how firmly she was set in the affections of her people
-that she could venture to leave the land; a proof of her courage that
-she should dare set out on such a journey. Hearing of the wisdom of
-Solomon, hearing of the great things he had done for his people,
-hearing above all that he had brought such prosperity to the land that
-every man could sit safely under his own vine and fig-tree, she formed
-her purpose to go. If she could learn to do so much for her own people
-it were worth everything.
-
-When the merchants had gone we can see her turn to her statesmen, every
-inch a queen, and full already of her lofty purpose, address them
-thus, “If I could but secure such well-being for this nation of mine,
-I should count it cheaply earned if I went to the ends of the earth to
-get it.”
-
-It is also worthy of observation that this queen of the south was not
-content with hearing about Solomon. She did not listen to the tale
-these merchants told, and straightway forgot it all, as if it were of
-no further concern. She made up her mind, there and then, that if such
-a one lived she would go to him and ask such questions as he, and only
-he, could answer, that would give her peace and be a blessing to her
-people.
-
-So important was this matter that she did not send an ambassador to the
-king. To her they were so real and sacred she must go herself, and go
-she did.
-
-Oh, the misery of it is that such hosts among us are content with
-hearing about these blessings of God. Alas, there are thousands of
-people who think all this is only to be preached about, never to be
-sought after; only to be heard about, never really found.
-
-She had a long way to go. We read, she came from the uttermost parts of
-the earth. Distances were immense in those days. It was a journey for
-camels, by no means a comfortable method of traveling. Soldiers must
-guard her, for there were many robbers; servants must go to wait upon
-her, for her state must be in keeping with the greatness of the foreign
-court. She must take with her a load of the most splendid gifts. Then
-there were long stretches of hot, wind-swept deserts to be crossed, in
-which many had perished in the sand storms. But she was not daunted,
-she was not to be turned aside. She had made up her mind, and bravely
-faced all the dangers.
-
-And then, also, we must not overlook the fact she had no invitation.
-She did not know how he might receive her. These great kings were
-jealous of strangers. Upon some pretence that she came to spy out the
-land, he might have her seized as a prisoner, and held her and her
-servants to be ransomed at some enormous cost of money. Such things
-were common enough; and, if he received her, was it not likely that
-he would look with contempt upon her? Even civilized people like the
-Greeks were accustomed to regard those as barbarians whose language and
-ways were foreign to themselves. But this brave woman will risk it all,
-and with a splendid courage, the courage of a woman, she comes.
-
-So the Queen of Sheba came to see King Solomon, and the scene of her
-coming was one of the utmost splendor. It was a tribute indeed to the
-far-reaching fame of Israel, which king and people alike may well have
-sought to turn to the fullest account.
-
-[Illustration: THE QUEEN OF SHEBA.]
-
-At the city gate Solomon came forth to meet the queen in all his
-glory, with flashing crown of pure gold, and royal robes of costliest
-magnificence. About him are the great officers of state in their
-gorgeous apparel, the old wise counselors, the chief captains of his
-army. Everywhere are the vast crowds of citizens, thronging every
-house roof and city wall, and clustering on every point of vantage.
-The music of his singing men and singing women fills the air with glad
-welcome.
-
-And now, seated at his side, in the chariot of cedar with its
-tapestried curtains, and drawn by the horses of Egypt all richly
-caparisoned, they go on their way. Solomon points out to her the Temple
-which he was seven years in building, and which Josephus likened to
-a “mountain of snow, covered with plates of gold, whose brightness
-made those that looked upon it turn away their eyes.” He told her
-there were used “talents” of gold, of silver, and of brass in its
-construction valued at the enormous sum of $34,399,110,000. The worth
-of the jewels placed at figures equally as high. The vessels of gold,
-according to Josephus, were valued at 140,000 talents, which reduced to
-money, was equal to $2,821,481,015. The vessels of silver were still
-more valuable, being set down at $3,231,720,000. Priests’ vestments,
-and robes of singers, at $10,050,000. He told her ten thousand men
-hewed cedars, seventy thousand bore burdens, and eighty thousand hewed
-stones, and it required three thousand three hundred overseers. Surely
-it was the wonder of the world. Then he pointed out to her the Judgment
-Hall, the house of the forest of Lebanon, and many other stately
-edifices.
-
-And now they reach the palace, with its luxurious gardens filled with
-treasures from all lands. And, seated at the great banquet which the
-king had spread in her honor, she sees his wealth, the vastness of his
-possessions, the hosts of his servants, the cupbearers at his side,
-the banqueting hall, itself a marvel of splendor, the “ascent by which
-he went up unto the house of the Lord.” As she saw all this, we read,
-“there was no more spirit in her.” She was overwhelmed by the sight of
-such boundless wealth and the vision of such glory.
-
-The Queen of the South communed with Solomon, we are told, of all that
-was in her heart. Simply and earnestly she told of her longings for her
-people and of the difficulties that beset her. She communed with him of
-the mystery of life, how to reach the highest and best. She asked him
-of many a matter that perplexed her. Graciously the king listened, and
-wisely he answered her. We can easily imagine the words which showed
-his skill in answering her questions. There may have been and doubtless
-was the keen wit, the brilliant saying, the flashes of wisdom, the
-glow of poetry, the genius like that which settled the dispute between
-the two mothers. Never did she dream of wisdom like that, and she
-exclaimed, “Behold, the half was not told me!” What she saw and heard
-excited her wonder to such a degree that it seemed to her directly
-imparted by the God of Solomon, whom he adored, and for whom she became
-filled with reverence. The light of heaven seemed to break on her soul
-when she exclaimed, “Blessed be the Lord thy God, which delighted in
-thee, to set thee on the throne of Israel.”
-
-She gladly acknowledged the truth of all that she had heard. “It was a
-true report that I heard in my own land of thy acts and of thy wisdom.”
-It was not mere learning, the answering of hard questions, the solution
-of metaphysical problems, but his works, appointments, the sitting of
-his servants, and the attendance of his ministers, the civil officers
-who sat at the royal table, convinced the queen of his great wisdom, in
-which she recognized the working of a peculiar power and grace imparted
-by God. It was also a practical or life-wisdom, such as Solomon himself
-describes, “a tree of life to them that lay hold upon her, length of
-days is in her right hand, and in her left hand riches and honor.”
-Such wisdom, which rests upon the foundation of the knowledge and love
-of God, “is more precious than rubies, and all the things thou canst
-desire are not to be compared unto her.”
-
-But the queen was not content with the words of praise and thanks. She
-makes proof of her gratitude by means of great and royal gifts. “She
-gave the king an hundred and twenty talents of gold, and of spices
-very great store, and precious stones.” The presents which she made
-consisted of those articles in which her land most abounded, and for
-which it was most famous. The spices were principally the celebrated
-Arabian balm, which was largely exported, and the shrub of which is
-said to have been introduced into Palestine by the Queen of Sheba.
-
-How high the significance which has always been attached to this
-visit of the Queen of Sheba to Solomon is shown by the fact that
-the remembrance of it has been preserved outside of Palestine for
-thousands of years, and that two ancient peoples, the Arabians and
-Abyssinians, regard her as the mother of their line of kings. And when
-the Lord, from out the treasure of the Old Testament history, chooses
-this narrative, and presents it for the shaming of the Pharisees and
-Scribes, this presupposes that it was known to and specially esteemed
-by all other nations. Sheba was reckoned to be the richest, most
-highly favored and glorious land in the ancient world, and therefore
-was given the unique name of “The Happy.” Now when the queen came with
-a splendid retinue to visit this distant land, and from no political
-design, but merely to see and hear the famous king; and when she, the
-sovereign of the most fortunate country in the world, declared that
-what she had seen and heard exceeded all her expectations; this surely
-was the greatest homage Solomon could have obtained. The visit of the
-Queen of Sheba marks, therefore, the splendor and climax of the Old
-Testament Kingdom, and marks an essential moment in the history of the
-covenant as well as of Solomon, and when our Lord said, “The Queen of
-the South shall rise up in the judgment with this generation and shall
-condemn it; for she came from the uttermost part of the earth to hear
-the wisdom of Solomon, and behold a greater than Solomon is here,” He
-recognized the prophetical and typical meaning of our narrative. It
-is said in the prophetical descriptions of the peaceful Kingdom of
-Messiah, “The Kings of Sheba and Seba (Meroe) shall offer gifts; yea,
-all kings shall fall down before him; all nations shall serve him.” The
-Queen of Sheba, who came from afar, is a type of the kings who, with
-their people, shall come from afar to the everlasting Prince of Peace,
-the King of kings, and shall do Him homage. Her visit is an historical
-prophecy of the true and eternal Kingdom of peace.
-
-The Queen of Sheba had everything that pertains to temporal prosperity,
-high rank, honor and wealth. But all these satisfied not her soul.
-She spared no expense or hardships, in order to satisfy the longing
-of her heart for the Word of Life. She said not, “I am rich, and have
-an abundance, and need nothing,” but she felt she still needed the
-highest and the best. How superior is this heathen woman to so many in
-Christian lands, who hunger and thirst after all possible things, but
-never after a knowledge of truth and wisdom, after the Word of Life.
-And then we do not need to journey on camels through burning deserts to
-Jerusalem to find Him who is greater than Solomon, for He has promised,
-“I am with you forever, until the end of the world,” and can be found
-by “whosoever” will seek after Him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-Womanhood in the Time of the Prophets and During the Captivity.
-
- THE WICKED JEZEBEL--THE WIDOW OF SAREPTA--THE TISHBITE AT THE CITY
- GATE--HIS STRANGE REQUEST--THE WIDOW’S UNFALTERING OBEDIENCE--AN
- APPEAL TO ELISHA--A POT OF OIL--THE WIDOW’S WONDERFUL FAITH--THE
- RICH WOMAN OF SHUNEM--HER MODEST LIFE--BARLEY HARVEST--A RIDE
- TO CARMEL IN THE GLARE OF THE SUN--ESTHER--HER BEAUTIFUL TRAITS
- OF CHARACTER--CROWNED AS QUEEN--PLEADING FOR THE LIFE OF HER
- PEOPLE--FOUND FAVOR WITH THE KING.
-
-
-The glory of the united kingdom of Israel, described in the last
-chapter, in a few years departed as a dream of the night. It was rent
-in twain, and Ahab, the wicked king, was on the throne of the northern
-kingdom, with the seat of government in Samaria. He had married
-Jezebel, the daughter of Ethbaal, King of Sidon, and she had introduced
-into the kingdom of Israel the heathen abominations of the Sidonians.
-She had even torn down God’s altars, and persecuted his prophets to the
-death. And it seems that too many of the Israelites raised little or
-no protests against these wicked acts of Jezebel. Indeed, one of the
-reasons why the kingdom, after the death of Solomon, was wrenched from
-Rehoboam, his son, was the people worshipped Ashtoreth, the goddess of
-the Sidonians.
-
-So grievous had these abominations of the Sidonians become, that
-God was about to visit the nation with judgment. But, as He always
-sends warnings, and gives a season to repent, so he sent Elijah, the
-Tishbite, from the hill country of Gilead down to Ahab in Samaria, with
-this message, “As the Lord God of Israel liveth, before whom I stand,
-there shall not be dew nor rain these years, but according to my
-word.” And James tells us, “it rained not upon the earth for the space
-of three years and six months.”
-
-During these years of famine, the Lord directed Elijah to a widow in
-Sarepta, after the waters of the brook of Cherith had dried up. Sarepta
-(or Zarephath) was a city of Phœnicia. But the distress of the famine
-in Israel was felt even here, for Israel was the great grain field
-for Phœnicia. And this explains why Elijah, when he came to the city
-gate of Sarepta, found a poor woman, a widow, gathering a few sticks,
-that she might bake the last morsel of bread and share it with her
-child, after which there was nothing more to hope for. The famine was
-doing its awful work among the cities of the coast. The hills back of
-Sarepta were scorched, and the beautiful valleys on either side of
-the city were cracked in great fissures. In her distress this widow,
-in her person had wasted to a skeleton, faltering, trembling, as she
-staggered out to gather a few sticks to bake her last cake for self and
-child, and then to die. Her cheeks were sunken, her eyes hollow, and
-her nerves seem never to have known what rest meant. As she walked she
-staggered; when she stood she reeled. She was leaning against her gate,
-the sticks in her arms when the Tishbite saluted her with the request,
-“Fetch me, I pray thee, a drink of water.”
-
-In a moment she was going toward her water pot. “Bring me, I pray thee,
-a morsel of bread in thy hand,” the prophet called after her while on
-the way to get the water.
-
-“Bread!” Distressed and sorely tried, the poor woman breaks down, and
-discloses the sad condition of her home in the ever-memorable words,
-“As the Lord thy God liveth, I have not a cake, but a handful of meal
-in a barrel and a little oil in a cruse, and behold, I am gathering two
-sticks that I may go and dress it for me and my son, that we may eat it
-and die.”
-
-She may or she may not have been an Israelite. She may have been one of
-the seven thousand who had not bowed unto Baal, and possibly knew who
-it was who addressed her. At all events she must have heard of this
-“lighted fire-brand, fallen out of the clouds, and hurled by the hand
-of Jehovah” at the wicked Ahab. She may even have heard that in the
-midst of the drought Ahab had divided the country between himself and
-Obadiah, to seek if possible, amidst its former fountains and brooks
-a little “grass to save his horses and mules alive,” though it did
-not matter to this hardened wretch of a king if his subjects died by
-the thousands. So this demand of Elijah must have been a real trial
-to her faith. Nor did her distressed condition change the demand of
-the Tishbite. “Do as thou hast said,” he commanded, “but bake me a
-little cake first!” What, serve this stranger from Gilead before her
-starving child? Surely how could she, with her mother heart, obey such
-an order? But, noble woman, staggering under the request, she placed
-the gathered sticks on the fire, went to the barrel and took out the
-last handful of meal, and poured the last drop of oil from the cruse,
-and baked for God’s prophet the cake, and served him _first_! Was
-there ever such unselfish self-surrender? But for her poverty and her
-appearance, she might have passed for an angel who had strayed away
-from heaven, got caught in the famine and could not find her way back.
-If God had not been behind this exorbitant demand of the prophet it
-had been simply heartless. But, along with the demand were the words,
-“for the Lord God of Israel hath said it.” If God said it, that was
-the end of all questionings, this angel in human form, reduced in her
-poverty, staggered off to meet the demand. There may have been no
-small stir in heaven when it became known that she had gone to bake
-her last cake for the man of God, and then to die without tasting it
-herself. If the jasper walls had that moment let down around her, and
-all the glorified had gathered about that oven, she would have felt
-perfectly at home without a change of raiment. But that “last cake”
-was never baked. As the trembling widow stood by the heated oven, in
-sublime obedience to God’s requirement, even as Abraham once stood by
-his altar fires on Moriah, with the bound Isaac upon it, there came
-the gracious “_Fear not!_” She had gone to a point in her faith where
-God always breaks down. He saw it all, and out of divine compassion He
-answered, “The barrel of meal shall not waste, neither shall the cruse
-of oil fail, until the day that the Lord sendeth rain upon the earth.”
-And the record goes on to say that she, and the prophet, and her house,
-had enough through the years of the famine. There was so much meal and
-oil that even the widow’s poor and starving relations came to partake
-thereof. That is the way God blesses--it always overflows upon others.
-
-How this incident at Sarepta glorifies God, whom the Scripture teaches
-us to know in His unapproachable greatness and in His affable mercy
-and condescension! As we sat by the little brook in Sarepta, amid
-the noontide glow of an Oriental sun, and read afresh this charming
-story, and then raised our eyes to look on the little chapel which
-the crusaders had erected on the reputed site of the widow’s home,
-the thought of such a God flooded us with His precious nearness, for,
-in our human needs, we love to feel His comforting presence in our
-hearts. The Jehovah, the Almighty God, the maker of worlds, the ruler
-of systems beyond human vision, whose perfect will is done in heaven
-by angels, who holdeth the dew of heaven, the rain in the clouds, the
-waters of the oceans in His hands, who gives and withholds the needed
-bread and water, He is our Father, and exercises a father’s care, so
-that the individual is not forgotten of Him. He holds not only the
-whole, but the single parts; He looks not only into the palace of
-kings, but into the cottages of poverty. The need and misery of a poor
-widow are not too insignificant for Him; He observes her sighs and
-tears, and her silent, desolate cottage is for Him a place worthy of
-the revelation of His glory and goodness.
-
-Matchless widow of Sarepta! As long as the name of Elijah lives, with
-its imperishable renown, so long shall thine be found side by side with
-it in the unfading annals of the church of God!
-
-But our story runs on. The wicked Ahab had died, and Jehoram, his son,
-reigned in his stead. The great hero, prophet of the kingdom of the
-ten tribes, had also passed over the Jordan, and somewhere among the
-valleys, overshadowed by the lofty dome of Nebo, the “chariot of fire
-and horses of fire” came down and translated the first and greatest
-of the prophets. His mantle, however, fell upon Elisha, the son of
-Shaphat. Elisha had scarcely returned from the land of Moab, whither
-he had gone to relieve the armies of Jehoshaphat, king of Judah, out
-of the horrors of a water famine, when there met him a certain widow
-of the wives of the sons of the prophets, and cried unto him in her
-distress. Of what particular prophet she was the widow the record does
-not state, nor is her name given. Josephus and the rabbis will have
-it that she was the widow of Obadiah, who, they think, had exhausted
-his fortune in the provision for the persecuted prophets in the time
-of the drought, in the reign of Ahab, when, faithful to God, amidst
-the splendors of Ahab’s corrupt court, he hid such of the prophets as
-escaped out of the hands of Jezebel, the wicked queen, hid them in
-caves, feeding them on bread and water through the sore distress of the
-three years’ famine, and so had fallen into debt, basing their claim
-upon the woman’s statement that her husband “feared the Lord,” which
-is also stated in respect to Obadiah. But whether she was the widow of
-Obadiah or not, she was greatly in need, and, in her distress, appealed
-to Elisha, who was the acknowledged head of the prophetic school.
-
-But what a calamity had come into her widowhood! Her husband had not
-only been taken from her by death, but now, after bravely struggling
-to provide for her family, the creditors had come to take her two sons
-to be bondsmen. If that will not touch a mother’s heart we do not know
-what will. And so she hastens away to relieve her burdened heart in the
-ears of the sympathizing prophet. He listened to her story, and then
-asked, “What hast thou in the house?”
-
-What a question to ask a mother whose sons were about to be sold into
-slavery for debts! What could she have of value she would not gladly
-dispose of to save her children?
-
-She answered, “Thine handmaid hath not anything in the house!” Not
-anything? Oh yes, there is “a pot of oil.” She was in a more deplorable
-condition than the widow of Sarepta, for she, aside from the cruse of
-oil, had a “handful of meal.” But this one was entirely destitute, even
-of the oil so essential in the preparation of food--she had only a
-little pot for anointing purposes. But even this was enough for God and
-faith to work on.
-
-“Go,” said Elisha, “borrow thee vessels abroad of all thy neighbors,
-even empty vessels; borrow not a few.” Comforted in her heart, she
-went home and told her anxious sons what the prophet had said. “It is
-vessels you want, is it mother?” “Yes,” she answered, the prophet said,
-“borrow not a few!”
-
-So all that morning, and far into the afternoon, the widow’s sons were
-calling on their neighbors for empty vessels, crocks, great waterpots,
-casks, firkins, in short, anything that would hold oil. As the boys
-were going empty-handed down the streets and returning loaded with
-vessels, the people began to wonder what that poor widow of the prophet
-should want of so many vessels, especially as it was known that she
-had nothing in her house. But the boys kept at their work until every
-neighbor was borrowed empty, and her house looked more like a depot for
-freight, than a poor woman’s cottage. All the rooms were filled, the
-open court was filled, and all the approaches were filled. The widow’s
-sons, if their industry in borrowing and carrying home vessels would
-save them from being sold into slavery, they certainly would escape
-out of the hands of their mother’s creditor, for was there ever such a
-sight of empty vessels! And not until there were no more to be borrowed
-did they cease from their work.
-
-And now the supreme moment came. The prophet had told her, after the
-vessels were all in, she should shut the door upon herself and upon her
-sons. Only her boys should be witnesses to the mighty deliverances
-of God. The locking of the door had no other object than to keep
-aloof every interruption from without. The action in question was not
-an ordinary, simply external, operation, but an act which was to be
-performed by the command of the man of God, and with the heart directed
-towards God, that is, in faith, so that it was to be completed, not
-in the noise and distraction of everyday life, but in quietness and
-solitude. And we may also well believe she first asked God’s blessing
-upon her undertaking, so far carried on in faith, for though her house
-was full of vessels, they were all as yet empty.
-
-The prayer ended, she took down her ointment jar--and Oh, it was such
-a very little pot! Holding it in her hand, she told her oldest son to
-bring one of the smallest jars, for how could the little vessel in her
-hand fill even the smallest of the borrowed utensils? As she tipped the
-little pot, the golden stream began to flow, and it kept on flowing
-until the vessel was filled to the brim, to the utter astonishment
-of herself and sons. This one filled, another was quickly brought.
-And as the oil flowed, the poor woman’s faith grew, and the sweat was
-now rolling down the faces of her sons as they brought up the empty
-vessels, and removed the full ones. Her face fairly shone as she filled
-the last vessel, and in her excitement cried out, “Bring me yet a
-vessel!” “Why, mother,” both the sons speaking at once, “there is not a
-vessel more!” So when the last was filled to the brim, “the oil stayed.”
-
-As she looked over the sea of vessels all filled to the brim with
-golden oil, out of the gladness of her heart she hastened to tell
-Elisha what had happened at her house. She had oil in her vessels and
-thanksgiving in her heart, and she must tell it out, and who was better
-prepared to share her joy than the prophet who had listened to the
-story of her distress.
-
-And he said, “Go, sell the oil, and pay thy debt.” The religion that
-comes from heaven looks well after its creditors. The debt was paid,
-her sons were spared to her, and a surplus was left for them to live
-upon.
-
-What a beautiful lesson of faith! We suppose if any of her neighbors
-had known that all these empty borrowed vessels were for the purpose
-of experimenting with a little pot of anointing oil, it would have
-created a sensation. Some, doubtless, would have said, the creditor,
-in threatening to take her sons, has driven that poor widow out of her
-mind. Why, such a thing as filling these pots, and firkins, and great
-casks of ten and fifteen gallon capacity, with a little pot of oil has
-never been heard of in Israel, and we can’t understand who could have
-put such an absurd idea into the poor woman’s head. Indeed, there was
-good reason for shutting the world out, for, if they had seen her take
-down the little pot of oil and attempted to pour into the vessels, they
-would have laughed her to scorn. But then, we Christian people should
-know that the things which are impossible with men, are perfectly
-possible with God. Yea, He loves to multiply the impossibilities of
-men, that no flesh may glory in His presence.
-
-Then also the number of vessels borrowed speak well for the faith of
-this woman. Our Lord tells us, over and over, according to our faith
-shall it be done unto us. If her faith had been small, and she had been
-content with a few vessels, the oil would have ceased to flow when the
-last vessel was filled. If our heavenly Father is ever pleased with the
-action of His earthly children, it must be over the audacious faith of
-a poor woman who, in her poverty and distress, borrows of her neighbors
-empty vessels for Him to fill out of His gracious benevolence.
-
-But not all women, in the time of the prophets, were widows and poor,
-but even the rich needed the consolations God only can give in times
-of trouble. And so our story runs on from the widow of Sarepta and the
-widow who, in her extremity, appealed to Elisha, to the rich woman of
-Shunem.
-
-Over against Jezreel, under the base of _Jebel Duhy_ (the so-called
-“Little Hermon”) amid luxuriant gardens of lemon, orange and fig trees,
-which cast their refreshing shades over the hot and sultry bridle-path,
-is the village of _Sulem_, in which we recognize the ancient Shunem,
-rendered so dear to every lover of the Bible by the beautiful, sweet
-story of the rich Shunammite woman who prepared a prophet’s chamber in
-her house, where Elisha often found a shelter from the oppressive heat
-of the noontide sun as he passed that way.
-
-The little city, in the division of the land, under Joshua, was
-allotted to the tribe of Issachar, and is three miles north of Jezreel,
-five miles from Mount Gilboa, about four miles from Nain, where our
-Lord raised the widow’s son, and is in full view of the sacred spot
-on Mount Carmel. In the southern section of the village, at the base
-of the hill Moreh, flows out a transparent stream of sparkling water,
-which renders the fields green and beautiful, said to be the finest in
-the world.
-
-Amid these enchanting and picturesque scenes lived the Shunammite. The
-Bible gives her no name. She needs none. She is simply “a great woman.”
-Standing in her doorway, in three directions, she could look out over
-the fields of grain, and see the slow movements of the heavily loaded
-camels drudge up from the seaport of Acre, or down through the great
-plain of Esdraelon from the mountains of Naphtali or the hill country
-of Gilead, beyond the Jordan. If Elisha came from Carmel, he would
-approach Shunem by the Acre road. Accompanied by Gehazi, one of the
-sons of the prophets, she could see them trudging along the dusty camel
-path at a great distance, and she said to her husband, “Behold now, I
-perceive that this is an holy man of God.” So much for the personal
-appearance of Elisha. He carried a good face, which commended itself
-even to this discerning woman. Prompted by the manly bearing of the
-prophet, he had scarcely reached the gate when she stood before him,
-and pointing to her home, “she constrained him to eat bread.”
-
-It appears that Elisha passed frequently through Shunem. No doubt
-Carmel, which lay in the middle of the northern part of the kingdom,
-was the place where the faithful worshippers of Jehovah, who lived in
-the north, came together from time to time, and were strengthened in
-their faith, and instructed by the prophet. This would call Elisha to
-pass up from Carmel to Shunem and the north. “And so it was, that
-as oft as he passed by, he turned in thither to eat bread.” Happy
-household! Most gracious hospitality! That sweet home, amid the olive
-groves of Shunem, ever afterwards became the resting place of the good
-Elisha.
-
-The pious, but keen-sighted woman, who at the first recognized in
-Elisha “an holy man of God,” was not deceived or disappointed when she
-became more fully acquainted with him in his frequent stops. Indeed,
-she must have been very favorably impressed with his bearing, for she
-proposed to enlarge her hospitality. She said to her husband, “Let us
-make a little chamber, I pray thee, on the wall,” that is, upon the
-flat roof of the house, with walls which would be a protection against
-storms, “and let us set for him there a bed, and a table, and a stool
-and a candlestick.” Beautiful and thoughtful provision. In such a room
-Elisha would be protected from every interruption, such as it was
-hardly possible to avoid entirely in the house, and there he might pass
-his time in quietness.
-
-Elisha wished to make some return to his hostess, who had received and
-entertained him so liberally and so often, but he did not know what
-would be acceptable to her a woman of wealth. In order to learn this,
-he does not address himself directly to her, but directs his servant
-to ask the necessary questions, that she may express herself with
-less embarrassment and less reserve. He asks, “What is to be done for
-thee? Wouldest thou be spoken for to the king, or to the captain of
-the host?” This question presupposes that Elisha at that time stood
-in favor and respect at court. The king, in this instance may have
-referred to Jehu, whom Elisha caused to be anointed. The commander of
-the army is named in connection with the king as the most powerful and
-most influential man at court.
-
-This excellent woman sent a most beautiful reply to the prophet. “And
-she answered, I dwell among my own people.” She asks no recompense
-for the good she had done. She wishes to have nothing to do with the
-court of the king, and the great ones of the world. She had no favors
-to ask, and desired no political honors. Hers was a contented life.
-Perhaps, in this reply, she wished to show, at the same time, that she
-had not entertained the prophet for the sake of any return, but for
-his own sake, and for the sake of God. She had received him in the
-name of a prophet, and not for the sake of a reward, or any temporal
-gain. She loved God, and therefore loved His servant, and she showed
-him kindness, because this was the law God had written upon her heart.
-Although she lacked that which was essential to the honor and happiness
-of an Israelitish wife, namely, a son, yet she was contented, and no
-word of complaint passed her lips--a sign of great humility and modesty.
-
-But the noble-hearted Elisha could not endure the thought of receiving
-all these favors without making some return, and he felt all the
-more bound to do something for her. To be barren, in those days, was
-regarded as a disgrace, so the prophet summoned her into his presence.
-But out of modesty and respect she only came to the door. Elisha
-announced to her that her home is to be blessed in the birth of a
-son. There were the disabilities of nature, and the woman regarded
-the announcement as improbable of realization, and, in true Oriental
-language, replied, “Nay, my lord, thou man of God, do not lie unto
-thine handmaid,” that is, do not deceive me, by exciting vain hopes in
-me. The Lord, however, according to His grace and truth, remembers even
-the desires which we cherish in silence, as no doubt this woman had
-done, but did not express, and He often gives to those who yield to His
-holy will without murmurs or complaints just that which they no longer
-dared to hope for. It makes a great difference whether we doubt of the
-divine promises from unbelief, or from humility or want of confidence
-in ourselves, because we consider the promises too great and glorious,
-and ourselves unworthy of them.
-
-But God remembered this noble woman of Shunem, who had shown such
-kindness to His servant, and, according to the promise, a son was
-born into the great woman’s home. A ray of sunshine had indeed broken
-through the parted clouds and entered that home--sunshine such as had
-never been there before, and such as outshone all her estates.
-
-Below the village, stretching away towards the south and east, were the
-wheatfields, and the child, as children sometimes will, slipped out
-from under the mothers watchful care, into the field where the reapers
-were at work. Absorbed in the work of the reapers, neither the father
-nor the son realized the intense heat pouring down out of a clear sky
-upon the field at the hottest season of the year. Presently, this child
-of promise, which had gladdened the hearts of his parents and brought
-such joy and sunshine to their home, came up to his father and said,
-“My head, my head.”
-
-It was scarcely barley harvest when we crossed this plain with the
-glare of the sun out of a clear sky shining in our face, and with blood
-heated and thirsty withal, and the danger of a sun-stroke, we thought
-of the words of the child, and ever since they have had a new meaning.
-At once the father directed a lad to carry the child “to his mother,”
-and when the lad had brought him “he sat on her knees till noon, and
-then died.” All the mother’s hope turned to ashes, and her joy into
-grief, made all the more bitter because it was her only child. As she
-sat in her house with the dead child folded to her bosom, her soul
-cried out: “What is life?” Though passing fair, it is but as
-
- A flower just opened in the sun,
- And wilted, withered, ere the day is done;
-
- A vapor swiftly floating in the sky,
- That vanished as it caught our eye;
- A fragrant perfume borne upon the gale,
- That’s gone before we could its sweets inhale.
-
- A bright pinioned warbler but just flitting by
- Is lost, while we gaze in the depths of the sky;
- A bud just bursting when the cruel frost
- Steals all its beauty and its fragrance is lost.
-
- Strains of sweet music floating on the air,
- Soon turned to moans and wailings of despair;
- A glowing smile while flashing o’er the face,
- Suddenly to glistening tears give place.
-
-The grief-smitten mother carried the body of her precious child into
-the upper chamber and tenderly laid it on the “bed of the man of God,
-and shut the door upon it.” Doubtless, for the present, she intended to
-keep the death of the child from the husband and father. Evidently she
-cherished the secret hope that the prophet, who had promised her a son
-in the name of Jehovah, and had not deceived her, could help to restore
-him. At all events she acted promptly. She called her husband to send a
-young man out of the field to make ready with all haste to go to Mount
-Carmel, and when ready she said to the servant, “Drive, and go forward;
-slack not thy riding for me, except I bid thee.”
-
-Elisha, from his outlook on mount Carmel, saw a cloud of dust in the
-plain of Esdraelon, and he called the attention of Gehazi to the flying
-figures at the head of it. On swept the riders over the plain. Elisha
-once more put his hand up to shade his eyes from the glare of the sun,
-and said, “Behold, it is the Shunammite; run now,” and ask, “Is it well
-with thee? is it well with thy husband? is it well with the child?” By
-sending his servant to meet her, Elisha showed how highly he esteemed
-this woman. However, to the salutation of Gehazi, she returned only
-the short, indefinite answer, “It is well,” in order, doubtless, not
-to be detained by further explanations. She would at once hasten to
-the prophet himself. When she came near him, overcome by grief, which
-she had repressed until then, she threw herself at his feet, in the
-manner of Orientals, and sobbed out her great sorrow, at the same time
-imploring his assistance. Gehazi could not understand it. He thought
-her conduct in clasping his master’s feet an offence against his
-dignity, and “came near to thrust her away.” But Elisha said, “Let her
-alone.” Give the poor grief-stricken woman a chance to compose herself
-and to tell her trouble.
-
-Presently, the stricken mother called the prophet’s attention to
-his own promise, meaning to say thereby, I did not complain of
-my childlessness, and did not demand a son; now, however, I am
-grief-smitten, for it is better never to have a child than to have one
-and lose it.
-
-The grief and the lamentation of the woman moved the compassionate
-heart of the prophet so much that he desired to bring her relief as
-soon as possible. He therefore said to Gehazi, “Gird up thy loins,
-and take my staff in thine hand and go thy way; if thou meet any man,
-salute him not.” This shows that he was to go as quickly as possible.
-He was even to refrain from saluting any one. It is well known that
-salutations are far more ceremonious in the Orient than with us, and
-inferiors always remain standing until persons of higher rank pass by,
-and thus annoying delay was often occasioned. This command to hasten
-would draw off the attention of the mother from her excessive grief,
-and, possibly, Elisha may have hoped that life had not yet entirely
-left the child, and that utter decease might yet be prevented by swift
-interference. But the importunity of the woman, that Elisha himself
-should come, proceeded from the conviction that the child was already
-completely dead, and that now not Gehazi, but only the prophet himself,
-who had promised her the son, could help. To this deep confidence he
-promptly responded.
-
-Gehazi carried out his commission by hastening on to Shunem, and
-placing the prophet’s staff upon the face of the child, and, by means
-of the divine power, of which the staff was the symbol, he was to
-execute a prophetical act in awakening the child out of the death-sleep.
-
-Before Elisha, with the sorrowing mother, arrived at Shunem, Gehazi had
-discharged his commission, although in vain, and was on his way back
-again, when he met the prophet, and said, “The child is not awaked.”
-Though he had the external symbol of the prophet’s power, yet it lacked
-the spirit of Jehovah, which was the special gift of God, and which
-even Elisha might not delegate, according to his own will and pleasure,
-to his servant.
-
-The want of success of Gehazi’s commission spurred on the prophet all
-the more to do what he could in order to restore the child to life.
-Having reached the house of sorrow, and the little chamber where the
-loving hands of the mother had laid the body of her child, Elisha shut
-the door, and “prayed unto the Lord.” In that awful hour of a mother’s
-heart-crushing suspense, God heard His servant’s cry, and gave back the
-precious child to life again.
-
-The closing scene is very beautiful indeed. The mother having been
-called, when she reached the chamber, Elisha said, “Take up thy son!”
-We are not told whether the mother heart first leaped to embrace the
-child, or, out of modest gratitude, she first fell at the prophet’s
-feet in a flood of grateful thanksgiving. The bread of kindness she
-had been casting upon the waters, in honoring God’s servant, now all
-returned to her. She certainly was reaping with tears of joy, and, had
-she lived in this gospel age, she could have heard the Lord of life
-saying, “Inasmuch as ye did it to one of these My servants, ye did it
-unto Me.” Marvels of marvels, that prophets’ homes do not dot our land
-in this day of gospel light.
-
- As Elisha broke asunder
- Death’s cold hands and said, “Arise,”
- Give the child back to his mother--
- So Thy power doth still suffice.
-
-Immortal woman of Shunem! Home-builder for the prophets of the Lord;
-the saints in glory salute thee to-day, and the saints on earth are
-thrilled with thy worthy example. There is scarcely a story in the Old
-Testament which is more beautiful than the one related of this “great
-woman” in White Raiment, who built a prophet’s chamber in her own house
-at Shunem, where the servant of the Lord might turn in out of the glare
-of the noontide sun and find rest.
-
-From the incidents connected with the beautiful life of the rich woman
-of Shunem, to the time of Queen Esther, there is a period of about four
-hundred years, and they are years of turbulance on the part of the
-people and admonitions on the part of God, until finally He suffered
-them to be led away into captivity.
-
-The scene of our next woman in White Raiment is in the reign of
-Ahasuerus, son of Xerxes, who lived B. C. 462. After several severe
-conflicts he was settled in peaceable possession of the Persian Empire,
-and, in honor of his victory, appointed a feast in the city of Shushan,
-which continued for one hundred and eighty days, after which he gave a
-great feast to all the princes and people who were in Shushan for seven
-days.
-
-[Illustration: HADASSAH IN THE PERSIAN COURT.]
-
-Queen Vashti, at the same time, made a like feast, in her apartment for
-the women.
-
-On the seventh day of the feast, Ahasuerus commanded the seven
-chamberlains to bring Queen Vashti before him, with the crown royal on
-her head, that he might show to the princes and people her beauty.
-
-This she refused, for the act would be contrary to the usage of Persia,
-very indecent and unbecoming a lady, as well as the dignity of her
-station. Whereupon the king was incensed, and fearing the influence
-among the people of the realm in encouraging women to disobey their
-husbands, called a council of seven, to determine what should be done.
-The council advised putting away the queen, and she was removed from
-her high position as queen, and a collection of virgins was ordered
-throughout the realm for the selection of a successor.
-
-There lived at this time in Shushan a Jew named Mordecai, a descendant
-of Babylonish captives and who was a porter at the royal palace.
-Mordecai, not having children, brought up Hadassah, his uncle’s
-daughter. Her life opened like a cactus flower on the thorny stem of
-the captivity, but nevertheless is an exquisite jewel with a royally
-superb setting, and gleams and sparkles in Hebrew history.
-
-Her mother named her Hadassah, for the myrtle tree, which was not only
-beautiful, with its glossy, dark-green leaves and luxuriant clusters of
-white bloom, but was useful for perfumery and spice. It was the emblem
-of justice, and bearing it may have added strength to her character.
-Her Persian name was Esther, for the planet Venus. Orientals held the
-myrtle sacred to the goddess of Love.
-
-Esther, being fair and beautiful, was made choice of among other
-maidens in this collection of virgins which had been ordered, and was
-carried to the king’s palace and there committed to the care of Hegai,
-and was assigned to the best apartments.
-
-This captive young woman was discreet. Those who have great beauty do
-not always have discretion. Depending upon the power of their personal
-charms, they neglect to cultivate the mind and soul. Physical beauty,
-like fruit, begins to decline as soon as it reaches its best. Mental
-and spiritual beauty grow with the years as long as the hygienic laws
-of grace are obeyed. But she was not only discreet, but also amiable.
-Amiability costs only self-control and unselfish love, and it is the
-best possible investment. Genuine amiability is God’s gift to those who
-trust Him to cleanse them from all that is contrary to love.
-
-Then also this Hebrew maiden must have known severe discipline. She
-showed its effect in the gentle deportment that won the favor of the
-officers that guarded the king’s harem. She submitted her taste in
-dress and ornament to the one who had the responsibility of preparing
-her for the royal presence, and in the docility with which she heeded
-the advice of Mordecai.
-
-These graces of mind and heart commended her to the king’s favor and
-she was advanced to higher honor, and subsequently, when Queen Vashti
-was deposed, Esther was crowned in her stead. Thus she was raised at
-once to the highest place that the world could give a woman at that
-day--as the queen and favorite of the mightiest monarch of his time.
-
-This event was celebrated by a great feast which the king made to all
-his princes, called Esther’s feast, and which was attended with high
-honor, and by the presentation of gifts, “according to the state of the
-king.”
-
-About this time Haman, the chief minister or vizier of King Ahasuerus,
-was promoted, so that his seat was “above all the princes.” The Targum
-and Josephus interpret the description of Haman, the Agagite, as
-signifying that he was of Amalekitish descent, the sworn enemies of
-the Israelites in their march through the desert, and the sparing of
-whom cost Saul, the first king of Israel, his crown. This Haman was the
-king’s favorite, and all the under officers and servants were required
-to pay reverence unto him.
-
-But there was one man who would not bow. This was Mordecai, the
-porter at the royal palace. He would not salute Haman, the idolatrous
-descendent of the old enemies of his people. This greatly displeased
-Haman, but he scorned to lay hands on Mordecai, and knowing him to
-be a Jew, resolved to destroy him and his people. He took council and
-determined by lot on the day for the accomplishment of his purpose.
-
-To do this successfully he must deceive the king and entrap him to
-do a wicked act. So he said to Ahasuerus, “There is a certain people
-scattered abroad and dispersed among the people in all the provinces
-of thy kingdom; and their laws are diverse from all people; neither
-keep they the king’s laws; therefore it is not for the king’s profit
-to suffer them. If it please the king, let it be written that they
-be destroyed; and I will pay ten thousand talents of silver to the
-hands of those that have the charge of the business, to bring it into
-the king’s treasuries.” And so this hateful Amalekite, by offering
-to pay into the king’s treasury more than $10,000,000, obtained the
-royal decree to put all the Israelites in the hundred and twenty-seven
-provinces of Ahasuerus, extending from India to Ethiopia, to death.
-
-When Mordecai heard of the decree, he and the Hebrews made great
-lamentation, and he made Queen Esther acquainted with the plot to
-destroy her people, and entreated her to go in unto the king and make
-supplication for their rescue. At first she excused herself, but being
-led to understand that she, too, was included in the decree, she put
-her life on the hazard for the safety of her countrymen. It was no
-light matter for the beautiful young queen to risk her life to save
-her people. Surrounded as she was by the luxury and elegance of that
-magnificent Persian court, keenly alive to the charm of all lovely
-things, it meant much for her to go down to the grave in the brilliant
-morning of her youth.
-
-But when Mordecai turned to her for help, he reminded her that she
-had come to the kingdom for such a time as that. His faith asserted
-that God would deliver His people; and, if she failed to do her part,
-she and her father’s house would perish. She said she would make the
-attempt. “If I perish, I perish,” was her wail of submission.
-
-However, in her great undertaking, she displayed a humble dependence
-upon the God of Israel; she also showed great prudence and wisdom. She
-asked her people to fast and pray three days; and all her maidens--who
-were selected, no doubt, on account of their sympathy with her
-faith--would also fast and pray. When the books are opened it may
-appear that the Hebrews were led, through the deliverance that she
-wrought for them, to the penitence that made it possible for God to
-take them back to the fatherland.
-
-[Illustration: ESTHER PLEADING FOR HER PEOPLE.]
-
-At the end of the fast she put on her royal apparel and went unto the
-king while he was seated upon his throne. The first gleam of hope
-lighted up her distressed heart when Ahasuerus held out his golden
-sceptre.
-
-It has been said that men’s hearts are reached through their stomachs.
-Whether this was true of Ahasuerus, or whether Esther knew of this
-avenue or not, she certainly showed great tact when she desired to
-make a banquet for the king and his favorite prince, Haman, which the
-beautiful queen would prepare, where he could then hear her request.
-
-It would have been a most natural thing to do, after Esther had risked
-her life by going uncalled into the presence of the king, and when
-she found him graciously disposed to partake of her feast, to throw
-herself at once upon his mercy, and beg for her life and the lives of
-her people. But no. She must have great power over him to get him to
-undertake the difficult task of setting aside one of his own decrees.
-Probably her faith in God was not yet strong enough for her to make a
-sure move. She saw that she was not yet sure of her ground, nor firm
-in her faith; so, when he made the great offer even of dividing his
-kingdom with her, she simply asked that he and Haman should honor her
-with their presence at another banquet.
-
-Doubtless, as she sat at the second banquet with the perfect
-self-control that they have who rely only on God, having used every
-device to fortify her position in the good graces of the capricious
-despot, her keen Hebrew insight weighed every light expression from his
-lips, although she knew a sword of doom hung over her jewel-crowned
-head, and yet she was calm and self-contained, as if she had no thought
-but to please him. Thus she led the king on until her power over him
-was at its height, and when he again offered her half the kingdom, she
-asked only for her life and the lives of her people.
-
-It must be that, although Haman was present at this banquet, he did
-not hear the request of Queen Esther, for he went forth from the feast
-“that day joyful and with a glad heart.” But when he saw Mordecai, in
-the king’s gate, and that he still refused to bow to him, “he was full
-of indignation.”
-
-So when he reached his own residence, he called his friends, and took
-counsel with them, and they advised him to cause a gallows to be built,
-eighty feet high, and to ask the next morning to have the king order
-Mordecai to be hanged thereon.
-
-But matters had taken a different turn at the palace. The king could
-not sleep that night. To pass the long, wakeful hours, he called for
-the reading of the records of the kingdom. As they were reading before
-the king, it was found written in the chronicles of the conspiracy of
-Bigthan and Terish, and that Mordecai had discovered the plot, and that
-nothing had been done for him as a reward.
-
-In the meantime the morning drew on, and Haman had entered the court of
-the palace to confer with the king about the hanging of Mordecai. We
-can well believe the mind of Ahasuerus was in a bad frame to talk about
-hanging the man who had saved his life by discovering the plot of the
-king’s chamberlains. But the king did not know what dark deeds were in
-the heart of Haman as he ordered him to be called. When Haman came into
-the presence of Ahasuerus, the king asked what should be done with the
-man whom he wanted to honor.
-
-The king’s favorite, who had just shared two private banquets with
-the king, was so inflated with himself that he did not think there
-was another man in the Persian empire in whom Ahasuerus would be so
-delighted to honor as himself, so he advised that the royal apparel be
-brought forth and the king’s horse and his crown, and given to one of
-the noble princes to array the man whom the king delighted to honor,
-and take him through the city on horseback with a proclamation, “This
-is the man whom the king delighteth to honor.”
-
-The command was given to Haman to thus honor Mordecai, which he did,
-with not very good grace, for, when he had finished his task, he
-“hasted to his house mourning, and having his head covered,” and
-related his mortification to his wife and friends.
-
-After all, for the moment at least, it must have seemed to Haman and
-his friends as a strange act on the part of the king, for while they
-were yet talking over the humiliation, the king’s chamberlains came,
-requesting Haman to hasten and come to the banquet Esther had prepared.
-It must have seemed to Haman that Esther had really gone into the
-banqueting business, so frequently had he been honored of late.
-
-When the king and Haman sat down to the banquet the king again asked
-Esther what was her petition. Whereupon she humbly prayed the king
-that her life might be given her and her people, for a design was laid
-for the destruction of her and her kindred. At which the king asked
-with much anger who it was that durst do this thing. She told him that
-Haman, then present, was the author of the wicked plot, and she laid
-the whole scheme open to the king. Who can tell how much her own chance
-of salvation depended on her courage, self-control and tact? A look,
-even the droop of an eye-lid, might have betrayed her into the hands
-of the most cringing and unscrupulous of royal favorites, and sent her
-and her whole race to their death. But God held her steady in nerve and
-growing in faith, as He does all who put their whole trust in Him.
-
-The king rose up with much wrath from the banquet and walked out into
-the garden.
-
-Haman saw his opportunity. Quickly he stood up to plead for his life.
-Perceiving that there was evil determined against him by the king, he
-prostrated himself before the queen upon the couch on which she was
-sitting to supplicate for his life; in which position the king found
-him on his return.
-
-The motive for Haman’s unhappy attitude before the queen was
-misunderstood by the king, and he spoke in great passion, “What, will
-he force the queen before me in the house!”
-
-At which words the servants present immediately covered Haman’s face,
-as was the usage to condemned persons, and the chamberlain, who had
-called Haman to the banquet, acquainted the king with the gallows he
-saw in his house there prepared for Mordecai, who had saved the king’s
-life.
-
-The king ordered Haman should be forthwith hanged thereon, which was
-accordingly done. A feast was then consecrated in commemoration of the
-deliverance of the Jews, called the feast of Purim.
-
-This story of Esther, which has in it the real romance of life, has
-also a consummate blending of works and faith. Preparing a banquet of
-every luxury that could please a dangerous tyrant, and at the same time
-fasting and praying in heart-humbling agony for Divine deliverance.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-Womanhood in the Time of the Saviour’s Nativity.
-
- AN ANGEL BY THE ALTAR OF INCENSE--HIS MESSAGE--AN ISRAELITISH
- HOME--IN THE SPIRIT OF ELIJAH--THE DESERT TEACHER--THE
- ANNUNCIATION--THE VISIT OF MARY TO ELIZABETH--MARY’S
- MAGNIFICAT--JOURNEY TO BETHLEHEM--THE NATIVITY--HOME LIFE IN
- NAZARETH--AFTER SCENES IN MARY’S LIFE--HER RESIDENCE AND DEATH
- AT EPHESUS--THE PROPHETESS ANNA--HER WAITING FOR REDEMPTION IN
- JERUSALEM--THE LESSON OF HER PURE AND BEAUTIFUL LIFE.
-
-
-Isaiah, looking adown the ages to the coming of Christ’s Kingdom,
-likened it to waters breaking out in the wilderness and streams in
-the desert. For centuries there was no voice of prophet in Israel
-or revelation from God to His chosen people, when suddenly the long
-silence was broken. It was in the days of Herod the Great, when sin and
-misery had reached their climax, and when the yearning for Messiah’s
-appearance was more intensely felt than ever. The Temple, so often
-the scene of the manifestation of the glory of God, became again the
-centre, whence the first rays of light secretly break through the
-darkness.
-
-One of the priests, named Zacharias, while performing his duty in
-the service of the sanctuary, burning incense before the Lord, had a
-vision, in which he was assured that his prayer was heard, and great
-distinction conferred upon him in a twofold answer: First, the Messiah
-shall indeed appear in his days; and, secondly, that he shall himself
-be the father of the forerunner, who is to prepare His way--an honor
-he could not have ventured to anticipate. What human tongue could have
-foretold it to him, or how could he have ventured to hearken to the
-voice of his own heart, without direct revelation? Zacharias sought
-first the Kingdom of God, and His righteousness, and all other things
-were added to him.
-
-In the service of the sanctuary the burning of incense before the
-Lord was considered exceedingly important and honorable. The people
-were accustomed to unite in the outer court in silent supplication,
-while the priest in the sanctuary offered the incense, which was ever
-regarded as the symbol of acceptable prayer.
-
-Remaining longer in the sanctuary than was strictly necessary, the
-people, who were waiting in the outer court of the Temple, feared
-that some misfortune, or sign of the divine displeasure, had befallen
-him, for they “marveled that he tarried so long.” And when he finally
-appeared “he could not speak.” While standing before the altar,
-awaiting the signal to sift the precious incense, a heavenly messenger
-appeared unto him. When Zacharias saw the angel he was troubled, and
-fear fell upon him. The heavenly messenger quickly answered, “Fear not,
-Zacharias, for thy prayer is heard; and thy wife Elizabeth shall bear
-thee a son, and thou shalt call his name John.”
-
-Both Zacharias and Elizabeth were of the priestly race, and he himself
-was a priest of the course of Abia, and she was of the daughters of
-Aaron. Both, too, were devout persons, walking in the commandments of
-God, and waiting for the fulfillment of His promise to Israel. But in
-the midst of the glorious revelations the angel had made, strange to
-say, Zacharias had asked for some sign or confirmation of the glad
-tidings. The angel answered, “I am Gabriel” (the Might of God) “and,
-behold, thou shalt be dumb.” As faith is to be the chief condition
-of the new covenant, it was needful that the first manifestation of
-unbelief should be emphatically punished, but the wound inflicted
-becomes a healing medicine to the soul. The aged priest was constrained
-to much silent reflection, and, according to the counsel of God, the
-secret was still kept for a time.
-
-There is here a remarkable coincidence between Zacharias and Abraham on
-the one side, and Elizabeth and Sarah on the other; not only in the
-fact of their lack of an heir during so many years, but also in the
-frame of mind in which they at length received the heavenly message.
-In these parallel histories, the man of the olden times is strong in
-the faith, the woman weak; while under the new covenant it is the man
-whose faith falters. On the very threshold of the new dispensation
-woman, in the person of Elizabeth, takes her place in the foreground
-by the heroism of a living faith. It is also quite in keeping with
-Divine wisdom that in this case unbelief in view of the rising sun of
-the gospel salvation is much more severely punished than under the old
-dispensation.
-
-[Illustration: THE ANGEL’S MESSAGE.]
-
-The sight of Zacharias struck dumb awakened among the people an
-expectation of some great and heavenly event; soon will “the things”
-done in the priest’s house be “noised abroad throughout all the hill
-country of Judea,” and the voice of “him that crieth” shall soon
-resound over hill and valley.
-
-The sacred duties performed, retirement was next in order. As a priest,
-in the “course of Abia,” the twenty-four courses in the services of the
-temple relieved each other weekly, each course ministering during a
-whole week. So Zacharias and Elizabeth leave Jerusalem for their home
-among the picturesque hills of Judea, south-west of Bethlehem. How
-beautiful are the pictures of these Israelitish homes into which the
-Bible bids us so often to look. The familiar vine and fig-tree; the
-flower-planted courts; the waterpots filled for quenching thirst; the
-basin and towel and servant to bathe the heated, often dust-covered,
-feet; the domestic scene morning and evening in the grinding of the
-food in the familiar hand-mill, the work always performed by the women;
-the delightful views from the housetops in the cool of the evening;
-the maidens busy in filling the waterpots; the halting of visitors
-in the outer court, waiting for some damsel to open the door; the
-thousand little touches of real life which are always so charming to
-the observer. In addition to these outward signs, the good manners and
-propriety, the atmosphere of true courtesy; the youth rising up before
-the hoary head; the child learning at his mother’s knee, or inquiring
-of father or elder; a joyousness, such as a mind at peace with God only
-can exert, are all manifest in these Bible pictures which ages can not
-dim. Yet most striking are the proofs that in every household children
-were desired, and gladly welcomed.
-
-Notwithstanding a barren wife in an Israelitish home was often a cause
-for divorce, Zacharias was pre-eminently a man of hope. As a pious
-husband and lover, he had faithfully and tenderly clung to his beloved
-Elizabeth through the long years of youth and middle age, and even
-after hope had died out of their longing hearts. Both had learned “the
-patience of unanswered prayer”--a lesson not easily mastered by the
-bravest of us. But now the hope was to be realized, the “reproach among
-men” was to be taken away. In that home among the hills of Judea was to
-be a child in the arms of its mother. The name of the child, and he a
-son, was to be John (Jehovah shows grace). Many homes would rejoice in
-his birth, and he would be God’s man, eating nothing to inflame carnal
-passions, and filled with the Holy Spirit, he would become prophet
-and reformer. The grossly literal hope of the people for Elijah’s
-appearance in the flesh would be spiritually fulfilled, for Elizabeth’s
-son was to have the spirit and the power of the Tishbite; and thus
-gifted of the Almighty, was to be the forerunner of the Christ. All
-that was spoken of the Messiah’s messenger by Isaiah, as “the voice of
-one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make His
-paths straight,” and by Malachi, “Behold, I will send my messenger, and
-he shall prepare the way before me,” were fulfilled in this son of many
-prayers.
-
-In due time he was born, and on the eighth day, in conformity with the
-law of Moses, was brought to the priest for circumcision, and, as the
-performance of this rite was the accustomed time for naming a child,
-the friends of the family proposed to call him Zacharias after the
-name of his father. The mother, however, required that he should be
-called John--a decision which Zacharias, still speechless, confirmed
-by writing on a tablet, “his name is John.” The judgment on his want
-of faith was then withdrawn, and the first use which he made of his
-recovered speech, was to praise Jehovah for his faithfulness and mercy,
-a proof that the cure had taken place in his soul also.
-
-A single verse contains all that we know of Elizabeth’s child of
-promise for the space of thirty years--the whole period which elapsed
-between his birth and the commencement of his public ministry. The
-record is, “The child grew and waxed strong in the spirit, and was in
-the desert till the day of his showing unto Israel.” But we must not
-forget that through his childhood and youth he was under the care of a
-wise, loving mother. Elizabeth’s unfaltering faith and prudent counsel,
-we must believe, exerted a lasting influence over this child of the
-desert.
-
-The child thus supernaturally born, was surely a sign that God was
-again visiting His people. His providence, so long hidden, seemed once
-more about to manifest itself in the person of Elizabeth’s son, who,
-doubtless must be commissioned to perform some important part in the
-history of the chosen people. Could it be the Messiah? Could it be
-Elijah? Was the era of their old prophets about to be restored? With
-such grave thoughts were the minds of the people occupied, as they
-mused on the events which had been passing under their eyes, and said
-one to another, “What manner of child shall this be?”
-
-So when John passed out from under the wise training of Elizabeth, his
-reputation for extraordinary sanctity, and the generally prevailing
-expectation that some great one was about to appear, were sufficient
-to attract to him a great multitude from “every quarter.” Brief and
-startling was his first exhortation to them, “Repent ye, for the
-kingdom of heaven is at hand.” His preaching of repentance, however,
-meant more than a mere legal ablution or expiation, it meant a change
-of heart and life. While such was his solemn admonition to the
-multitude at large, he adopted towards the leading sects of the Jews a
-severer tone, denouncing Pharisees and Sadducees alike as “a generation
-of vipers,” and warning them of the folly of trusting to external
-privileges as descendants of Abraham. He plainly told them, “the axe
-was laid to the root of the tree,” that formal righteousness would be
-no longer tolerated. Such alarming declarations produced their effect,
-and many of every class pressed forward to confess their sins and to
-accept John’s ministry.
-
-This son of Elizabeth is one of the most striking characters in the
-Bible. Destined from before his birth to be a prophet, his life was
-worthy of his high office. Pure, unsullied, earnest, fearless, humble,
-he much resembled his great predecessor, Elijah. Like him, he was an
-ascetic, and like him, he had his time of fearless outspeaking and
-of reproval of kings, and hypocrites; and like him, also, a time of
-depression, as when he sent to Christ to ask, “Art thou He that should
-come, or shall we look for another?”
-
-A noble example of the fearless manner in which he proclaimed the truth
-is illustrated in the denunciation of the unlawful marriage of Herod
-Antipas, the Tetrarch. He had married a daughter of Aretas, King of
-Petra, but seeing Herodias, the wife of his half brother, Philip, he
-became infatuated with her, divorced his own wife and married Herodias,
-who abandoned Philip to marry him. Herodias was a grand-daughter of
-Herod the Great. This unprincipled woman wrought the ruin of Herod
-Antipas. Aretas, angry at the treatment of his daughter, made war upon
-Herod. John reproved Herod for all this, and he evidently had not
-minced words. Neither had he spoken in such low whispers that he might
-seem to others to disapprove the crime, but still escape the notice of
-the king. He thundered out his denunciations in a way to make even the
-royal couple alarmed, and caused them to shut John up in prison, lest
-his growing popularity should undermine the security of Herod’s throne.
-And then Herodias secured the execution of John, which angered the
-Jews, for they counted John as a prophet and held the subsequent defeat
-of Herod by Aretas as a judgment upon him for this wicked deed.
-
-Such, in brief was the son of the most highly and signally honored
-Woman in White Raiment in sacred history, Mary, the mother of Jesus,
-only excepted. The strong faith of the pious Elizabeth, as developed
-in her noble son, has been a blessing to the whole race of man. The
-clear shining faith to grasp the promises of God are most beautifully
-exemplified in the pure, self-sacrificing, and devoted life of
-Elizabeth.
-
-Closely related to the events in the life of Elizabeth, as just
-narrated, is the birth of our blessed Lord.
-
-There is no person in sacred or in profane literature around whom so
-many legends have been grouped as around the Virgin Mary, and there
-are few whose authentic history is more concise. Doubtless the very
-simplicity of the sacred narrative has been one cause of the abundance
-of the legendary matter of which she forms the central figure.
-According to the genealogy given by Luke, which is that of Mary, her
-father’s name was Heli. She was, like Joseph, her husband, of the tribe
-of Judah, and of the house and lineage of David. We are informed that
-at the time of the angel’s visitation she was betrothed to Joseph and
-was therefore regarded by the Jewish law and custom as his wife, though
-he had not yet a husband’s rights over her.
-
-The angel Gabriel, who had appeared to Zacharias in the Temple,
-appeared to her and announced that she was to be the mother of the
-long-expected Messiah; that in Him the prophecies relative to David’s
-throne and kingdom should be accomplished; and that his name was to be
-called Jesus. He further informed her, perhaps as a sign by which she
-might convince herself that his prediction with regard to herself would
-come true, that her relative Elizabeth was about to be blessed in the
-birth of a child.
-
-It appears that Mary at once set off to visit Elizabeth in her home
-in the hill country of Judea. When she had reached her destination,
-and immediately on her entrance into the house, she was saluted by
-Elizabeth as the mother of our Lord, and had evidence of the truth
-of the angel’s saying with regard to her cousin Elizabeth, Mary then
-embodied her feelings of exultation and thankfulness in the hymn known
-under the name of the _Magnificat_. The hymn is founded on Hannah’s
-song of thankfulness (1 Sam. ii, 1-10), and exhibits an intimate
-knowledge of the Psalms, prophetical writings and books of Moses, from
-which sources almost every expression in it is drawn.
-
-In approaching this exquisite bit of Hebrew poetry uttered by Mary we
-may profitably consider, first, its beauty of expression; and second,
-its nobility and grandeur of sentiment. The hymn consists of four
-stanzas of four lines each, and its literary character is best brought
-out by a translation which so arranges it. The first stanza reads:
-
- My soul doth magnify the Lord,
- And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour,
- Because He hath looked upon the humility of His bondmaiden;
- For behold, from henceforth all generations shall pronounce me
- blessed.
-
-In this stanza three points of parallelism appear in the first two
-lines. In the first occurs the word “soul,” and in the second the
-word “spirit,” which we understand to be but different designations
-of the same elements of our natures. Whatever difference in the use
-of these terms in other places it is evident that here according to
-the ordinary requirements of Hebrew poetry, the two words are chosen
-because of their similarity in meaning. The other synonymous terms are
-the words “magnify” and “rejoice;” “the Lord” and “God my Saviour.”
-Thus is introduced the so-called Magnificat. The characteristic of
-Hebrew poetry is not that it is arranged in rhyme and measured feet,
-but in the grander rhythm belonging to parallelisms of thought. Such
-a rhythm has far more freedom and force than that which consists of
-mere similarity of measure and sound. Hence it is that the poetry of
-the Bible is so readily translated into other languages, and loses so
-little of its force in the process; whereas poetry which depends upon
-the peculiarities of any given language is incapable of translation.
-The essential thing in Hebrew poetry is sublimity of thought and
-diction, accompanied by a substantial repetition of the sentiment in
-terms that are nearly synonymous. The thoughts are thus held before the
-mind till it can fully see their grandeur and beauty, and receive those
-shades of impression which come from repeated efforts at statement.
-
-In the second couplet of the above stanza Mary gives the reason for
-her rejoicing. She was of humble origin, and, before her neighbors and
-friends, was to be humbled still further. But, as is so often the case,
-what was Mary’s extremity was God’s opportunity, and He was to glorify
-Himself by making the weak things of the earth confound the mighty. As
-He brought Moses from the wilderness and David from the sheepfold, so
-was He to bring Mary from the seclusion of Nazareth and the humiliation
-in the stable at Bethlehem to a position of honor attained by no other
-woman, and all generations were henceforth to call her blessed.
-
-The second stanza reads:
-
- For the Mighty One hath done great things for me;
- And Holy is His name.
- And His mercy is unto generations and generations
- Of them that fear Him.
-
-Here the great things spoken of as done to Mary (in the first line)
-correspond, or rather constitute, the mercy (of the third line) which
-flows forth from the gospel from age to age; and the holiness of His
-name mentioned in the second is that characteristic of God which evokes
-the fear mentioned in the fourth line.
-
-The third stanza may be literally rendered as follows:
-
- He hath exercised the strength which is in His arm;
- He hath scattered abroad those who were proud by reason of the
- thoughts of their hearts;
- He hath cast princes down from their thrones, and exalted the lowly,
- The hungry hath He filled with good things, and the rich hath He sent
- empty away.
-
-In this, as all through the hymn, we have the flavor of Hebraistic
-forms of speech. In their poetical conceptions they did not think of
-God as an abstract being, but as having a mighty arm with which He
-swayed the nations and dashed their foolish plans in pieces, as one
-might break a potter’s vessel with a rod of iron. How little do men
-know the flimsiness of the schemes which they organize against the Lord
-and His anointed! The third and fourth lines of this stanza contain a
-double parallelism and a twofold antithesis. He casts down the kings
-and lifts up the lowly people; He fills to fullness the hungry, and
-sends the rich away empty.
-
-In the fourth stanza we read:
-
- He hath taken hold to help with Israel His servant,
- In order that He might call to mind the mercy characteristic of His
- nature
- (According as He hath spoken unto our fathers)
- To Abraham and his seed for ever.
-
-What a glorious conception this is of Israel, the hero of God, and
-who was not a servant, but a son, for that is the true meaning of the
-word rendered “servant.” The word is also one of endearment. And so we
-are reminded, in the second line, of His tender mercy. The only mercy
-of which He could have spoken to our fathers was His own, expressing
-itself in the whole scheme of salvation as revealed in the Bible. It
-was a peculiar plan of mercy revealed to Abraham and his spiritual
-descendants.
-
-Such, in brief, are the noble conceptions and the lofty figures of
-speech of this exquisite hymn of Mary. And we ask involuntarily,
-Whence comes it that so humble a maiden should thus in the beauty of
-her diction and the sublimity of her conceptions have rivaled, if not
-eclipsed, all the poets both of ancient and modern times?
-
-It might seem a short answer to this question to say that Mary was
-inspired. But such an answer does not satisfy the reasoning mind. God
-in His wisdom does not ordinarily see fit to disregard the secondary
-causes which He has created. We are led to look, therefore, to the
-character and condition of Mary herself as a partial explanation of
-the character of this piece of literature. And, upon examining the
-hymn, we find that it is largely composed of sentences from the Old
-Testament, embodying the Messianic expectations of the Jewish people.
-It sounds like an echo, not only of David’s and Hannah’s, but also of
-Miriam’s, and of Deborah’s harps; yet independently reproduced in the
-mind of a woman, who had laid up and kept in her heart what she had
-read in Holy Scripture. Out from the large body of sacred literature
-which was the rare heritage of her people, she had extracted that
-which was best and noblest and most appropriate. We do not, however,
-deny the direct inspiration of this hymn; but we would emphasize the
-broader conceptions of Providence, how the Holy Spirit can use a mind
-well stored with the deep things of God, as evidently was the mind of
-Mary, for, from beginning to end, this hymn assumes a sympathizing
-acquaintance with the history of the Jewish people, and of all the
-noble conceptions of the Deity with which the history of that people
-has made the world familiar.
-
-The unity of God is assumed without question. It is the Lord Jehovah
-that her soul magnifies. It is the only true God her Saviour in which
-her spirit rejoices. Nor is it a God of mere power, but a God of love
-and tenderness, whom she adores. It is one who has regard not for men
-alone and the great ones of the earth, but for the humble woman who
-occupies the most contracted sphere that falls to the lot of any. And
-in this the power of the God she adores appears pre-eminent, for he is
-able to make great things out of small. It was He who took Israel as a
-little vine and made him a great nation. It was He that multiplied the
-widow’s cruse of oil and handful of meal till she had a superabundance.
-It was He who lifted Rahab out of her wicked and heathen surroundings
-and placed her in the line of royal women in whom all the families of
-earth were to be blessed. It is He that notes the sparrow’s fall, that
-numbers the hairs of our heads, that hears the prayers we offer in
-secret when the door is shut, and that rewards us openly. It is He that
-can exalt the humblest life and make it gleam with the sunshine of His
-own glory. “Not many mighty, not many noble, are called ... but ... God
-hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which
-are mighty ... yea, and things which are not, to bring to nought the
-things that are.”
-
-Only such a God could lift on high so humble a maiden, and turn upon
-her the gaze of all the nations of the earth. But the God of Israel
-well might do it, for He is the Mighty One, and able to do great
-things, and His mercy is upon them that fear Him from generation
-to generation. In Israel’s deliverance from Egypt and in all their
-subsequent history, He had shown the strength of His arm. The wrecks of
-the nations that opposed Him strew the whole pathway of history. And as
-He raised Joseph from prison and exalted Daniel from the lion’s den,
-so should He ever lift up the meek, and help His servant Israel, and
-remember His promises to Abraham and His seed forever. Only one who is
-familiar with such a history could write such a hymn. Surely it is a
-great thing to be educated into such thoughts as these. To breathe in
-such sentiments in the very atmosphere of one’s home and in the social
-circles in which one daily moves is the highest of earthly privileges.
-It is only in such a hymn as this of Mary that we get a proper
-conception of the grandeur and nobleness of the thoughts underlying
-Hebrew history. In her Magnificat, Mary breathed the thoughts of those
-that surrounded her. From the days of pious Hannah down to those of
-Elizabeth, the women of Israel had been moved by such longings and
-animated by such hopes as have never been possible to any other people.
-They had the promise made in Eden that the seed of the woman should
-bruise the head of the serpent who led the world astray. And now to
-her, to this humble virgin of Israel, had the fulfillment of this
-promise come, and truly blessed was she among women. For here was the
-performance of those things which had been told her from the Lord. The
-great crisis of the world’s history had arrived, and she was the chosen
-channel through which the hope of the nations was come.
-
-O, blessed Woman in White Raiment, may thy hymn of praise, divinely
-inspired, be often upon our lips, and the sweetness of its precious
-truths continually in our hearts!
-
-The words of the angel in respect to Elizabeth having been confirmed by
-this personal visit of Mary to her home in the hill country of Judea,
-she returned to Nazareth.
-
-Soon after this the decree of Augustus, the Roman emperor, that all the
-world should be taxed, was promulgated, and Joseph and Mary traveled to
-Bethlehem to have their names enrolled in the registers of their tribe.
-It would seem that the Israelites still clung to their genealogies and
-tribal relations, and, though the undertaking was a severe strain upon
-Mary, and notwithstanding, according to the Roman custom, her name
-could have been enrolled without her personal presence, this woman,
-who was to be the most blessed of women, greatly preferred to accompany
-her husband on this journey of over seventy miles, much of the way up
-and down steep, rocky hills. Traveling in the East, under its most
-favorable conditions, is a slow, tiresome affair, especially for women.
-But Mary drudged along the mountain path, in company with her husband,
-all the way from Nazareth to Bethlehem. Her love for the city of David
-seems to have overcome all difficulties. Possibly a contemplative mind
-like hers may have perceived that this decree of Cæsar Augustus was but
-an instrument, in the hand of Providence, to fulfill ancient prophecy
-with respect to the birthplace of the Messiah, for Micah had declared
-that out of Bethlehem Ephratah, though little among the thousands of
-Judah, “yet out of thee shall He come forth unto Me that is to be ruler
-in Israel; whose goings forth have been from of old, from everlasting.”
-So, while it would seem that an arbitrary decree decided where Christ
-is to be born, God had manifested His wisdom in the choice of the
-time, place and circumstances, and was faithful in the fulfillment of
-the word of prophecy, ever carrying out His plans through the free
-acts of men. In this instance the great Roman Cæsar, even without his
-knowledge, became an official agent in the kingdom of God.
-
-So it came to pass, in the fullness of time, and in the beloved city of
-David, Bethlehem Ephratah, Mary brought forth the Saviour of the world,
-and humbly laid Him in a manger. Here, amid these humble surroundings,
-in the stall of an inn, among the beasts, was the advent of the Son of
-God, the Saviour of the world. And, behold, the Life which was to lift
-“empires off their hinges” and turn the “stream of centuries out of
-its course”--a life which was to revolutionize the world and transform
-humanity--had begun.
-
-The place where the inn stood is now occupied by an enormous pile of
-buildings, known as the “Church of the Nativity.” Down in the crypt of
-this church, reached by fifteen stone steps, and in the eastern wall
-of it, is a silver star, around which are the words: “_Hic de Virgine
-Maria Jesus Christus natus est_”--“Here Jesus Christ was born of the
-Virgin Mary.” One can not with indifference behold such a spot as this.
-To us it was a sacred and hallowed place, and we felt subdued and
-reverent while beholding the place where began the greatest life earth
-has ever contained. To the Christian, Bethlehem stands first among
-the holiest places on the face of the globe, and we were hushed into
-reverence by its sacred associations and charmed by its natural beauty.
-
-The “inn,” the scene of the nativity, stood on the crest of a hill that
-rapidly falls away to a valley seven hundred feet below. At its base
-is the “well” for the waters of which David so greatly longed. On the
-opposite side is a hill still more precipitous than the one on which
-Bethlehem stands. The little valley between the hills gradually opens
-out eastward, where once stood the wheatfields of Boaz, in which Ruth
-gleaned after the reapers. Just beyond this, scarcely a mile from the
-“city of David,” is the field where the shepherds were “keeping watch
-over their flock by night, when lo, the angel of the Lord came upon
-them,” with this glad proclamation, “Behold, I bring you good tidings
-of great joy, which shall be to all people.” Then suddenly night
-was turned into day by the radiant brightness of a multitude of the
-heavenly host, filling earth and sky with their song:
-
- “Glory to God in the highest,
- Peace on earth, good-will to men.”
-
-The visit of the shepherds to the inn, the circumcision and
-presentation in the Temple, the visit and adoration of the wise men who
-saw His star in far off Persia, the cruel massacre of the children of
-Bethlehem by Herod, and the flight into Egypt, are rather scenes in the
-life of Christ than that of his mother, and are fully described in “THE
-CHRIST LIFTED UP.”
-
-However, in passing, it may be well to pause long enough to observe
-how the presentation in the Temple brings the limited circumstances of
-Joseph and Mary to our notice. The custom of ceremonial purification
-by a Jewish mother in the sanctuary with a sacrifice is fully stated
-in Lev. xii. Two offerings were required, a burnt and a sin offering.
-When Mary presented herself with her babe in the court of the women,
-in the Temple, the proper offering was a lamb for a burnt offering,
-and a young pigeon or a turtle-dove for a sin offering; but with that
-beautiful tenderness which is so marked a characteristic of the Mosaic
-law, those who were too poor for so comparatively costly an offering
-were allowed to bring instead two turtle-doves or two young pigeons.
-Mary, instead of the lamb and dove, brought the offering of the
-poor--two doves. With this offering in her hand, she presented herself
-to the priest.
-
-One incident more occurs in the presentation in the Temple. At the
-moment when Mary had completed her consecration, an old man came
-tottering through the throng. It was the aged Simeon, “just and devout,
-waiting for the consolation of Israel.” Taking from Mary’s arms her
-precious infant, and, as with face aglow and eyes kindled with heavenly
-fire, in speaking his holy rapture, one passage is specially directed
-to her, “Yea, a sword shall pierce through thine own soul also.” This
-“sword,” we must believe, entered her heart as later she saw her Son on
-the cross.
-
-In the return from Egypt after the death of Herod the Great, it appears
-to have been the intention of Joseph to have settled at Bethlehem at
-this time, as his home at Nazareth had now been broken up for a year or
-more, intending there to rear the infant King, at his own royal city,
-until the time should come when he would sit upon David’s throne and
-restore the fallen kingdom to its ancient splendor. But “when he heard
-that Archelaus did reign in Judea,” he turned aside into Nazareth, as
-well he might, if he knew the life and character of the new prince,
-thinking, no doubt, the child’s life would be safer in the tetrarchy of
-Antipas than in that of Archelaus.
-
-Henceforward, until the beginning of our Lord’s ministry, so far as is
-known, Mary lived in Nazareth, in a humble sphere of life, the wife
-of Joseph the carpenter, pondering over the sayings of the angels,
-of the shepherds, of Simeon, and those of her Son, as the latter
-“increased in wisdom and stature and in favor with God and man.” Two
-circumstances alone, so far as we know, broke in on the otherwise even
-flow of her life. One of these was the loss of Jesus out of the company
-of the homeward journey, when he remained behind at Jerusalem upon the
-occasion of His first visit to the Temple. His mother is the first to
-speak. “Son,” she said, “why hast thou thus dealt with us?” His reply
-gave the keynote of His life, “Wist ye not that I must be about my
-Fathers business?” The other was the death of Joseph. The exact date
-of this last event we can not determine. But it was probably not long
-after the other.
-
-From this time on Mary is withdrawn almost wholly from sight. Four
-times only is the veil removed, which is thrown over her, and surely
-not without reason.
-
-1. The first is at the marriage of Cana. It is thought from the
-interest Mary took in it that the bride or bridegroom, were friends, if
-not relatives of the family. “And Jesus was called, and His disciples.”
-The disciples were invited out of respect for their Lord. This
-unexpected addition to the company may have been the cause of Mary’s
-evident embarrassment, and she appeals to her Son by saying, “They have
-no wine.” It is impossible to know all that was in her heart. Possibly
-from the Jordan had come wonderful news concerning her Son which had
-inspired her with the hope that now at least, after so long waiting,
-the time of His manifestation was at hand. What if He should use the
-present opportunity to show His power! Might she not at least mention
-it to Him? But, mark His answer, “Woman, what have I to do with thee?”
-While His reply, in the original, does not have in it the severity it
-has in the plain English, yet He would have her understand that in
-His divine character He could not acknowledge her, nor be influenced
-by her suggestions. Henceforth there must be room between her and Him
-for His Father. And so He told her with all the tenderness that words
-and looks could convey that the matter she hinted at was a matter
-between Him and His Father. Mary quickly acceded to this. By woman’s
-enlightened intuition she perceived His meaning, and so she said to
-the servants, “Whatsoever He saith unto you do it.” In confident
-expectation, she believed He would supply the need. Her beautiful faith
-in Him was unshaken.
-
-2. The second time Mary comes to view is in the attempt which she and
-others made to speak with Jesus in the midst of His conflict with the
-Scribes and Pharisees at Capernaum, when they sought to destroy His
-good name and influence by applying that most horrible and loathsome
-epithet, “He had Beelzebub.” We can hardly realize what satanic forces
-were massed against Jesus at that time. And Mary, who probably, with
-some friends, stood on the outside of the crowd, became alarmed, and
-would rescue Him from the malice of His enemies. So she sent a message,
-which probably was handed on from one person to another, begging Him
-to allow His friends to speak to Him. Again He refuses to admit any
-privilege on account of their relationship. “Who is my mother, and who
-are my brethren?” He loved His mother, but infinite wisdom saw best
-that she must in no way influence His divine work, which He could not
-share with another and be the Saviour of the world. He must tread the
-winepress of men’s malice alone.
-
-3. The third time Mary comes to our notice is at the foot of the
-cross. She was standing there with Mary Magdalene, Salome, and other
-women, having no doubt followed her Son as she was able throughout
-that terrible morning of our Lord’s several trials. It was now three
-o’clock in the afternoon, and He was about to expire. Standing near the
-company of the women was John, and, with almost His last words, Christ
-commended His mother to the care of this disciple. And from that hour,
-John assures us, he took her to his home. If, by “that hour,” John
-means immediately after the words were spoken, Mary was not present at
-the last scene of all. The sword had sufficiently pierced her soul,
-and she was spared the hearing of the last loud cries and the sight of
-the bowed head. However we might have understood His relation to Mary,
-while the great scheme of human redemption was being wrought out, He
-now turns in beautiful and touching tenderness to her, who tenderly
-loved Him, even when she could not fully understand His work.
-
-4. The fourth and last time Mary is brought to our view is in the
-company of the one hundred and twenty believers, assembled at
-Jerusalem, waiting for the descent of the Holy Spirit. This is the
-last view we have of her. The Word of God leaves her engaged in prayer
-in the “upper room,” with the women, and with His brethren. From this
-point forward we know nothing of her. It is very probable the rest of
-her life was spent in the home of John, cherished with the tenderness
-which her sensitive soul would have specially needed, and which she
-undoubtedly found in him who had borne the distinction of “that
-disciple whom Jesus loved.”
-
-When the disciples “were scattered abroad” after the martyrdom of
-Stephen, and the apostles assumed the charge of important centres, we
-read of John being minister of the church at Ephesus. No doubt Mary
-removed with John to Ephesus, where, tradition says, she died, and
-where she was buried. Probably she died before John was banished to
-Patmos. While at Ephesus, we visited her sepulchre. It is on the north
-side of Mt. Prion, half way up the mountain side. The tomb is cut out
-of the solid rock, and in full view of the church, which doubtless she
-loved so well.
-
-We have already dwelt at considerable length upon the beautiful
-character of Mary in connection with her song of rejoicing in the house
-of Elizabeth and known as the Magnificat. So far as Mary is portrayed
-to us in the Scripture, she is, as we should have expected, the most
-tender, the most faithful, humble, patient and loving of women, but a
-woman still, and how she herself regarded her relation to her divine
-Son is best expressed in her own words:
-
- “My soul doth magnify the Lord,
- And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour.”
-
-[Illustration: THE MINISTRY AT EPHESUS.]
-
-No doubt she was a comfort in the home of John. The dark shadows of the
-cross were dissipated when she saw Jesus alive after His resurrection,
-and communed with Him, and, doubtless, saw Him ascend to heaven in a
-cloud, and had heard the angels assure His disciples, as they had seen
-Him depart, in like manner He would come again. She was comforted in
-the wonderful scene at Pentecost, when three thousand acknowledged
-Jesus as their Saviour as well as her Saviour. She lived to see the
-Gospel spread through Judea and Samaria, and the great centres in Asia
-Minor. She had nobly done her work at Jerusalem and at Ephesus--had
-told, as none could tell it, the sweet story of the infant Jesus and
-her glorified Saviour. On account of her presence there was a strange
-interest about the services of the great church at Ephesus, because the
-mother of Jesus was among the worshippers. Even the life and ministry
-of the beloved John was made richer because of her helpful presence.
-
-But now she is growing old. Her earthly mission is drawing to a close.
-She can not stay longer to bless the people who had learned to love
-her. Indeed, her affections had already stolen away and preceded her
-upward. The glad day has come for her to go. Her weary feet will
-soon stand within thy gates, O Jerusalem. The low murmur of voices
-and the subdued sobbing of loved ones around her she heeds not, as
-a strange light breaks upon her, and she hears celestial symphonies
-from the glory shore. White-winged messengers--jasper walls--pearly
-gates--golden streets--life’s river--and she is with Him in the land
-where swords can never enter stricken hearts!
-
-We can not close this chapter without making mention of Anna the
-Prophetess. It would seem that at the coming of the Saviour into the
-world, earth and sky clapped their hands for joy, and the mountains
-and hills broke forth into singing. Not only did Zacharias prophesy,
-saying “Blessed be the Lord the God of Israel;” and Mary sing her hymn
-of praise, in which she exclaimed, “My soul doth magnify the Lord;”
-and the angels who sang, “Glory to God in the highest;” and the aged
-Simeon, who, coming into the Temple, and taking the child in his arms,
-burst forth in doxology, “Lord, now lettest Thou Thy servant depart in
-peace, according to Thy word, for mine eyes have seen Thy salvation,”
-but also Anna the Prophetess. Scarcely had the sweet strains of the
-aged Simeon ceased, when the prophetess, coming into the court of the
-women, in the Temple, and seeing Mary presenting herself with her babe,
-caught the meaning of the scene and added her voice of praise, “and
-spake of Him to all them that looked for redemption in Jerusalem.”
-
-It was very fitting that women should have such a prominent part in
-these human and angelic songs over the nativity of Him who, in after
-years, proved women’s best friend. Who alone, of all earth’s great
-teachers, wept with and over woman’s broken heart; who alone pitied
-woman taken in sin; who alone stood up in defence of woman against
-cruel criticism; who alone placed in contrast a poor penitent woman
-over against a well-washed, and we had almost said, “white-washed,”
-Pharisee; who, on the way to the cross, had words of comfort for
-womanhood, in the ever-memorable exclamation, “Daughters of Jerusalem,
-weep not for Me!” And why should not these daughters weep for one who
-had elevated them to their true position? Surely, they might well weep,
-for they had never had such a friend.
-
-Anna was a daughter of Phanuel, of the tribe of Asher, and of very
-great age--eighty-four years. Her age is specially mentioned, to show
-that, though she had passed but few years in the married state, she had
-reached this advanced age as a widow; a fact redounding to her honor
-in a moral sense, and ranking her among the comparatively small number
-of “widows indeed,” whom Paul especially commends. It is somewhat
-remarkable that the name of Anna’s father should be mentioned, and not
-that of her husband. Perhaps her father survived her husband, and may
-also have been known as one who waited for the consolation of Israel.
-The pious words Anna uttered in the presence of Mary and her child in
-the court of the women can not be the only reason of her being called a
-prophetess. Such an appellation must have been caused by some earlier
-and frequent utterances, dictated by the Spirit of prophecy, by reason
-of which she ranked among the list of holy women who, both in earlier
-and later times, were chosen instruments of the Holy Spirit. If the
-spirit of prophecy had departed from Israel since the time of Malachi,
-according to the opinion of the Jews, the return of this Spirit might
-be looked upon as one of the tokens of Messiah’s advent.
-
-In Simeon and Anna we see incarnate types of the expectation of
-salvation under the Old Testament, as in the child Jesus the salvation
-itself is manifested. At the extreme limits of life, they stand in
-striking contrast to the infant Saviour, exemplifying the Old Covenant
-decaying and waxing old before the New, which is to grow and remain.
-Old age grows youthful, both in Simeon and Anna, at the sight of the
-Saviour; while the youthful Mary grows inwardly older and riper, as
-Simeon lifts up before her eyes the veil hanging upon the future.
-Joseph and Mary marveled at the revelations, not because they learned
-from Simeon’s prophecy anything they had not heard before, but they
-were struck and charmed by the new aspect under which this salvation
-was presented.
-
-There is something very beautiful in this aged Anna, the prophetess,
-who “departed not from the Temple, but served God with fastings and
-prayers night and day.” And the reason given for this consecrated
-devotion is, she “looked for redemption in Jerusalem.” This aged saint,
-into whose obscure but loyal keeping the spirit of true religion has
-always retired in times of a degenerate and formal faith, under the
-Divine Spirit, refused to depart from the courts of the sanctuary day
-nor night. Many a long and weary year she had waited for redemption
-in Jerusalem, and had watched with eager eyes the long procession of
-fathers and mothers as they presented, according to custom, their
-first-born at the altar steps. But the Child for whose coming she had
-waited with such spiritual patience had not come.
-
-At length the supreme day of her life had dawned, and with an unusual
-expectancy she goes early to her accustomed vigil. As the humble Joseph
-and Mary draw near, unheralded of men and with no sign of lineage or
-worth beyond the rank and file of common people, the clear vision of
-the aged prophetess discovers the King, and with a joy that blossomed
-into song, she unites with the devout Simeon, who like herself,
-was also “waiting for the consolation of Israel,” the praises that
-redemption had at last come to Jerusalem. There was providential
-coincidence in her coming in just at “that instant,” when Simeon
-was prophesying and when the babe was in the Temple, for a divine
-propriety, so to speak, seemed to require that the new-born Saviour
-should first receive the homage of the elect of Israel.
-
-[Illustration: ANNA, THE PROPHETESS.]
-
-With this temple scene, the aged Anna comes into and goes out of
-history, but in its light certain great facts are made luminous
-forever, namely, that Jesus the Christ comes into our common humanity
-along no royal road, but through the great common gateway of common
-people. Jesus touches life at its majority points, meeting our needs
-and our weakened nature with a brotherhood that loves us and lifts us
-up. Christ’s first welcome into the world was not through Herod, nor
-the famous Council of the Seventy, nor through the wise Scribes, or
-great Pharisees, but through the trembling arms of an aged man and
-woman.
-
-To pause upon the romantic fitness of this temple scene were easy, when
-the heart of the old and the new, the beginning and the end of life
-throb together, but rather we turn to the mission of Christ to old age
-as embodied in this incident of Simeon and Anna. Age is to a well-spent
-life what the fruit is to the vine, the garnered and best part of it.
-That ripeness of experience, of mind, of judgment, which comes alone
-from long and patient drudging on until the mile-posts are many, that
-calm which comes at the sunset--these are the crowns that come to the
-soul as it stands on the delectable mountains with the Celestial City
-in full view. Youth is clear-visioned and hopeful, early life is busied
-with palpable ambitions, and later on is occupied with the harvesting
-of ventures and the fruitage of success. But age has nothing but a
-memory and a hunger, therefore it was a fitness and a providence that
-Simeon and Anna should reach out their trembling hands in initial
-welcome to the Son of God.
-
-Again, Anna stands as the type of the spiritually-minded, to whom
-in old age are vouchsafed the revelations of God. Her attitude was
-very significant. She “departed not from the Temple,” that is, she
-was watchful. She served God “with fastings and prayers,” peculiarly
-expressive of Old Testament piety, with its minute attention to
-precept and ceremony. That to this woman it was permitted, under the
-Spirit’s guidance, that morning to come into the court of the women
-at the “instant,” indicates a perpetual spiritual condition, rather
-than a sudden impulse or illumination--the habit of one who walked and
-talked with God “night and day.” These reveal the spiritual qualities
-of the prophetess of Jehovah, where an obedient will and loving heart
-are linked to far-sighted spiritual vision in the discernment of the
-providence and truth of God. To such elect souls revelations are always
-coming, because of spiritual affinities and the unerring insights of
-love. Therefore it was no accident, this coming into the courts of the
-Temple at the “instant,” but in accord with a world-wide and unbroken
-law of spiritual discernment, for spiritual truths are spiritually
-discerned.
-
-She that desires this spiritual sense must do as Anna did, wait upon
-God in prayer. She “served God.” She was spiritually-minded. An intense
-desire always precedes possession. Our Lord said, “Blessed are they
-which do hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be
-filled.” Do we hunger after righteousness, with a hunger that joins
-a great longing with a strong will? Then shall we possess it, for
-these powers of the mind and heart wait with sure benediction upon
-the prayers of earnest souls. This desire lies at the threshold of
-spiritual-mindedness. It is synonymous with love. Do I love God? Is my
-eye single and my heart pure? If so, I shall see Him. If not in the
-court of the women, as Anna did, in the inner courts of an unending
-eternity.
-
-The other factor that enters into this spiritual life is abiding.
-Anna “departed not from the Temple.” She waited patiently. Go back
-to that night in Shiloh, ere the lamps of God had gone out, and note
-how Samuel the child became Samuel the prophet by waiting on God in a
-listening attitude and prompt obedience. Follow Paul from the vision on
-Anti-Lebanon to the prisons of Nero, and the roadway of his Christian
-life is literally paved with waiting and prompt obedience, and both
-the seer and the apostle give us the rule of spiritual expansion, and
-set the step for all the regiments of the heavenly-minded. An eminent
-divine has said, “Every duty we omit obscures some truth we should
-have known,” and a greater than this divine has said, “He that doeth
-truth cometh to the light.” The secret of all soul degeneracy, of a
-seared conscience and a blunted moral sense, alas! we all know too
-well, is disobedience to the heavenly visions. Like Eli, our eyes are
-grown dim, and like Paul’s fellow-travelers to Damascus, we hear a
-sound, but no articulate voice of call. “To obey,” said the great and
-good Samuel to the disobedient Saul, “is better than sacrifice.” It is
-because of disobedience to the clear visions of duty there is so much
-of moral “near-sightedness” in the modern Christian life. The options
-of spiritual life or death are always with us, to see or not to see, to
-know or not to know. Here is the power and the peril of the Church our
-Saviour purchased at the price of His own blood; here is her strength
-and her weakness; for the dominant danger in the Church of our time,
-with its wealth, its average moralities and its social compromises,
-is unspirituality, when the lines of division between a refined
-worldliness and a perfunctory Christianity are so vague that both seem
-so near alike to many professed followers of Jesus as not to know where
-worldliness ends and the Christian rule commences. An unspiritual life
-is the real apostacy which clogs the chariot wheels of God and dims the
-eye to the King in His excellent glory.
-
-Do you wonder at the high honor heaven conferred upon this aged
-prophetess, who “departed not night nor day from the Temple,” lest she
-should miss the opportunity of a lifetime, of making her the first
-woman to witness for Christ? It was in perfect keeping with God’s
-eternal plan of exalting the humble of this world who have loyal
-hearts. Rebekah, with cheerful alacrity, watered the ten camels of
-Eliezer, the servant of Abraham, when he called her to be the bride of
-Isaac; Rachel was driving her father’s sheep to the well in Haran when
-she won the heart of Jacob, the heir of promise; Miriam watched the
-little craft among the rushes of the Nile, before she led the women in
-triumphal song at the Red Sea; Ruth gleaned in the fields of Bethlehem
-to relieve her own and Naomi’s necessities, when she attracted the
-attention of Boaz; Esther lived a modest, retired life in the house
-of Mordecai, the porter at the royal palace, when she was called to
-be queen over the Persians. Poverty and homely toil are no hindrance
-to holy zeal in Christian service; nor are they hindrance to high
-communion with the Eternal.
-
-These are truths attested by revelation and by history. We are
-sometimes tempted to question humility as a stepping-stone to
-exaltation, and to complain of our lot; tempted to think ourselves
-hemmed in and circumscribed, thus to lack all opportunity for large
-service or large vision, or large attainments of any kind. Nothing
-is more common among those whose life is crowded with what is termed
-coarse and common toil, who are loaded down with many cares, and
-confined in what seem to them narrow bounds, to count others vastly
-more highly favored than themselves, and to regard themselves as out of
-range of all spiritual visions or special divine communications! Let
-her who is left to think such thoughts, or to place such estimate on
-her lot in life, remember that no eye of Scribe or Pharisee, of priest
-or king, saw or recognized the Son of God that day when Mary presented
-Jesus in the Temple. Such vision was reserved for the aged prophetess,
-who was looking for redemption in Jerusalem.
-
-What is the lesson? This, that the waiting and the morally qualified
-are the chosen channels of divine communication; that to such the
-revelations of God unfold wonderful visions. Heaven and earth meet
-where the truly devout are found watching “night and day” by the altars
-of prayer. If doxologies of the soul are to be rendered in the ear of
-mortals, they shall hear them whose hearts are open towards the throne
-of grace, and whose longings are for “redemption in Jerusalem!” and who
-are “waiting for the consolation of Israel.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-Womanhood During our Lord’s Galilean Ministry.
-
- CHRIST AND WOMANHOOD--NOONTIDE AT JACOB’S WELL--THE LORD’S WONDERFUL
- TACT--FIELDS WHITE TO THE HARVEST--AN UNINVITED GUEST AT SIMON’S
- FEAST--COLD HOSPITALITY--A CONCISE PARABLE--FORGIVING SIN--A STREET
- SCENE--HUMBLE CONFESSION--MOST GRACIOUS WORDS--COAST OF TYRE AND
- SIDON--SYRO-PHŒNICIAN WOMAN--STRANGELY TESTED--HER HUMILITY--WENT
- AWAY BLESSED.
-
-
-We now come to the beautiful ministries of womanhood during our Lord’s
-earthly mission. No teacher had ever lived who sought to elevate women
-as did the Saviour. The most casual reader of our Lord’s acts of mercy
-as He moved among the people, must have noticed how often He wrought
-some of His most wondrous works among women. He talked with a woman
-of questionable character by the wayside, He stretched out his hands
-over one whose very touch was considered unclean, and tenderly said,
-“Thy sins are forgiven!” He called another, whose shrinking fear, after
-she was healed, caused her to sob out her confession, “Daughter, be of
-good comfort; thy faith hath made thee whole.” What a sweet picture
-that is of the mothers who bring their little children to Him that “He
-should touch them,” and their faith was rewarded not by a mere “touch,”
-but He took the mothers’ darlings in His arms and blessed them. With
-a yearning of divine pity He brings back to life three persons that
-motherhood and sisterhood might be comforted. Surely womanhood must
-have been precious in His sight, and there is a peculiar force in the
-word _precious_ as of God’s own choosing. When He speaks of precious
-things, or permits in His inspired servants such ardent language, we
-may be assured there is a deep meaning in the expression, and that
-whatever is spoken of, is of great value, costly and rare. “I know the
-thoughts that I think toward you,” says the dear Lord, “thoughts of
-peace and not of evil.” And they are so continuous! “How great is the
-sum of them? If I should count them they are more in number than the
-sand!” We have walked the wide beach, as it stretches on for miles and
-miles in one unbroken line of white sand. Could we count a single rod
-of it? Yet these thoughts of our Lord outnumber the sand on the shore
-of the sea. And how precious they are, because begotten of pure love;
-and royal with kindness; and tender with compassion; and fragrant with
-blessings; exquisite with sweetness; infinite, incessant, immeasurable.
-
-In our love, we mainly dwell upon the thought of what God is to us,
-and so are apt to forget what we are to Him. “He has chosen Israel for
-His peculiar treasure.” “The Lord’s portion is His people.” Does He so
-esteem us? Does He hold us close to His heart, and say, I love thee
-“since thou wast precious in My sight!” The mother thinks of her child,
-the wife of her husband, the lover of his beloved. And how sweet are
-these thoughts of our dear ones. Unbidden they crowd upon the soul;
-comforting, tenderly cherished and precious are the thoughts of the
-absent for one another! Memories of form and feature, look and smile,
-word and deed, affection and purpose, are ever present. Does God, the
-Infinite, thus think of us! Oh, wondrous alchemy of grace that can turn
-such poor unworthy souls into gems so beautiful, so priceless, so dear
-to the Infinite heart of God; so highly esteemed that if even the least
-were lost, it would be a loss to Him. Then, also, the trial of our
-faith is “much more precious than of gold that perisheth, though it be
-tried with fire.” If we bear this in mind, we shall better understand
-the Saviour’s acts as we read the story of His love for womanhood. Oh,
-ye tired, troubled ones, put into God’s crucible, did you ever feel
-that you were forgotten, overlooked, too long or too severely tested?
-God is watching with an eye that never slumbers. The trial going on is
-precious to Him. He tempers the heat when too strong, and adds fuel
-when too light. He creates the smith to blow the coals; and here, be
-sure, He makes no mistake. You would not have chosen as He has; and
-yet the process must go on, for it is a precious one; so much so that
-our Beloved can not trust it to other hands than His own. He will not
-let you be harmed. “Many shall be purified and made white and tried.”
-Are you not glad He has chosen you among these? The trial is painful to
-you, but precious to Him, and “will be found unto praise and honor, and
-glory,” walking with Him in White Raiment, as those who “are worthy.”
-
-Through human personality is God best made known. There is a revelation
-in nature; the movements of planets, the return of seasons, the
-regularity and uniformity of natural laws, reveal a fixed order in
-the universe; the balanced relationship, the correspondences and
-adaptations in nature reveal mind as the centre of activities; wisdom
-speaks out in the organizations, kingdoms and beneficent purposes of
-nature, while beauty shines from the splendor of the world. All this
-is very good, but it is not conclusive. It is written of the Son of
-God, that He endured the cross for the joy that was set before Him. He
-recognized the sore need of humanity, and the Father’s plan to meet
-that need, and gave Himself a willing offering. Christ is the living
-manifestation of God’s love. To be “able to save to the uttermost all
-who come unto God by Him,” was the joy set before Him for which He
-endured the cross and now ever liveth to make intercession for us.
-Surely His thoughts of us must have been most precious, and, in view
-of the great price He paid for our redemption, let us never minify our
-lives however humble our lot:
-
- “A commonplace life,” we say and we sigh,
- But why should we sigh as we say?
- The commonplace sun in the commonplace sky
- Makes up the commonplace day.
- The moon and the stars are commonplace things,
- And the flower that blooms, and the bird that sings.
- But dark were the world, and sad our lot,
- If the flowers should fail and the sun shine not--
- And God, who studies each separate soul,
- Out of the commonplace lives makes His beautiful whole.
-
-If we partake of the Divine nature, we will want to share in His work
-of saving, and thus enter into the joy of our Lord. To be able to touch
-life hopefully, and to see it expand and grow day by day into the
-similitude of the All-perfect, is to experience a joy not of earth.
-Womanhood has come into her kingdom in the sense of having reached a
-place of large opportunity, in the use of her God-given power. Our
-Saviour has honored woman by giving her a place in his heart and work,
-and most loyally does she “lay her hands to the distaff and with her
-hands hold the spindle” in the making of the great fabric of human
-destiny.
-
-[Illustration: CHRIST AND WOMANHOOD.]
-
-How womanhood, in the days of the Saviour’s incarnation, manifested
-her appreciation, will be amplified in this and the next chapter, and
-her loving ministry does credit to her head and heart, for we read, as
-He journeyed with his disciples from place to place, “Certain women,
-which had been healed of infirmities, Mary Magdalene, Joanna, Susanna,
-and many others, ministered unto Him of their substance.” How beautiful
-is all this. Women actually following Jesus, as disciples, and out of
-their means ministering to His physical necessities. Heathenism has no
-place, socially for women, as we have shown in our introductory. Christ
-sought to bless and elevate womanhood.
-
-The skill of our Lord’s wayside teaching is beautifully brought out in
-the scene at Jacob’s well. In one of His tours through Samaria our Lord
-reached Jacob’s well, in the neighborhood of Sychar, about noon, and
-being weary, sat down upon the stone seat in the little alcove erected
-over the well. It offered a shelter from the glare of the noontide
-sun. John, in his gospel, tells us that Jesus, “being wearied with His
-journey, sat thus on the well.” The words in the original imply that
-He was quite tired out with His journey, and doubtless overcome with
-the extreme heat. In His exhaustion, He seems to be quite anxious, if
-possible, to obtain a little rest, while the disciples had left Him, to
-procure in the nearby city, the necessary bread.
-
-The disciples had scarcely departed, when a lone woman, with face
-veiled, and on her head a great stone waterpot, came to the well to
-draw water. It was an unseasonable hour, for morning and evening only
-would the well be thronged by women, whose duty it is to carry the
-water for household use. For some reason, possibly because she was
-in no good repute, this woman avoided the throng at the well in the
-morning or evening hours, and availed herself of this unseasonable time
-to come for water.
-
-The scene before us is pathetically picturesque. The Son of God resting
-in the refreshing shade of the little alcove, and a woman of doubtful
-character coming in out of the noontide glare and heat of the sun to
-draw water. We almost wonder if our Lord, in His exhausted and fevered
-condition, had not been casting around in His mind how He might obtain
-a cup of refreshing water from the depth of the well. And now is His
-opportunity. With the nicest tact and politeness He asks, “Give me
-to drink!” To ask for a drink of water in the East is a proffer of
-good-will. Under no circumstances would an Oriental ask or receive
-water or bread of one with whom he was unwilling to be on good terms.
-So when Jesus said to the woman, “Give me to drink,” it was as if He
-had said, “I wish you well; I feel kindly towards you and yours.”
-
-We are somewhat surprised at the conduct of the woman after such kindly
-salutation. Instead of quickly offering Him a drink, she proceeds to
-ask, “How is it that thou being a Jew askest drink of me, which am a
-woman of Samaria?” She would recognize the nationality of Jesus by
-His dress. The color of the fringes on the Jewish garments was white,
-while those of the Samaritans were blue. Possibly His appearance and
-accent in His speech would also identify Him. However, in explanation
-of her conduct, she goes on to say, “the Jews have no dealings with
-Samaritans.” So that while this non-intercourse between the two
-people was not absolute, a request of such a nature might surprise
-a Samaritan. And yet we must confess she is more ready to conduct a
-religious discussion with the Son of God Himself than to offer cups of
-cold water.
-
-But with what wonderful tact Jesus drew the mind of this woman away
-from the religious differences between Jews and Samaritans. He was not
-to be drawn off from the main point at issue. He had asked for water,
-for He was really thirsty. She had come to the well for water, for it
-supplied a need. When she came to the well her aspirations reached
-no farther than a pitcher of water. So, with water for a text, Jesus
-proceeds to tell this Samaritan that good as the well was, and great as
-Jacob was, all who drank of that water would thirst again. The best the
-world had to offer could never satisfy her thirst. She could not help
-but see the truth of these words. They were but the echo of her daily
-experience.
-
-Now the divine Teacher proceeds to uncover another well to this woman.
-“Whosoever,” Jesus proceeded to say, and the whosoever included all
-Samaritans and the world as well, “drinketh of the water that I shall
-give him, shall never thirst; for the Holy Spirit that I shall put in
-him shall be a well of water springing up into everlasting life--it
-shall satisfy his thirst and he shall be continually refreshed.”
-
-How deftly Jesus turned this conversation into a spiritual channel! It
-was done so easily that the woman was not conscious of the change. She
-thought he was talking about literal water, though the seriousness in
-his tones had awakened her utmost attention. She knew what it was to
-thirst, and the labor of coming to the well to carry away pitchers full
-on her head, only to repeat the labor with each returning day. He had
-awakened in her a desire, though that desire was no higher than water,
-and she said, “Sir, give me this water, that I thirst not, neither come
-hither to draw.” Though the woman did not understand His words, she was
-really, in her mind, struggling with the great problem of not thirsting
-any more, and of doing away with the necessity of daily coming to
-Jacob’s well. How the Lord delights to lead inquiring minds to the
-higher things of life! He saw, doubtless, by supernatural intuition,
-the sinful blemishes in her life, as well as the deeper aspirations
-of her soul which His words had awakened. How shall He get at the
-plague-spot which corrupted the fountain of her life?
-
-In a tender, pathetic tone he said to the woman, “Go, call thy
-husband!” It was a painful request to make of this poor woman, but He
-could not trifle. He must be faithful. The request had its desired
-effect. It drew off the woman’s attention from her desire for fountains
-of water, to see the wretched condition of her life.
-
-Yet, with a frankness that showed an honest soul, she replied, “I have
-no husband!”
-
-Ah! that was the point this wisest of Teachers was bringing her to. He
-did not want to see her husband, but He wanted her to see herself. His
-words probed to the plague-spot in her soul. She admitted her guilt,
-but could not quite bring her will to give up her manner of life.
-
-When Jesus told her that she was living with the fifth man, and he not
-her husband, she perceived that He was a prophet, and was ready with
-another batch of theological questions. “I know I am not what I ought
-to be,” she said in effect, “but then there are some things I don’t
-understand, and now, since you are a prophet, perhaps you can inform
-me. We Samaritans claim that our way is right, and you Jews claim that
-your way is right. Both can’t be right; tell us what we are to do?”
-Referring to her Samaritan ancestors, she continued, “Our fathers
-worshipped in this mountain,” pointing to Mt. Gerizim, under the shadow
-of which they almost stood, and which had a special sacredness as the
-mount of blessing. It was also claimed by the Samaritans that their
-worship was earlier, and, therefore, older than that at Jerusalem.
-However, it is not clear that she meant to urge this as one of the
-reasons in favor of Mt. Gerizim, on the summit of which the Samaritan
-Temple stood. In the Scriptures which the Samaritans possessed (the
-Pentateuch) the name of Gerizim had been inserted in the place of
-the holy city of the Jews. On the other hand, the claim of the Jews
-was exclusive. Men must worship in Jerusalem. If the woman regarded
-the supremacy of Gerizim or Jerusalem an open question, it showed
-her candor and a willingness to accept the revelation of the truth,
-whatever it might be.
-
-But see how our Lord sweeps the idol of locality from this inquirer’s
-mind, “Believe me,” he said, “the hour cometh when ye shall neither
-in this mountain, nor yet at Jerusalem, worship the Father.” Men have
-ever looked upon their places of worship as sacred. Islamism has its
-Mecca, the heathenism of India its Baneras and Ganges, the idolaters of
-China their sacred mountains, the apostates of modern times their holy
-shrines. Jesus abolishes local limitations, and announces that what one
-worships is of more importance than where; that God is a Spirit, and
-that true worship is unlimited by time, place or form.
-
-[Illustration: THE NOONTIDE HOUR AT JACOB’S WELL.]
-
-Such wonderful words had never fallen upon the ears or entered the
-heart of this woman. No priest or scribe had ever uttered such sublime
-conceptions of our relations to God. She had thought him a “prophet,”
-but such utterances are almost divine. She thinks of the Messiah, and
-answers, “I know that when Messias cometh, which is called Christ; when
-He is come, He will tell us all things.” This was in accordance with
-the Samaritan view of Christ. While showing a desire for a fuller
-knowledge she thinks of a higher authority of the expected Messiah. In
-this He did not rebuke her. He lets her question, yet is never turned
-from His purpose. Step by step His love lifted this inquiring mind,
-until at last she was ready for such an avowal of His nature and office
-as He had never given to Scribe or Pharisee or disciple, “I that speak
-unto thee am He!”
-
-Wonderful news! Filled with surprise and joy, she “left her waterpot”
-on the well, and ran into the city, forgetting all about her own need,
-as well as the request of the Saviour for a drink of water. Her haste
-shows how absorbed she had become in the wonderful words from the lips
-of Him who declared Himself the long-expected Son of God. And He, the
-blessed Lord, was so intent on saving a soul that He had forgotten all
-about His thirst and His weariness.
-
-Just as she had left the well, the disciples came, having made the
-necessary purchase of food, and “marveled that He talked with the
-woman,” yet were mysteriously restrained from asking Him why He did
-so. Presently they spread their noonday meal, but observing that Jesus
-did not share with them their meal, they urged Him, saying, “Master,
-eat.” But great was their surprise when He answered, “I have meat to
-eat that ye know not of.” They could not understand that the chance to
-help an inquiring soul was more to Him than food or drink, and said to
-one another, “Hath any man brought Him ought to eat?” He astonished His
-inquiring disciples yet more, when knowing the thoughts uppermost in
-their minds, said, “My meat is to do the will of Him that sent Me,” and
-to carry out the mission for which I am in the world.
-
-In the meantime the flying feet of the woman had reached the city, and
-she hastened from street to street delivering her message, “Come, see a
-Man who told me all that ever I did. Is not this the Christ?”
-
-The theological questions over which Jews and Samaritans contended,
-whether Jerusalem or Gerizim was the place where “men ought to
-worship,” had dropped entirely out of her mind. But she proved an
-excellent evangelist, for presently the people came flocking out of the
-city in the direction of Jacob’s well, pouring out of every gate, and
-led over the fruitful plain by the woman.
-
-It must have been a grand sight, and showed that Jesus was not mistaken
-when, looking into the face of the woman, He saw a pearl of great
-beauty and worth beneath the rough exterior of this semi-heathenish,
-yet quick-witted, sprightly and susceptible Samaritan.
-
-As the Saviour lifted up His eyes over the plain and saw the
-approaching multitude, He was evidently well satisfied in withgoing His
-weariness and thirst while talking to this Samaritan Magdalene as she
-came with her water-pitcher to the well, and not only was He satisfied
-with the results of His labors, but He seems also to have been pleased,
-for, as the host filled the plain, He called the attention of his
-disciples to the beautiful sight, and exclaimed, “Say not ye, there
-are yet four months, and then cometh harvest!” Doubtless this was true
-in the physical world, but spiritual conditions do not have to depend
-upon the slow processes of the natural world, and the well-sown seed
-amid the glare of the noontide, was already ripening unto the harvest.
-Behold the thronging people! said our Lord. “Lift up your eyes, and
-look on the fields; for they are white already to the harvest.”
-
- “Laborers wanted!” The ripened grain
- Waits to welcome the reaper’s cry;
- The Lord of the harvest calls again;
- Who among us shall first reply,
- “Who is wanted, Lord? Is it I?”
-
- The Master calls, but the servants wait;
- Fields gleam white ’neath a cloudless sky.
- Will none seize the sickle before too late,
- Ere the winter’s winds come sweeping by?
- Who is delaying? Is it I?
-
-As the people thronged the well to hear and see the Man who had
-revealed the hidden life of the woman, He must have taught this people
-with wise, loving words, for they forgot all about their prejudices
-and hate and begged Him, though of a race with whom the Samaritans had
-no dealings, to stay among them. And He graciously complied with their
-request, and it took Him two whole days to harvest that whitened field.
-And the record is, “Many of the Samaritans of that city believed on Him
-for the saying of the woman.”
-
-But what a testimony is all this to that Samaritan woman. What, if her
-previous life had not been of good repute? What though she was a social
-outcast? One thing she discovered that noonday, as she came out to draw
-water from Jacob’s ancient well, that the Man who laid open her inner
-life in such modest words and patient forbearance, was none other than
-the long-expected Messiah, and she was altogether too generous-minded
-to lock up the glad tidings in her heart, but at once, without
-commission or priestly authority, witnessed for Christ, published the
-glad tidings of salvation through the streets of Sychar, and brought
-her whole city to a knowledge of her Saviour. And so this woman became
-the first gospel preacher in Samaria. That was before church councils
-had decided women may not speak for Jesus.
-
-Jacob’s well is no longer used, and the grain fields, which “Stood
-dressed in living green” before the Saviour’s eyes, have long been
-trodden under foot of Islam’s hordes, yet the living spring of water
-which our Lord opened there to the poor, sinful, yet penitent woman,
-is as deep and fresh as ever, and has flowed on and out over the earth
-to remotest nations, and will quench the thirst of souls to the end of
-time.
-
-We see also in this beautiful scene at Jacob’s well that Christ’s
-intercourse with women was marked by freedom from Oriental contempt of
-womanhood, and a marvelous union of purity and frankness, dignity and
-tenderness. He approached this woman as a friend who wished her well,
-and yet as her Lord and Saviour. And, to the good sense of womanhood
-be it said, when the light of truth broke over her inquiring mind, she
-believed! And behold how she loved Him! Forgetting her errand to the
-well, yea, even leaving her pitcher, she hastened to publish the glad
-news. Surely the Saviour “must needs go through Samaria,” on His way
-from Judea to Galilee, and His resting in the little alcove of Jacob’s
-well, for the moment sheltered from the glare of an Oriental midday
-sun, was more than a geographical “_must_.” It was the necessity of
-love laid upon His heart to meet and to help that woman who came with
-an empty stone pitcher to the well at the same hour of the day, but
-went away with a heart filled with “living water ... springing up into
-everlasting life.”
-
-Some time after this, on one of those days while Jesus was teaching in
-lower Galilee, a Pharisee, by the very common name of Simon, invited
-our Lord to a feast. Why he invited Him is not stated. Possibly he
-may have been impressed with the character and teaching of Christ,
-and disposed, in a social way, and at his own table, to give Him a
-further hearing, thinking, perhaps, by coming in personal contact with
-our Lord, aside from the throngs which attended upon His ministry, he
-could the better satisfy himself as to the merits of this new Teacher
-in Israel, and so invited Jesus to dine with him. Our Lord had not
-yet broken with the Pharisees, and was still anxious, if possible, to
-conciliate them, if by any means He might win them, and withal, willing
-to show his good-will, accepted the invitation.
-
-However gracious the invitation may have been given, it is quite clear
-that the hospitality was meant to be qualified. These Pharisees who
-loved the uppermost seats at feasts, knew how to entertain. But in
-this feast, all the ordinary attentions which were usually paid to
-honored guests were strangely omitted. There was no servant with basin
-of water and towel for the weary and dust-covered feet, no anointing
-of the head, no kiss of welcome upon the cheek, nothing but a somewhat
-ungracious admission to a vacant place at the table, and the most
-distant courtesies of ordinary intercourse, so managed that this Guest
-from among the common people might feel that he was receiving honors
-in the house of a rich and influential Pharisee. Many a poor man’s head
-has been turned by such feigned and mock courtesies. It would have been
-a thousand times better to the head and heart of Simon if he had never
-invited the Lord, than to assume in His presence what he was not at
-heart.
-
-Our Lord must have keenly felt these omissions. But, since he had been
-invited, He made the best of this empty show at hospitality, only we
-may be quite sure He was clothed in His usual gentleness and modest
-dignity. We may well believe our Lord showed no signs of being piqued
-at the slights put upon Him, nor embarrassed in the presence of His
-host and the distinguished guests present. While Jesus cared little for
-show or etiquette, yet it was but natural that He should have keenly
-felt these omissions so gracefully shown to the others at this feast.
-
-But before us rises another scene. “Behold, a woman in the city, which
-was a sinner, when she knew that Jesus sat at meat in the Pharisee’s
-house, brought an alabaster box of ointment.” How thoughtful these
-women are! This one was not satisfied with merely following the throng,
-but she takes with her the most costly gift at her command. What a
-contrast between her and Simon, who haughtily thought within himself
-that anything was good enough for this lowly Prophet of Nazareth.
-
-When this woman, whose character seemed to have been well known, too
-well indeed for her own comfort, reached Simon’s house, she found the
-door thronged by a crowd of people who had doubtless followed Jesus,
-and now stood, and looked, and listened--for privacy seems a thing
-impossible in the free and easy life of Orientals. For a moment she
-lingered amidst the throng. While there, men, as they passed in to the
-feast, gathered their robes as they passed her, lest by a passing touch
-she should defile them. As she sees the scanty preparations, the cold
-reception, her woman’s heart is made indignant. “Would that I were
-worthy to ask Him beneath my roof, or would that I could bid Him come
-and sit at meat with me; all that I have were His to minister in any
-way to His comfort. But I, alas, am so far down and He so holy--there
-is no chance for me.” So she thinks.
-
-Then lo, that face is lifted, the eyes meet hers. He, all pitiful,
-reading her heart looks an invitation that she can not resist. And then
-in the presence of the Pharisees, as they start with horror, every man
-shrinking from this infamous intruder, every face filled with scorn,
-she hurries across to the side of the Lord Jesus and falls at His feet.
-She pours forth her penitence in a flood of tears; then, startled that
-she should thus have bathed His feet, she loosens her hair and wipes
-them with reverent hands, and tenderly kissing His feet, she draws from
-the folds of her dress a pot of unguent, and pours its fragrance upon
-them.
-
-Who she was or how she had come to know Jesus, or when she had been
-moved by his preaching and converted by the grace of His words we do
-not know. It is quite likely, having been attracted like others to be
-one of His auditors somewhere, she had heard His gracious words of love
-and pity, and had gladly on her part accepted their healing influences.
-
-But when the Pharisee saw the marked attention of this woman of the
-street to his Guest, he commenced talking to himself in his heart,
-“This man, if He were a prophet,” he muttered to himself, “would know
-who and what manner of woman this is that is thus lavishing her love
-upon His feet, for she is a sinner, whose very touch is pollution.”
-No doubt Simon was shocked beyond measure, especially when he saw
-Jesus allowed it, and was glad at that moment that his cold caution
-at the commencement of the feast had prevented him from giving Jesus
-too cordial a welcome. “I am glad now I did not compromise my honor or
-forfeit the good opinion of those of my set; that I wasted none of my
-perfume upon His head; that I gave Him no kiss of welcome; yea, even
-that I did not bid a servant wash His feet. Such acts of hospitality
-would, in a measure at least, have committed me, in the eyes of the
-people, to Him as a friend, and would have exposed me to the criticisms
-of my brethren. I fear I have already gone too far, but will get out of
-it as quickly as possible, and when I extend another invitation He’ll
-know it. In my opinion, He is not only no prophet, but is altogether
-too free with the common people to make Him desirable among my fellow
-Pharisees.”
-
-To be sure, Simon did not utter these thoughts aloud, but his frigid
-demeanor, and the contemptuous expression of countenance, which he
-did not take the trouble to disguise, showed all that was passing in
-his heart. He little realized that Jesus had read his thoughts as
-unerringly as if he had written them upon the walls of his dining-room,
-and at once proceeded to lay open the heart of His host to himself
-in a manner he had never thought it possible, and He did it by first
-relating a little parable, and thus addressed the Pharisee:
-
-“Simon, I have somewhat to say to thee!”
-
-“Master, say on,” was the somewhat constrained reply.
-
-“There was a certain creditor who had two debtors. The one owed five
-hundred pence, and the other fifty; and when they had nothing to pay he
-freely forgave both. Tell me, then, which of them will love him most?”
-
-The construction of this parable is marvelous for its conciseness,
-naturalness and simplicity. In its application Jesus makes Simon
-condemn himself for his uncharitable judgment. He is compelled to admit
-the whole force of the great scheme of salvation by pardoning grace.
-It doubtless never entered Simon’s poor, proud, but sinful heart that
-he, too, was a debtor and needed to be as freely forgiven as the woman
-whose touch he considered pollution, and yet this is one of the lessons
-taught by the comparison here drawn between the abandoned woman and
-the proud Pharisee. It is pitiable to see the bitterness of the world
-towards a lost woman. And yet why should not her companion in sin
-suffer as much as she? But he never does. Let us be fair. Cast her out,
-if you feel called on to be her judge, but at least do the same by him.
-
-The fact remains that this poor woman knew she was an outcast. No
-one would forgive her. Never could she regain her social standing.
-But Simon? Ah! Simon was really quite a model man. As the world
-judges worth, she stood at one extreme and he at the other. Simon was
-eminently respectable. As a Pharisee he belonged to one of the first
-families; he was recognized in Church and State; he had social position
-which introduced him to the refined and educated. If he met a public
-speaker of eminence, or a man of reputation, he honored him by inviting
-him to dinner. Let us not too severely pass upon the conduct of Simon.
-He was undoubtedly a worthy man. Christ’s reference to him in the
-parable implies that his outward life was not that of a hypocrite or a
-mere formalist. But this parable makes him a bankrupt debtor. He can
-no more pay his fifty pence than the woman her five hundred pence. So
-both were sinners, and both needed to be forgiven. Here there was no
-difference. Both had broken the law of God, and both were in need of a
-Saviour.
-
-We see again that penitence breaks down the wall that separated from
-God. This poor woman saw her dreadful sin and turned from it in an
-agony of repentance. She sought the Lord. He was the only friend to
-whom she could turn in her need. She was sure of His sympathy and help.
-She desired forgiveness and found it. She had been alienated from God,
-but through her penitence had reached a comprehension of Christ’s
-character impossible to the self-satisfied Pharisee. She was far more
-at one with God, as He was revealed in Christ, than was the dignified
-gentleman, indignant at her presence in his house.
-
-This woman felt a great need. She was sin-burdened, and needed a divine
-deliverer, and the Saviour proved to be an all-sufficient helper.
-How was it with Simon? Why, he relied on himself. He felt no need
-of Christ’s help. He was self-satisfied--a very good man in his own
-opinion. The woman had expressed her gratitude in many touching ways,
-but Simon had no sense of gratitude. He had given no kiss of welcome,
-had provided no water for the feet, had failed to anoint the Saviour’s
-head.
-
-Beyond a doubt there are a great many excellent people to-day of
-Simon’s stamp. They are quite courteous, if their social position is
-not compromised thereby. They will spread a feast, and invite the
-Lord to dinner. And yet, they feel no need of Christ. The whole show
-of hospitality is a cold, heartless formality, with no tenderness
-of emotion towards Him. They feel no longing to make sacrifices for
-His sake as expressive of their love. And so, while treating Christ
-respectfully, they do not treat Him lovingly. They think too well of
-themselves. They need to recognize more fully their position of danger
-and their dependence upon Christ.
-
-There is also a wonderful picture in this narrative of Christ’s
-love for us. How considerate His treatment of this penitent and
-broken-hearted woman! He was not supercilious. He had no feeling of
-pride that resented her touch. It was not necessary that He avoid her
-in order to vindicate His own purity.
-
-Hitherto Jesus had said nothing to the woman, though it must have
-thrilled her soul when she heard what had been said to Simon in the
-application of the parable. She was first indirectly assured of the
-grace of God in respect to herself, and of the principle on which her
-forgiveness was vouchsafed. She knew that He was not ashamed of her,
-and, finally, she heard Him say in so many words, “Her sins which are
-many are forgiven her.”
-
-Having said so much to Simon concerning her, Jesus now turned to the
-woman herself, laid His hand tenderly upon the bowed head, for He would
-not break the bruised reed, nor quench the smoking flax, He would not
-by bitterness drive her from Him, but as her Defence and Deliverer,
-personally addressed her, and said, “Thy sins are forgiven!” There now
-remained not a doubt in her mind. She had His word personally addressed
-to her, and this was the ground of her assurance.
-
-[Illustration: THE UNINVITED GUEST.]
-
-Now see what followed. “They that sat at meat with Him began to say,
-within themselves, Who is this that forgiveth sins also?” Simon and his
-friends were offended because there was no sympathy in their hearts
-for Christ and His works of mercy. They did not desire the salvation
-of this woman who had come in to their feast. It did not once occur
-to them that Christ could know the character of the woman and yet be
-willing to let her approach Him that He might forgive her sin. They saw
-only a man, and said, “Who is this that forgiveth sins also?” Only God
-could do that. But she saw a Saviour before her, and our Lord fearing
-the cavil of the Pharisees might distress the woman, He said to her,
-“Thy faith hath saved thee; go in peace!” He would get her away from
-the doubting Pharisees as quickly as possible.
-
-It is worthy of observation that, notwithstanding the beautiful
-exhibition this woman gave of her love and affection, it was her
-“faith,” not her love, that saved her.
-
-Tradition identifies this woman as Mary Magdalene, a native, it is
-thought of Magdol, the modern _Mejdel_, a town on the west shore of
-the Sea of Galilee, and south of the plain of Gennesaret. The present
-village lies close to the water’s edge, and, Tiberias excepted, is the
-only place on the western coast of Galilee which survives the wreck of
-time.
-
-Much is said by the Talmudists of her wealth, her extreme beauty, her
-braided hair, but all we know of her from Scriptures is her enthusiasm
-of devotion and gratitude which, henceforth, attached her, heart and
-soul, to her Saviour’s service. For we read, “And it came to pass
-afterward,” after this feast in the house of Simon the Pharisee, that
-Jesus “went through” the cities and villages of Galilee “preaching and
-showing the glad tidings of the kingdom of God,” and “certain women,
-which had been healed of evil spirits and infirmities, Mary Magdalene,
-out of whom went seven devils, and Joanna the wife of Chuza, Herod’s
-steward, and Susanna, and many others,” “ministered unto Him of their
-substance.” Thus we find this woman, with others, ministering to the
-temporal necessities of our Lord.
-
-In the last journey of Christ to Jerusalem, Mary Magdalene accompanied
-the women who were in the company. She was also among the women on the
-day of crucifixion who “stood afar off, beholding these things” during
-the closing hours of the agony on the cross, and remained till all was
-over, waited till the body was taken down, and wrapped in the linen
-cloth and placed in the sepulchre of Joseph of Arimathea. Thus, this
-loving, faithful woman, true to her nature, clung to her Lord to the
-very last.
-
-On the morning of the resurrection, Mary Magdalene was among the women
-who found the tomb of our Lord empty. Instantly she hastened to inform
-the disciples. While she was gone, the remaining women saw the angels,
-who asked, “Why seek ye the living among the dead?” And instructed
-them to tell his disciples. So when Mary returned to the sepulchre,
-she was alone. She was also ignorant of what the angels had said to
-the other women, and the poor woman’s heart could no longer retain her
-pent-up grief, and stood at the open sepulchre weeping. Presently she
-saw a man, and supposing him to be the gardener, said, “Sir, if thou
-hast borne Him hence, tell me where thou hast laid Him, and I will take
-Him away.”
-
-While she is speaking to the supposed gardener, Jesus addressed her
-by her given name, “Mary!” Behold, it was her Lord, and she exclaims,
-“_Rabboni!_” It was the strongest word of reverence which a woman of
-Israel could use, and, in her joy, would have fallen on His neck, had
-He not restrained her. But what honor the Lord conferred upon her. She
-was the first human messenger to the world of a risen Saviour!
-
-Such was the beautiful pearl our Lord saw in the woman who poured out
-her penitence in a flood of tears at His feet in the house of Simon
-the Pharisee. While it was her faith that saved her, surely it can
-truthfully be said of her, “She loved much.”
-
-It was after Jesus had begun His new method of teaching by parables,
-the keynote of which was, “Take heed how ye hear,” and had, at the
-close of a hard day’s labor, sailed over the Sea of Galilee, and spent
-the night in the region of Decapolis, in the hope of getting away from
-the multitudes to obtain a little rest, that, on the following morning
-as he returned to Capernaum, the people, from the hillsides were
-watching for His return, and as soon as they recognized the sail of the
-little vessel, and long before he reached land, great throngs had lined
-the shore to welcome His return.
-
-Notwithstanding the prejudices of the Scribes and Pharisees had already
-been aroused against Christ, there was, on the shore, nervously moving
-among the people, a very prominent citizen of Capernaum, by the name
-of Jairus, a ruler of the synagogue. From the deep lines of anxiety
-visible on his face, he was evidently in great mental distress. And
-well he might be, for his beautiful twelve year old daughter had been
-given up by the physicians and was dying. As a last resort, he hastened
-to find Jesus, who already had performed many cures in his city, and
-so when he learned that our Lord had passed over the Sea of Galilee,
-he could do no better than wait His coming. No sooner had the little
-vessel touched the landing than Jairus pushed his way through the
-crowd, and when he got near enough fell at Jesus’ feet, and in great
-agony of heart besought Him, saying, “My little daughter lieth at the
-point of death; I pray Thee come and lay Thy hands on her, that she may
-be healed.” There was no calmness in this appeal. On the other hand,
-it was full of agitation and fear, mingled with fancies that the Lord
-must first lay His hands upon his dying child. There is a striking
-similarity between this appeal of Jairus, and that of the nobleman who
-came to Jesus in the early part of His ministry, and cried out, “Come
-down ere my child die.” Then the Lord told the nobleman to go his way,
-his child should live, but here His divine compassion went out to the
-distressed father. Doubtless Jesus saw the weakness of his faith, but
-He also saw his sincerity, and so He “went with him.”
-
-But the daughter of Jairus was not the only sufferer in that city. We
-read, there was “a certain woman which had an issue of blood twelve
-years, and had suffered many things of many physicians, and had spent
-all that she had, and was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse.”
-Surely she was in a sorrowful condition, had suffered many things,
-besides the disease which was wasting her life away, for medicine
-in that age was but imperfectly understood, and diseases were often
-exorcised by charms, and, doubtless her “many physicians” practiced all
-sorts of charms and resorted to every kind of omen, until her money
-was gone, and she was not only poverty-stricken, but daily growing
-worse under her affliction. One almost wonders, since Jesus had now
-been for a year and a half a resident of Capernaum, that she had not
-sooner appealed to Him for help. Perhaps his work had been in another
-part of the city, or she may have been deterred from asking His help
-because of the nature of her malady, or she may have thought within
-herself that she could do in the throng what she had not the courage to
-do openly, for she said, “If I may but touch His garment, I shall be
-whole.” And now was her opportunity, for “much people followed Him, and
-thronged Him.” Besides, on this occasion, Jesus may have passed through
-the street on which she lived, since He has such a way of passing by
-the door of helpless, suffering humanity, for He is “touched with the
-feeling of our infirmities.”
-
-This woman at first does not impress us as having a very exalted idea
-of the Saviour or faith in His ability to heal. Doubtless she shared
-the superstition of her people, and imagined that Christ healed by a
-sort of magic or magnetism, for, as she mingled in the throng, she said
-to herself, if I come “in the press,” if I can only get near enough to
-“touch the hem of His garment,” I will be healed. These seem to be the
-thoughts passing through her mind as she ventured out on her errand of
-being healed. It is important, however, though difficult, to realize
-her situation, for she had become impoverished, diseased, and almost
-helpless. Once she was possessed of health, and some means at least,
-and, no doubt moved in respectable society. Her changed relations
-to her former surroundings made it all the harder to be publicly
-recognized, and so she timidly permits herself to be absorbed by the
-multitude as they pressed their way through the crowded street that
-morning. There may be another reason of which she was fully conscious,
-namely, according to the Mosaic law, such a sufferer was unclean, and
-was required, after the cure was wrought, to bring an offering for
-purification. Orientals had a perfect abhorrence of such a person, for
-her very touch would render them unclean. Perhaps could we know all the
-circumstances which shaped her actions, the wonder would be, that she
-came at all, and that her courage was greater than her faith.
-
-At length, and as unobtrusively as possible, she came up, in the press
-of the people, behind Jesus, and stretched out her trembling hand, and
-in such a modest way touched the hem of His garment that no one saw
-it, not even His disciples, who were nearest the Saviour. Since no one
-saw her act, she thought no one needed to know it. Perhaps she was so
-careful that she even thought Jesus was not conscious of it. But to our
-Lord there was a difference between the touch of faith and the touch of
-the crowd. She was all too deeply conscious of her great need. She was
-carried along with the multitude, because she believed if she could get
-near enough to Jesus to touch Him, she would receive that which all her
-physicians were unable to bestow, namely, restoration to health. She
-was there for a blessing. The crowd was there through idle curiosity.
-They wanted nothing, only to see. They pushed through the thronged
-highway together, and as they did so talked about the simplicity of the
-great Man in their midst, were interested in Him because of His fame,
-discussed His origin, wondered at the growing opposition of the Scribes
-and Pharisees, but hoped some good would come of Him to the nation. The
-woman believed she would personally receive new life from Him. In this
-she was not disappointed, for “straightway the fountain of her blood
-was dried up; and she felt in her body that she was healed of that
-plague.” To her there was an inward consciousness, which could not be
-mistaken, of the staunching of a wound through which her life, for long
-years, had been slowly and yet surely ebbing, and she felt the rising
-tide of new existence and a return to wholeness.
-
-But now the scene changes. The great throng came to a halt. What has
-happened? one inquired of another. See! Jesus has turned around “in the
-press” and is sharply looking into the faces of those nearest Him, and
-demanding, “Who touched my clothes?”
-
-To the disciples this seemed a strange inquiry, and they could not
-understand its meaning, and replied, “Thou seest the multitude
-thronging thee, and sayest thou, Who touched me?” To appreciate
-the astonishment of the disciples one must see an Oriental throng
-pushing its way through a narrow street of an Eastern city. There is
-no resisting its onward rush. Like some mighty river which, fed by a
-thousand spring freshets, irresistibly bears everything before it, so
-is an Eastern crowd, and the wonder is that Jesus could stay at all.
-But He immediately knew in “Himself that virtue had gone out of Him.”
-He was conscious that He had put forth power for the woman’s healing.
-He would there and at once correct any superstition that there was any
-healing virtue in His clothes. Not in the touch of the garment, for the
-people pressed Him on all sides, and experienced nothing of His healing
-power, even though one or another might have had a concealed disease,
-simply because this conscious need of help was lacking in them, and so
-it was her own faith had saved her, even though in the beginning it was
-not wholly free from superstition.
-
-But what a trial this stop must have been to the woman, especially
-when there was such urgent haste, and this seeming leisurely way of
-calling out all the circumstances of the case, even after all disavowed
-touching Him, and His looking “round about to see her that had done
-this thing.” She must have thought to herself, “I will surely be
-discovered.” And timidly shrank back in the crowd, her face burning
-with confusion, for doubtless she was not only alarmed at the delay,
-but also mortified and afraid on account of the nature of her malady,
-disturbed by the consciousness of impropriety, as having, while
-Levitically unclean, dared to mingle with the people, and even touch
-the great Teacher Himself. We wonder, in the sweep of the Saviour’s eye
-over the multitude “to see her,” as she caught sight of His beneficent
-face, possibly for the first time, she did not see something in it
-that calmed her fears and inspired hope? It would seem so, for even
-while yet “fearing and trembling” she came promptly out from among the
-throng, “fell down before Him,” and, hard as it must have been for
-her to tell her shame in the ears of the multitude, woman-like, she
-bravely “told Him all the truth!” Confessed the whole sad story of her
-life, and twelve long years of suffering. Oh, the touch of loyalty to
-truth and honor in this woman, prostrate at the feet of Jesus, pleading
-for mercy and forgiveness! How His own heart must have been touched by
-it. He would not break the bruised reed, even in this necessity for
-the good of her faith, to have her openly confess the great blessing
-she had received. Doubtless the Lord constrained her to make this
-confession, partly to seal her faith and to strengthen her recovery,
-and partly to present her to the world as healed and cleansed.
-
-But while she is sobbing out her confession at the Saviour’s feet, He
-graciously addresses her, “Daughter, be of good comfort; thy faith hath
-made thee whole; go in peace!” Had ever such endearing words fallen
-upon human ears! To the woman in the house of Simon the Pharisee, He
-had said, “Thy faith hath saved thee!” To this one He says, “Daughter,
-be of good comfort; thy faith hath made thee whole!” That endearing
-appellation, “daughter,” must have sounded as a lost note out of heaven
-in the ear of this woman. Could it be possible that she, who, under
-the Levitical law, had been held by her people as unclean, is called
-“daughter” by the pure, sinless Son of God? Did ever heaven come down
-to earth in such graciousness, and rescue from the mire of uncleanness
-and elevate womanhood to be a princess of the sky? Surely these were
-days of heaven upon earth, and we may well believe that “daughter”
-arose from her prostrate attitude at the feet of the Lord of life and
-glory, “a new creature” in Christ.
-
-Early ecclesiastical legends have garlanded this woman with many
-beautiful fancies. Her birthplace, according to tradition, was Paneas
-(the modern Banias), located at the sources of the Jordan. Here, in
-the front of her residence, she caused a monument to be erected to her
-Deliverer. She must also have been in the company of women who followed
-Jesus to Jerusalem at the last Passover, for, at the several trials of
-our Lord she is made to appear under the name of Veronica, and is said,
-in the presence of Pilate, to have proclaimed, in a clear, loud voice,
-the innocence of our Lord, and after he was condemned to be crucified,
-on the way to Calvary, wiped His face with her own handkerchief.
-
-Whatever value or genuineness there may be attached to these
-traditions, they certainly show in what reverence she was held in
-Christian antiquity, and how highly the faith and the hope of this
-sufferer were esteemed.
-
-But, above all these traditionary legends, we behold the glory and
-majesty of our Lord in that, in the midst of the multitude, He
-displayed no traces of excitement, but that in calm consciousness He
-was ready to receive any impression from without. Of this there is
-the clearest evidence, when, in the midst of the excited crowd, He
-perceived that one timid, shrinking woman, in the agony of her faith
-touched the fringe of His garment; and when He stopped to comfort and
-confirm the trembling believer, whom His power and grace had restored,
-He had recognized, even in a throng, that faith which was unperceived
-by men, and only found expression in the inmost desires of the one who
-was not even known to the crowd. He alone could develop and strengthen
-this unobtrusive and shrinking “daughter” until she breaks forth in
-open and public profession.
-
-There are also reasons why Christ ascribes to faith the deliverance
-which He alone works: 1. Faith alone can receive the needed
-deliverance. 2. Shrinking modesty, and even a feeling of unworthiness,
-need no longer be kept back by any sense of uncleanness, from the full
-exercise of that faith. 3. God’s gifts are not alone for the rich and
-those high in the ranks of social life, for even this ruler of the
-synagogue had to give place to this timid woman, therefore faith may
-be exercised by those in the humblest walks of life. 4. Jesus would
-convert the act of faith into a life of faith. This woman was not hid
-from the searching glance of Christ, but His gracious act of healing
-was concealed from the world until He brought her before Him in her
-public confession.
-
-If there is anything that can grieve the heart of Christ it must be
-the person who absorbs like a sponge all the gifts of grace, but never
-gives any of them out to others. If every one acted thus, Christianity
-would be blotted from the face of the earth in a single generation.
-Hence the wisdom and justice in requiring believers to be witnesses and
-confessors. If you have received any good, tell it out, that others may
-be blessed and God glorified.
-
-It was now becoming manifest that the opposition of the Pharisees was
-deepening, and, because they were bitterly offended at the Saviour’s
-work, shortly after the healing of the woman with a bloody issue,
-Jesus withdrew from Capernaum to the “borders of Tyre and Sidon.” Only
-a little before this so many were coming and going that our Lord and
-His disciples “had no leisure so much as to eat,” and because of these
-throngs upon His public ministry, He had said to the apostles, “Come
-ye yourselves apart into a desert place, and rest awhile.” So they
-sailed for the farther shore, to find a safe retreat in the sheltered
-uplands in the dominion of Herod Philip. But the people, who seemed to
-be always on the watch, when they saw the little vessel sailing out
-from Capernaum, and knew, by the direction it was taking, they quickly
-spread the news of His departure, and thronged out of Capernaum,
-Bethsaida, Chorazin and other cities, and hastened on foot around the
-shores of the sea, and outran the vessel and reached His contemplated
-place of retirement in advance of the little craft, and there was no
-rest, but a great multitude to be instructed, and healed, and fed,
-for it was on this occasion that He spread a table in the desert, and
-five thousand, besides women and children, sat down to eat. And so
-there was nothing but a hard day’s work, and a night on the desolate
-mountain in prayer. So obviously His journey to the “borders of Tyre
-and Sidon,” was to find seclusion and rest, which He had sought, but in
-vain, in the “desert place.” But even here, down by the coast of the
-Mediterranean, “He could not be hid,” although, when He had reached the
-“borders” of the land, He “entered into a house and would have no man
-know it.”
-
-To our mind this is one of the most remarkable incidents in our Lord’s
-ministry. In the house of some sheltering friend, on the remote
-frontier of Galilee, He hoped to escape popular attention and to be
-relieved from the demands of the crowds, who had even deprived Him
-of the needed time to eat, but “He could not be hid.” A woman, a
-Syro-Phœnician, that is to say, one of the mixed race, in whom the
-blood of the Syrians and Phœnicians mingled, and for that reason doubly
-despised by the Jews, this woman had observed His presence, and was
-soon “at His feet.” From the fact that she was a Gentile, and of a
-mixed race at that, made her coming to Jesus an act of heroic faith.
-She came not only without invitation, or a single promise to warrant
-her coming, but in the face of heart-breaking discouragements. We
-have been trained to believe, from the clear teaching of Scripture,
-that when we come to Christ with our burdens of sorrow, be they ever
-so heavy, and ask for help, our prayers must always be subject to His
-will. And indeed He set us a beautiful object-lesson in His own great
-agony in Gethsemane. But here it would seem as if the process had been
-reversed, and as if this poor Syro-Phœnician woman had succeeded in
-imposing her will on the Son of God. Did He not say, “Be it unto thee
-even as thou wilt?” And is there not in this the appearance, at least,
-of the monarch abdicating in favor of the subject? Strange, indeed,
-that any one should get their own way and will with the Sovereign
-of all, for the sin that is in us so dyes the color of our will and
-deflects it, that we can seldom think of it as being other than a
-crooked piece of bent or twisted iron. It is very wonderful that this
-woman’s faith was able to get deliverance for her daughter possessed
-of an “unclean spirit.” Somehow she believed beforehand in His love
-to her, a poor Gentile mother, and this was great faith indeed. All
-the miracles of Christ were wrought in response to faith, either in
-the sufferers who besought His aid, or in their friends. There must
-be faith by which, as over a bridge, the divine help might pass into
-the nature of man. Faith is the unfurled petal, the opened door, the
-unshuttered lattice. And so, in this case, it was through the mother’s
-faith that God’s delivering help passed to the child.
-
-Upon a careful study of the secret of this woman’s faith, we shall
-discover that her faith was severely tested. Christ gave her four
-tests, each of which was necessary to complete her education; and by
-each, with agile foot, she climbed the difficult stairway, which some
-would say was of upward ascent, but which in point of fact was one of
-downward climbing, until she got low enough to catch the waters which
-issue from the threshold of the door of heaven’s mercy.
-
-The first test was that of silence. “She cried unto Him, saying, Have
-mercy on me, O Lord, thou Son of David; my daughter is grievously vexed
-with a devil.” The effects of these unclean spirits are described in
-the instance where the distressed father brought his demoniac boy to be
-healed. And while the father is bringing him, the poor child is seized
-with paroxysms of his malady, having fallen to the ground at the feet
-of Jesus, foaming at the lips under the violent convulsions. When the
-father was asked how long the boy had thus been possessed, he answered,
-“Of a child, and ofttimes it hath cast him into the fire, and into the
-water to destroy him;” and whenever the spirit “taketh him, he teareth
-him, and he foameth, and gnasheth with his teeth and pineth away.”
-Such was the demon this poor mother’s daughter was possessed with,
-and grievously tormented. But to her appeal for help, Jesus “answered
-her not a word.” He alone had the power to help, but the agonizing
-mother awakened no response. And yet, His very silence is a testing of
-her faith. Often it has happened that God’s answer which has best met
-our need was the silence which has not been a refusal, but has given
-time for us to reach a condition of lowliness and helplessness before
-God. He always lets the fruit upon His trees ripen before He plucks
-it. Through the silence of the winter the sap is touching again its
-mother earth, and becoming reinforced by her energy for its work in
-the blossoms of May and the fruit of September. The mind reaches its
-clearest, strongest conclusion by processes carried on in its depths
-during hours of silence and repose. It is in the long, silent hours,
-when the heart waits at the door, listening for the footstep down the
-corridor in vain, that processes are at work that shall make it more
-able to hold the blessedness which shall be poured out from the chalice
-of a Father’s pity.
-
-Again. She was sorely tested in the conduct of the disciples. They
-were eager to rid themselves of the worry of this woman’s crying, and,
-as the quickest solution--a solution which we are all ready enough
-to imitate--advised Christ to give her what she wanted and send her
-off. They thought a miracle to Christ was not more than a penny to a
-millionaire. They did not see that Christ’s hands were tied until the
-conditions of blessing were fulfilled in the suppliant. He loves us too
-well to give His choicest boons to those who have not complied with the
-lofty spiritual conditions which are part of the standing orders of the
-kingdom of heaven. Much of our charity is sheer selfishness. We would
-rather grant the request any day than have an unsightly beggar intrude
-into our bowers of selfish repose. “She crieth after us,” the disciples
-said; “her misery is unpleasant; heal it.”
-
-But Christ was tied by the terms of His commission. She had appealed
-to Him as Son of David, and He said that He had been sent to the
-lost sheep of the house of Israel. She belonged to one of the alien
-races. She was not even a “sheep” of the house of Israel, much less a
-“lost” one. The question was, “Could He, even for once, transcend His
-commission, and grant the request of this weary soul which had traveled
-so far to find the Christ?” As Messiah, she had no claim on Him, for,
-in that capacity, He had been commissioned to the house of Israel only.
-
-Once again. Her faith was tested in His farther refusal to her
-pleadings, when He said, “It is not meet to take the children’s bread,
-and cast it to the dogs.” Somehow her quick woman’s instinct perceived
-a way up what had seemed to be the unscalable path of Christ’s refusal.
-If she had no claim on Him as Messiah, was He not something more? Was
-He not Lord and Master? Did not deity blend with humanity in that
-nature, which, whilst His voice repelled her, yet fascinated and
-attracted her? It would almost seem as if the Holy Spirit whispered,
-“Accost Him as Lord;” “Touch Him on the side of His universal power;”
-“Speak to Him as Son of Man.” So she acted upon His suggestion, and,
-throwing herself at His feet, said, “Lord, help me.” To this appeal
-Christ gave answer that seemed churlish enough. But the bitter rind
-encased luscious fruit. The nut had only to be cracked to disclose
-the milk, sweeter than that of the cocoanut in the desert waste. He
-compared the Jews to children, Himself to bread, and this woman to a
-dog. But for the word “dog” he used the tender diminutive, which was
-not applicable to the wolfish, starving animals that prowl and snarl
-through the streets of Eastern towns, but was used for the little dogs
-brought up with the children in the home. Now, hope once again sprang
-up in her heart. Jesus had talked about dogs, and little house dogs,
-the playthings of the children. He said it was not proper to cast the
-children’s bread to dogs. If by children he meant the “sheep of the
-house of Israel,” then she must belong to the household after all.
-
-She was quick to see her opportunity. “Truth, Lord!” she exclaimed,
-“Yet the dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their masters’ table!”
-When she said that, her lesson was learnt. In her former reply she
-had given the Lord His right place; in this she took her own as a
-little dog. You are not a child of Abraham’s stock! Truth, Lord. You
-are a Syro-Phœnician, and, for that reason, doubly unfit to be called
-a child! Truth, Lord. All I do for you must be of grace, and not of
-merit! Truth, Lord. She admitted all and accepted His most discouraging
-statements concerning herself. But, after the worst that can be said
-about dogs, they “eat of the crumbs.” All these seeming objections are
-in favor of her request. She only wants a little crumb of His mercy,
-which will take nothing from others.
-
-Jesus could stand such pleadings no longer, and he answered and said,
-“O, woman, great is thy faith: be it unto thee even as thou wilt.”
-She had come for crumbs, but the Lord handed to her the key of the
-storehouse, and said, “Have your way, go in and help yourself to all
-its stores.” She would have been content with the crumbs that fell
-beneath the table on the floor, but she finds herself seated at the
-table itself, and feasting like a daughter of the king on its rich and
-bountiful provision. No longer a dog, she proves herself to be one of
-those other sheep which shamed the lost sheep of the house of Israel by
-docility and purity and grace.
-
-This woman had many graces. She had wisdom, humility, meekness,
-patience, perseverance in prayer; but all these were the fruits
-of her faith; therefore, of all graces, Christ honors faith most.
-The perseverance of this woman may well be considered as every way
-calculated to teach us the power and efficacy of faith, and the
-greatness of her faith consisted in this, that in spite of all
-discouragements she continued her plea. Many a blessing has been lost
-out of our lives just because we lacked these graces of the soul.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-Womanhood During Our Lord’s Judean Ministry.
-
- THE SISTERS OF BETHANY--THEIR CHARACTERISTICS--NOT GOOD, BUT BEST
- GIFTS--THE EXTRAVAGANCE OF LOVE--SALOME’S STRANGE REQUEST--HER
- FIDELITY--JOANNA--THE POOR WIDOW’S GIFT--HOW ESTIMATED--THE
- SAVIOUR’S WORDS OF PEACE.
-
-
-The sisters of Bethany, Martha and Mary, come to our view three times
-during our Lord’s Judean ministry. The first view we have of them is
-recorded in Luke x, 38-42, where these sisters entertain our Lord after
-a long, weary day’s teaching. The second is recorded in John xi, 1-46,
-and relates to the sickness and raising from the dead their brother
-Lazarus. The third is the anointing of Jesus by Mary, the account of
-which is found in Matt. xxvi, 6-13; also in Mark xiv, 3-9, and John
-xii, 1-8. Though these three events are each distinct, yet a careful
-study will discover a close connection between the deep, underlying
-truths in each, the attitude taken by Jesus, and the results in the
-circumstances of everyday life.
-
-A great deal has been said and written about these sisters of Bethany,
-some regarding Martha at fault, while others think Mary did not do the
-right thing to leave her sister do all the work. It is related of three
-theologians that they were talking together about these two women, and
-at last made their discussions concrete by questioning each other as
-to which of the women they would like to have married. The first said
-he would rather take Martha, to have his home looked well after; the
-second said he would much prefer to have married Mary, the tender and
-the loving; and the third, who had been silent up to this point, said,
-“I should like Martha before dinner and Mary after.” We think there is
-a great deal in this statement. There are excellencies in each, and
-it is impossible for us to do without our busy Marthas in our homes
-and churches, but we must remember at the same time that our Lord’s
-estimate is that Mary had chosen the better part which was not to be
-taken from her.
-
-The location of Bethany is most picturesque and charming. It is
-scarcely two miles from Jerusalem, yet, by its situation on the
-south-eastern side of a lateral spur of Olivet, is completely hid from
-view. Here, amid the olive yards and fig orchards, lived this happy
-family in comfortable circumstances, and, we think, were possessed of
-considerable property, and ranked well among the learned and affluent.
-Jesus had been slowly journeying from Galilee down the east borders of
-Samaria to Jerusalem. Those who are familiar with that journey will
-remember how replete it was with incidents, wayside sermons, parables
-and miracles. At length, late in the afternoon, we may well believe, He
-arrived at Bethany weary with the long journey, exhausted by the labors
-which attended it, and glad to get away from the multitudes which
-thronged Him. That there should be some stir in the pious household at
-the coming of such a guest is perfectly natural, and that Martha, the
-busy, eager-hearted, and no less affectionate hostess, should hurry
-to and fro with somewhat excited energy to prepare for His proper
-entertainment, is not to be wondered at, for, in all probability,
-she had had no information of His coming, and along with Him twelve
-disciples to be provided for. The wonder is she was as self-contained
-as she was.
-
-There can be no doubt but Martha was a good housekeeper. She kept
-everything straight, clean and neat. And when Jesus came, it upset her
-somewhat, and she ran out into the kitchen, at the back of the house
-to get the supper; not a single thing must be left undone, everything
-must be there. She is so eager about it, coming in and out of the
-little guest-chamber where the Master is sitting, hurrying here and
-there with this one thought in her heart, that the Lord must have
-her best, nothing must be left unturned to give Him comfort. And,
-of course, there is a good deal of excitement and possible anxiety.
-The disarranged furniture is hastily put to rights, the table had
-to be freshly laid with clean white cloths, and the dining-room made
-presentable, for it must be remembered Christ did not come alone.
-He had a group of twelve disciples with Him, and such an influx
-of visitors would throw any village home into perturbation. Then,
-no doubt, the day’s labor had been a good appetizer. The kitchen
-department that day was a very important department, and probably
-Martha had no sooner greeted her guests than she fled to that room. No
-doubt she was a good cook. Mary had full confidence that her sister
-could get up the best dinner of any woman in Bethany, for Martha was
-not only a hard-working and painstaking woman, but also a good manager,
-ever inventive of some new pastry, or discovering something in the art
-of cookery and housekeeping.
-
-On the other hand, Mary had no worriment about household affairs. She
-seemed to say, “Now, let us have a division of labor. Martha, you
-cook, and I’ll sit down and be good.” So you have often seen a great
-difference between two sisters. Mary is so fond of conversation she has
-no time to attend to the household welfare. So by this self-appointed
-arrangement, Mary is in the parlor with Christ, and Martha is in the
-kitchen. It would have been better if they had divided the work, and
-then they could have divided the opportunity of listening to Jesus;
-but Mary monopolizes Christ while Martha swelters at the fire. It was
-a very important thing that they should have a good dinner that day.
-Christ was hungry, and He did not often have a luxurious entertainment.
-Alas! if the duty had devolved upon Mary, what a repast that would have
-been! But something went wrong in the kitchen. Perhaps the fire would
-not burn, or the bread would not bake, or Martha scalded her hand, or
-something was burned black that ought only to have been made brown;
-and Martha lost her patience, and forgetting the proprieties of the
-occasion, with besweated brow, and, perhaps with pitcher in one hand
-and tongs in the other, she rushes out of the kitchen into the presence
-of Christ, saying, “Lord, dost thou not care that my sister hath left
-me to serve alone?”
-
-Now look at Martha, but while you look, do not get out of patience
-with her. She is cumbered and growing fretful. Her service is getting
-too much for her, she can not get things done as well as she would
-like. And being fretful and tired she goes wrong herself. First she is
-cumbered; the next thing she feels cross with Mary; “Mary is sitting
-there at the feet of Jesus, and I am so busy getting the supper. What
-right has she down there when I am so busy?” The third thing she gets
-cross with Jesus, and she says, “Dost not Thou care that my sister
-hath left me to serve?” Cumbered in her own spirit, angry with her
-sister, reflecting upon her Master, and putting the blame on him of
-her weariness. Dear soul, how she loved and wanted that supper to be
-all that it ought to be, but she had forgotten that service only was
-acceptable which was filled up with communion with the Lord.
-
-How tenderly the Lord deals with Martha! There was nothing acrid in
-His words. He knew that she had almost worked herself to death to get
-Him something to eat, and so He throws a world of tenderness into His
-intonation as He seems to say, “My dear woman, do not worry, let the
-dinner go; sit down on this ottoman beside Mary, your younger sister.
-Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about many things, but
-one thing is needful.” Is there not a volume of love and sympathy
-expressed in these words? And may not the Marthas of to-day learn
-wisdom from them and seek in Jesus that Friend who can be touched with
-the feelings of our infirmities, “that good part which shall not be
-taken away?” The Saviour looked with love and pity upon the troubled
-Martha, for He realized that she was not only cumbered with many
-cares, but she was also anxious for His personal comfort. He was her
-Guest. Though the Lord of Glory, He was also man, having human wants.
-He hungered and thirsted as other men, and it was the duty of these
-sisters to provide for Him the necessary food. If at the last day it
-will be a matter of condemnation to any one that he has seen one of
-Christ’s disciples an hungered or athirst and did not minister unto
-him, how much more guilty would they be who would suffer Christ Himself
-to go without food when He was hungry, and that too in their own house!
-
-Martha was right, therefore, in seeing that a suitable meal was
-prepared for her guests. Her mistake was that she set an undue
-importance upon the matter. She represents that large class of Marthas
-which emphasizes fidelity to temporal cares and subordinates the
-devotional and spiritual. Mary represents that side which magnifies
-the devotional and spiritual, and which subordinates the temporal and
-physical things, making them subserve the other. The one is serving
-Christ in our own way and according to our own zeal; the other is
-humbly waiting at His feet for direction. Martha must needs get up a
-great entertainment. She must have a needless variety of dishes, show
-thereby the skill and resources of her art as a housekeeper. Instead of
-thinking mainly of what her distinguished Guest might do for her, of
-the infinite store of blessing that hung upon His lips, she was wholly
-intent upon what she might do for Him. While thus absorbed and fretted
-with cares of how she might give her table a more comely appearance,
-she was losing the heavenly manna which Jesus came to dispense, and
-which she so much needed for her soul. Not only did she throw away this
-priceless opportunity of hearing the words of eternal life directly
-from her Lord, but she was unreasonably vexed at Mary for not being as
-foolish as herself.
-
-The thoughts and purpose of her heart were as open to Him as were those
-of the gentle, loving Mary; and while one revealed care and anxiety for
-the perishing things of this life the other told of perfect love and
-trust in her adored Lord; of earnest longing for the knowledge of the
-truth, of deep humility, of self-forgetting devotion, of that quiet
-courage which fears neither ridicule nor opposition.
-
-There may have been some truth in Martha’s complaint against her
-sister. Very possibly Mary may have been so absorbed with the “good
-part” which she had chosen, as to be really negligent of her household
-duties, and to throw upon Martha burdens which should have been shared
-equally by the sisters. Had Mary, sitting at the Master’s feet and
-drinking in the precious doctrine that fell from His lips, been puffed
-up thereby, and said to Jesus, “Speak to my sister Martha, that she
-stop her household cares, and come and sit with me in this devout
-frame of mind,” very likely the rebuke would have fallen in the other
-direction.
-
-Observe, Jesus did not meet Martha’s words against her sister with
-a denial, or with an apology. He simply vindicated Mary’s religious
-integrity, by testifying that she had “chosen the good part.” She
-was a faithful, humble, loving disciple, and delighted to sit at His
-feet and receive instruction. That which Jesus calls “that good part”
-must be of priceless value, a treasure well worth obtaining in this
-changing, perishing world; for it is to be enduring, “it shall not be
-taken away.” Like the favored Mary, we may not literally sit at the
-Master’s feet, yet He is speaking to every humble child of God, in and
-by His Word. We may choose the world with all its vanities which perish
-with the using, or we may choose Christ as our portion, both for time
-and eternity. O! how many troubled Marthas there are in these modern
-times that need to choose the “good part,” that need to sit humbly at
-the dear Saviour’s feet, to be nourished by His love, cheered by His
-council, and approved by the divine “well done!” The lowly life of
-humble sacrifice is the only life worth living.
-
-The next view we have of this beautiful Bethany home the scene is all
-changed. The sunshine is all gone out and great clouds of sorrow and
-distress have rolled into the sky of its happiness. Prosperity has
-given place to the bitterest adversity, the brightness and gladness are
-banished, and the sisters are right down under the deepest, darkest
-shadow of sorrow that ever settled on their home. The well-beloved
-brother, Lazarus, is ill unto death, and Jesus is far away, and in
-the very midst of His Peræan ministry. In their distress, the first
-thought of these sisters was of Jesus. “If He only knew our brother was
-sick,” they doubtless said one to the other, He would sympathize with
-us, and at once restore him to health. And so they sent him the simple
-message, “He whom Thou lovest is sick.”
-
-Our first thought is when the messengers, bearing the sad intelligence,
-had informed the Lord, He would have at once promptly responded to this
-cry of help coming from the home where he had been so heartily welcomed
-and so bountifully entertained. But how different was His reception of
-the message from what we naturally expected. So far as is known, He did
-not even return an answer. Could they have been mistaken? Did not Jesus
-love Martha and her sister, and was not the very message couched in the
-words, “He whom thou lovest?” Would He dishonor the confidence they had
-reposed in Him?
-
-For two whole days He continued His Paræan ministry “in the same place
-where He was.” To us this conduct is most surprising. O, how often the
-Lord does so with us, even when we cry after Him in our sorrow He does
-not come. But always right in front of the statement, that He does not
-come, we have “Jesus loved.” How it added to their sorrow. Lazarus
-dying, Christ not coming, and at last Lazarus is dead and in the tomb,
-and yet the Master has not come. Surely the dense gloom of bereavement
-has settled down over the home, but a little while ago so full of
-sunshine and beauty.
-
-Heartbroken, the sisters keep their vigil by the sepulchre, but among
-the friends coming and going to tender their sympathy, the Friend does
-not appear. He came not to save; He comes not to weep. The fact must
-have added poignancy to their grief. But wait in your judgment. Right
-through these dark hours Jesus loved these sisters. Do not lose sight
-of this fact. It may comfort you some day. He refrained from bestowing
-a small favor only that He might have an opportunity to bestow a
-greater. If he had healed Lazarus by a word, Martha and Mary would
-have been grateful and satisfied, but by waiting He could give them a
-greater blessing, and one which might be shared by sorrowing ones in
-all ages to come.
-
-But Jesus is coming. Lazarus is dead, but Jesus is come at last, and is
-halting on the brow of the hill, just outside of the village. The news
-of His arrival reach the stricken sisters. How does the intelligence
-of His presence affect them? “Then Martha,” the dear woman, “as soon
-as she heard that Jesus was coming, went and met him; but Mary sat
-still in the house.” What a contrast. Martha hastens along the village
-road to the brow of the hill where the Saviour had halted, doubtless
-that He might meet the sisters apart from the crowd, which had come in
-accordance with Jewish custom, to mourn with them, and as she comes
-running to meet Him, she exclaims, “Lord, if Thou hadst been here my
-brother had not died.” He certainly understood that. But in her blind
-grief she could not understand how, if He loved her and her sister, He
-could delay His coming until it was too late. In her words there was
-almost the accent of rebuke and reproach, “If _Thou_ hadst been here my
-brother had not died.” But how graciously He deals with her. He comes
-to her in her argumentative state and with words the most comforting
-said, “Thy brother shall rise again.”
-
-Martha could hardly believe her ears, as she certainly did not
-comprehend the meaning of these words with her heart, and replied, “I
-know that he shall rise again in the resurrection at the last day.” She
-believed in the life everlasting, but she was going to put off being
-comforted until “the last day.” In that Martha has many sisters.
-
-But how patiently our Lord recalls the mind of Martha from the
-resurrection of the last day to Himself. He said, “I am the
-resurrection, and the life; he that believeth in Me, though he were
-dead, yet shall he live; and whosoever liveth and believeth in Me shall
-never die!” He is master of the thing that fills her heart with dread,
-and patiently He deals with her. Was not that beautiful?
-
-Comforted in her heart, Martha hastened back to her home, and called
-Mary her sister secretly, saying, “The Master is come, and calleth for
-thee.” He wanted to meet Mary apart from the public mourners, as He had
-met Martha. The custom was for the comforters to do as the mourners. If
-they were silent, to remain so; if they wailed, to wail with them. The
-shrieks of Oriental mourners are often ear-piercing. Our Lord wanted
-to avoid this, and so no doubt, although it is not chronicled, He had
-commissioned Martha to bear the tidings of His arrival, and she went
-and quietly and said, “The Master wants you, Mary.”
-
-Mary “rose quickly, and came unto Him.” But mark her coming. Unlike her
-sister, “when Mary was come where Jesus was, and saw Him, she _fell
-down at His feet_, saying unto Him, Lord, if Thou hadst been here, my
-brother had not died.” That’s what Martha said. Yes, but what effect
-did it produce upon Him when Mary said it? “When Jesus therefore saw
-her weeping,” and the company of mourners who had followed her soon
-after she left the house, “also weeping” with her, “He groaned in the
-spirit and was troubled,” no doubt, at the empty platitude on the
-part of those miserable comforters. But at the sepulchre, where lay
-the mortal remains of the loved Lazarus, He wept. The Son of God in
-tears! His great heart sharing another’s sorrow. This scene is the most
-precious and comforting in the record of the Saviour’s life so far as
-the revelation of His heart is concerned.
-
-Martha gets His teaching, Mary gets His tears. Martha said exactly what
-Mary said. When Mary said it, what a difference! Which do you think
-was the better thing, to run after Him and get His teaching, or wait
-till sent for and get His tears? The reasoning mind will receive the
-Master’s teaching; the broken, weeping heart, His tears. Bright and
-luminous as were His words with resurrection glory, Mary got to deeper
-depths in the heart of God when she came than Martha, because she drew
-His tears of deepest sympathy with her sorrow.
-
-Why did Jesus weep? Because Lazarus died? No, He is going to call Him
-back for a definite purpose. He knows that bereavement has broken the
-hearts of these two sisters, and though He is going to heal sorrow’s
-wound, He sympathized with their grief, and His heart went out in
-their distress. Every wounded heart that belongs to a child of God,
-the Master is going to heal by and by; yet He suffers with you in the
-wounding, and enters by tears with you into the sacrament of your
-sorrow. And so He wept when these women wept. There are times in our
-lives when the tears of sympathy speak greater comfort than the most
-eloquent words. Beloved, when you go to your friend sitting in the
-shadow of her deepest sorrow, spare your words, but freely mingle your
-tears with hers. Job’s comforters sat in silence for seven days before
-they spoke. But if you are not delivered out of your bereavement, may
-this scene in the life of our Lord comfort you with the thought that
-He has something better for you. The best thing came to these sisters,
-right after the bitter weeping.
-
-In the third and last view we have of this blessed Bethany home, we
-see some of the scenes of the first view coming up to us. It is the
-same home, only, because of better accommodations, the feast is held in
-the house of Simon, but the same people are in it. But what a change
-there is here! Let us get the humanness as well as the divinity out of
-it. Look at those people, what are they doing? Sitting at the table.
-A lovely place for us men to sit. _But Martha served._ Do not miss
-that. She is doing what she did before,--getting supper ready. She is
-bustling about in her earnestness, but she has lost her grumbling. She
-gets through the entertainment with smiles from first to last. She is
-no less busy, but she is at rest in her mind. She is cumbered, but is
-not angry with Mary, and is not reflecting on Jesus Christ. She had
-learned something in the day of sorrow and darkness. It has not altered
-her power to serve, but the matter and the manner of her service.
-
-What about Mary? If you have carefully studied the last few days of
-our Lord’s life upon the earth you have noticed that He was a lonely
-man, and that even His disciples failed to enter into sympathy with His
-suffering as it overshadowed His life. Take the story of those last six
-days and our Lord’s journey to Jerusalem, and you will find that it is
-an awful picture. He has the shadow of the cross upon Him, and He keeps
-calling these men to Him saying, “I am going to Jerusalem to suffer,
-to be delivered into the hands of men, and they will crucify Me.” His
-disciples broke in upon that awful revelation by asking, “Master, who
-is the greatest among us?”
-
-But there was one soul that saw the cross--Mary. Never forget it, you
-men; it was a woman that saw the cross and went into the shadow of it
-with Christ, as it was a woman who became the first human preacher of
-the resurrection when He came back again. So while He “sat at meat,”
-in the house of Simon the leper, with the man whom He had cured of
-the most terrible of diseases upon one side, and the man whom He
-had raised from the dead on the other, and the disciples on either
-side of these, Mary looks into the faces of the guests, and they
-all were happy, as men usually are with a feast spread before them,
-and even Christ, though fully conscious of his approaching death,
-and all the humiliation accompanying it, did not abandon Himself to
-melancholy feelings or looks, yet with that deep intuition that is
-only born of the highest and the holiest love, she sees what no one
-else sees, that on His heart is the shadow of a great sorrow. And she
-is thinking, “What can I do? Can I do anything that will let Him see
-I know something of His pain? Can I go into the darkness with Him
-and share in that sorrow?” And when love does this kind of thinking
-it is always extravagant. She slipped away from her sister’s side in
-serving, hastened to her room, where the precious treasure was kept,
-and seizing the alabaster box of spikenard, for which she had paid more
-than 300 pence, she hastened back to the feast, saying to herself, “I
-will give Him this; it is the choicest thing I can get hold of, and
-I want to pour it out upon Him, for He knows I can see His sorrow and
-pain.” So speaking, she fell at His feet and poured the perfume on His
-head and feet. It was a lavish waste of love--nearly $1,000 expressed
-in our money now. But nothing is wasted that is done in love for our
-Lord. Some murmured, others “had indignation,” and Judas spoke right
-out, “Why this waste?” Poor Mary, she had never thought of there being
-any waste to her act of love. “Three hundred pence!” Judas had quickly
-ciphered out the contents of the broken alabaster box, and just now, at
-the expense of Mary, was very benevolent. The unbroken box of ointment
-might have been sold, and the money “given to the poor.”
-
-But, in a moment they were hushed. “Let her alone,” said Jesus. How
-fortunate for Mary that she had a more righteous Judge to pass sentence
-upon her action. “Against the day of My burying hath she kept this.”
-Nobody else understood it. The motive determines the act. “Nothing
-can be wasted that love pours upon Me, because love enters into My
-suffering and sorrow, and that is what it meant.”
-
-“She hath done what she could.” O, what a precious revelation! Jesus
-is fully satisfied with the limit of our ability to serve Him. And
-the sequel showed that she met her Lord’s future as no other of His
-disciples had been able; anointed His brow for the thorns, and his feet
-for the nails, that both thorns and nails may draw blood in the perfume
-of at least one woman’s love.
-
-In this act of love done for Jesus she has erected to herself a
-monument as lasting as the Gospel, for the Master declared, “Verily,
-verily, I say unto you, wheresoever this Gospel shall be preached in
-the whole world, there shall this also, that this woman hath done, be
-told for a memorial of her.” Mary had loved wiser than she knew, but
-then it is just like Jesus to pay back into our hands a hundredfold
-more than the most liberal of us ever bestowed upon Him. The sweet
-story of that beautiful act of the breaking of the alabaster box
-will be told as long as there is a Gospel to be preached or a soul
-to be saved. The wonder of wonders is, that in this world of sin and
-suffering there are not more Marys to break alabaster boxes over the
-world’s burdened laborers.
-
-We now pass to notice another beautiful womanly character in White
-Raiment, namely, Salome. Her name means “peaceful,” and, though she
-developed considerable womanly ambition, her name quite describes her
-character. She was the wife of Zebedee, a well-to-do fisherman on the
-Sea of Galilee, and the mother of James and John, two of our Lord’s
-best loved disciples; two who, with Simon Peter, one of their business
-partners, constituted the inner apostolic circle. She had not only
-given two sons to the ministry, but she herself accompanied Jesus in
-His Galilean ministry, and, with others, ministered of her substance
-in meeting the expenses of His journeys. She must, therefore, not only
-have been a woman of means, but liberal in her use of it. No doubt
-she was a quiet, home-loving body; but she liked so well to listen to
-those sayings of our Lord that she was glad to leave her pleasant,
-comfortable Bethsaida house beside the beautiful “blue sea of the
-hills,” to go about hither and thither with her sons and drink in the
-wonderful words of Christ.
-
-Salome is best remembered as coming to our Lord, on His last memorable
-journey to Jerusalem, with the strange request that her two sons might
-sit, the one on the right hand of Jesus and the other on the left, in
-His kingdom. Just as in the Sanhedrin, on each side of the high priest
-there sat the next highest dignitaries, so here she requested the two
-highest places for James and John. However, perhaps, this was not a
-selfish ambition, since the request is made for others. Some one has
-said, “Plan great things for God, and expect great things from God,”
-and an apostle has said, “Covet earnestly the best gifts.” O, these
-mothers, when there are seats of honor to be given out can not only
-“covet,” but “earnestly” ask for great things for their sons.
-
-These two disciples had already been favored. They were with Jesus
-when He raised Jairus’ daughter from the dead; they were with our
-Lord on the Mount of Transfiguration, and, later on, in the Garden
-of Gethsemane, and witnessed His agony. Though of the inner circle,
-yet they possessed characteristics of their own. They were more eager
-for extreme measures for pushing their Master’s cause than was even
-the tempestuous Peter. Their self-poised love of the truth made them
-zealous. It was they who rebuked the one who cast out demons in Jesus’
-name, because he did not follow them. They requested Christ to call
-down fire from heaven to burn up the Samaritan village that refused to
-receive them on account of an old prejudice against the Jews. If these
-disciples could have had their own way, that village, with all its
-inhabitants, innocent and guilty, would have speedily been reduced to
-ashes. How little they understood their Lord, or even themselves. They
-did not get the idea from their Lord, for He came to save men’s lives,
-and not to destroy them.
-
-Possibly Salome may have thought her sons had some claim to these
-honors. The family had some business standing. They had partners and
-servants. John had some acquaintance with the High Priest, the great
-head of the Hebrew Church. They had left all to follow Jesus, giving
-up not only their business prospects, but their friendship with
-ecclesiastical aristocrats, and now she was looking out for a good
-place in His kingdom for her sons.
-
-Probably the two brethren had directed this request through their
-mother, because they remembered the rebuke which had followed their
-former contention about precedence. She asked simply, directly, humbly,
-nothing for herself, but what she thought was her due. He gave her no
-rebuke, as He would have been sure to do if she had asked through any
-selfish motive. Turning to James and John He questioned them about
-their fitness for such promotion. Could they drink of His cup and be
-baptized with His baptism? They thought they were able. They knew
-better what He meant when Herod beheaded James, and John was banished
-to Patmos.
-
-Salome remained true to her Lord. When the terrible death-hour came she
-stood beside the cross, held there by her faith and love through the
-jeers of the mocking crowd, the dying agony of her Saviour, and the
-darkness which veiled His terrible suffering.
-
-[Illustration: SEEKING THE LIVING AMONG THE DEAD.]
-
-After the body was taken down from the cross, Salome, with others,
-“beheld where He was laid.” O, this loving, faithful woman, true to her
-nature, how she clung to her Lord to the very last. And on the morning
-of the resurrection, “as it began to dawn,” we find Salome among the
-company of women hastening to the sepulchre to complete the anointing
-of the body of our Lord which had been so hurriedly buried on the
-evening of the crucifixion. But, upon reaching the garden, these women
-were amazed to find the tomb open and empty. These women--Salome, Mary
-Magdalene, Joanna, and others with them--came seeking a dead body, but,
-instead, they found a living angel, who asked, “Why seek ye the living
-among the dead?” “He is risen; He is not here; behold the place where
-they laid Him!”
-
-What these women, in company with Salome, had seen was enough to fill
-them with astonishment, and what they had heard from the lips of the
-angel was enough to fill their hearts with joy. Wonderful that He whom
-they had mourned as dead was indeed alive again, though they could
-hardly believe it.
-
-But Salome’s prayer for her sons had sure answer. To James was given
-the high honor of being the first apostolic martyr. John had the
-distinction of caring for the Virgin Mary during her last years, and,
-on Patmos, the little rocky isle of his banishment, where he could hear
-only the sea-bird’s cry and the melancholy wash of waves, he listened
-to apocalyptic thunderings that were enough to tear any common soul to
-tatters. He was permitted to put the capstone on the magnificent column
-of Holy Scripture, a column that had been forty centuries in building.
-
-Salome, the peaceful and brave, at the last went gladly away to her
-reward; for she was sure that her sons, having drank of His cup, and
-been baptized with His baptism, were now seated with Him in the throne
-of His glory.
-
-In connection with our Lord’s Galilean ministry, we find the name of
-Joanna mentioned. She was the wife of Chuza, the steward of Herod
-Antipas. No doubt she followed Jesus, and ministered to Him out of her
-substance, out of gratitude for having restored her child to health.
-Her husband was the nobleman who went all the way from Capernaum to
-Cana, and besought our Lord that He “would come down and heal His son,
-for he was at the point of death.” Joanna was both at the crucifixion,
-and is mentioned by name as being one of those who brought spices
-and ointments to embalm the body of our Lord on the morning of the
-resurrection.
-
-These women must have possessed means, as well as a spirit of
-liberality. All this is very beautiful indeed.
-
-The last woman in White Raiment during the ministry of our Lord, is
-the widow with two mites. Her act of benevolence has associated with
-it many tender and pathetic touches. The circumstances, so far as they
-relate to the ministry of our Lord, are inexpressibly sad. He had come
-down to the last day of His public teaching, and the last hour of that
-ministry. Indeed the time of His departure from the Temple was at hand.
-He had taught in their streets, by the wayside, in desert places, in
-the Temple. He had wept over Jerusalem that had seen so many of His
-mighty works, and as in mental vision He saw the coming doom, He sobbed
-out, “Oh if thou hadst known ... the things which belong to thy peace!”
-But they refused to know, and had finally rejected Him as they had
-rejected His teaching. The very tears of the suffering Saviour broke
-out in great sobs of grief in the words, “_Ye would not!_” So, in the
-very last act, all efforts having failed, He exclaims, “Behold your
-house,” it was no longer God’s house, “is left unto you desolate!” As
-Jesus on that last day, and at the close of the last hour of the day,
-closed the door of mercy, how that word, “DESOLATE” must have sounded
-through its God-forsaken courts.
-
-At a time when such a burden of unrequited toil and sorrow was resting
-upon the grieved heart of Jesus, the touching incident of this poor
-widow comes to our view. Jesus had left the inner court of the Temple,
-and, on His way through the court of the women, paused over against
-the treasury to point out one more beautiful lesson to His disciples.
-The people were casting their offerings into the thirteen great chests
-set to receive their gifts. These offerings were gifts of the people,
-and had no reference to “tithes.” These Jews, though they had utterly
-failed to comprehend the “day of their visitation,” were, nevertheless,
-liberal givers. They did not content themselves with giving a tenth of
-their income. So it was the “freewill offering,” the love gifts, that
-Jesus was watching. Twice in Exodus, once in Deuteronomy and once in
-Leviticus had God commanded, “And none shall appear before Me empty.”
-Three times a year was every Jew required to come before the Lord, and
-not one time empty-handed. Never was there an exception for rich or
-for poor, for great or for small. Not a pauper from Dan to Beer-sheba,
-would have dared to come without his offerings. In these modern times
-a sickly sentimentality has well-nigh made void the commandment of
-God. He made no discrimination in favor of the poor. He that had
-little, gave little. He that had much, gave much. A lamb or a kid was
-an offering acceptable. If any were too poor to furnish either, “a
-pair of turtle-doves or two young pigeons” might be brought. If this
-was too much, a few “tablespoonfuls of fine flour” was enough, and
-any neighbor would furnish them these. The money value of gifts might
-be brought, but the law was inexorable, “None shall appear before Me
-empty-handed”--none at these great feasts. At all other times they
-might be brought, at these they must.
-
-So while the people brought their offerings, “Jesus sat over against
-the treasury.” He noted carefully each person, and the ability of
-each one, as the long line of contributors moved forward toward the
-treasury. No one escaped His notice. The rich, from their mansions of
-luxury, rulers of the people, clad in costly robes, stately Pharisees,
-nobles, grand and lordly, jingling with ornaments of their social
-standing, swept over the tessellated floor to the treasury as if by
-special training for that particular occasion; and there, from soft
-white hands whose fingers were decked in gold, cast into the treasure
-chests such offering as their liberality prompted. Among the throng
-came a “certain poor widow.” No one knew who she was, or where she came
-from. Gliding so softly that no ear heard her footfall, and shying so
-timidly that no eyes but His saw her, until her hand was over the
-trumpet-shaped mouths through which the money was cast into the chests.
-She deliberately of her “penury cast in all her living that she had.”
-How much was that? Mark tells us her offering consisted of “two mites,
-which make a farthing.” They were the smallest copper coin, and the
-two were equivalent to two-fifths of a cent of our money. As these two
-mites slid down the narrow tube of the trumpet-shaped aperture into the
-chest below, they did not ring as did the gold and silver pieces of the
-rich, but they rang to the echo in our Lord’s ears.
-
-She was a “poor widow” before this contribution, but now she is an
-utter bankrupt. If she ever had any financial standing, this rash act
-of giving swept it all away. She would have to go without her supper,
-for there was no opportunity, at the Passover time, to earn money. On
-the contrary, it was a time for spending it. These great conventions
-absorbed the small earnings of poor people. But such sacrifices
-never go unrewarded, and that poor widow had her supper through some
-God-appointed channel.
-
-Jesus was so well pleased with her gift, and the faith which prompted
-it, that He called the attention of His disciples to this act of
-benevolence, and said, “This poor widow had cast in more than all
-they.” Not more money. Two mites can not be more than the “abundance”
-of the rich. How more, then? All gifts have double value--their
-commercial and their representative value. They represent the
-self-denial, the faith and the love of the giver. In the markets of the
-world the two mites would hardly have been looked at, but in the eyes
-of the King they represented more than all.
-
- “Ah! He knew of want and hunger,
- Grief and care, and sorrow too;
- And the widow’s paltry farthing
- Cost a sacrifice He knew.
- So all fruits of self-denial
- Are the gifts He loves the best;
- Not the richest or most costly
- Are the offerings most blest!”
-
-If ever there was an exception, or if ever one could be exempt, surely
-this widow would have been. She was in the weeds of widowhood; in the
-depths of poverty; in the extreme of want; with only “two mites” in the
-world and no bread for the morrow. Her own weary fingers her only means
-of living; with her earthly all in her hands she freely cast it into
-the treasury. Jesus was sitting where He saw it all. He who--
-
- “Searched and tried the hearts” of men,
- Saw what prompted every offering,
- With His wondrous, God-like ken.
-
-Did He stop her? He came to preach the gospel to the poor; did He tell
-her she was too poor to do as she had done? He brought all His apostles
-to witness the sight; did He say, “It shall not be so among you?” He
-was giving laws for His Kingdom for all generations; did He say, as He
-did in other cases where He intended any modification, “Ye have heard
-that it was said by them of olden times that ‘none should come before
-Me empty,’ but I say unto you, that whosoever is poor and needy shall
-bring no gift into mine house?” Did He say it, or anything like it? Can
-there ever be another occasion half so thrilling on which to say it?
-
-The contrast between the rich and noble, the grand and lordly, who
-offered tithes of all their stores, and this shy and shrinking woman,
-in her garb of widowhood, is very striking. There is not a word of
-reflection on the gifts or the motives of the rich. “The rich and the
-poor meet together--the Lord is the maker of them all.” “No respecter
-of persons” is He. All honor to the rich who bring their treasures
-into the storehouse of God. All honor to the poor who make “their deep
-poverty abound unto the riches of their liberality.” May we not from
-this lesson draw illustrations of consecration?
-
-God requires of every Christian a complete consecration of soul, body,
-time, talent, means, and everything else. Consecration means giving to
-God. When a thing is given away, ownership is transferred in the act of
-giving, or presenting from the giver to the receiver. In consecration
-the Christian gives himself literally to the Lord, and is henceforth
-not his own, but the Lord’s. This transaction must be as real as any in
-life, and divine ownership of all given to God must be recognized.
-
-If we wholly consecrate our souls, our bodies, our time, our several
-abilities, then God can use us. The Holy Spirit dwelling in the soul
-will dictate to the eyes where to look, and what to look upon, that
-the soul may be enriched by seeing. He will direct the feet in paths
-of safety and usefulness. He will teach the hands to labor skillfully,
-laying up treasures in heaven. He will give the lips messages of love,
-comfort and sympathy to speak. He will direct us how to use our time,
-that the best possible results may be achieved for both God and man,
-and also for heaven and earth. When such consecration is made, and we
-recognize fully God’s supreme ownership, then we are in a condition to
-“bear much fruit.”
-
-Few men would banish God from the universe. Too many worlds are
-wheeling in their orbits, and their orbits cross and recross each
-other too often to be left without a guiding hand. Moreover, the one
-we inhabit is the home of the earthquake and the volcano; hurricanes
-and tornadoes are born and bred on every continent and island; plague
-and pestilence ride on every breeze; death and destruction waste at
-noonday. In the presence of such dangers it is a comfort to know “the
-Lord reigneth.” But, alas! how many would banish God from their hearts!
-The clouds are the commissary trains of the nations; who would have
-them without their driver? Men want God on the throne, but not in their
-hearts. They would have Him watch the worlds, the clouds, the seasons,
-but not their actions. As if God was not a discerner of the very
-thoughts and intents of the heart.
-
-And then this poor widow loved much. And in God’s sight no offering
-of love is too small. Love is sometimes a babbling brook, leaping,
-laughing, sparkling, splashing. It is beautiful then. It is sometimes a
-mighty river--deep, broad, swift and strong, shouldering the burdens
-of a continent and bearing them without a murmur. It is glorious then.
-But it is sometimes the boundless ocean--feeding all the brooks and
-rivers, bearing the commerce of the world, and yet never losing one
-note in its everlasting lullaby. It rolls against all its shore lines
-and moans, “If there were no bounds, I’d bring your ships to all your
-doors.” Love is sublime then. The widow’s love was like the ocean; it
-rolled against its farthest shore and longed to go farther. “She of her
-penury” had cast into the treasury all that she had, and therefore had
-given “more than all they,” for, not what is given, but what is left,
-marks the grade of self-denial. There may be trust for bread when the
-storehouse is full, but the faith that empties the storehouse and then
-trusts for bread, is a purer and diviner faith. This poor widow was a
-heroine of faith.
-
-This apparently trifling event in the life of our Lord is of
-inestimable importance. It shows, after He had ended His oppressive
-day’s labor in the Temple, how he would still pause, in retiring from
-it, to bless the loving act of a poor widow, rendered unto the Lord
-in faith, and to adorn even so lowly a head with the crown of honor.
-We need no other proof for the celestially pure temper in which He
-left the inner courts of the Temple after He had pronounced His great
-denunciations against the hypocritical professions of Scribes and
-Pharisees. It is as if He could not so part, as if at least His last
-word must be a word of blessing and of peace.
-
-This incident of the poor widow with the two mites is also a new proof
-of the power of little things, and of the gracious favor with which
-the Lord looks upon the least offering which only bears the stamp of
-love and faith. The last object on which our Lord’s eyes rested as He
-departed from the Temple was the widow’s two mites.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-Womanhood During the Apostolic Ministry.
-
- TABITHA--GLORIFIED HER NEEDLE--THE RESULTS OF
- LITTLE ACTS--LYDIA--HER HUMILITY--PHILIP’S FOUR
- DAUGHTERS--PHŒBE--PRISCILLA--EUNICE--LOIS--EUDIA--SYNTYCHE--HULDA--
- THE HEBREW MAID--TAMAR--MOTHERS OF GREAT MEN--THE AUTHOR OF THE
- BIBLE WOMAN’S BEST FRIEND.
-
-
-We now come to the blessed ministry of women during the Apostolic age.
-And the first of these is Tabitha. Her residence was at Joppa. She was
-a “disciple,” and Luke renders her name, Tabitha, out of the Aramaic
-into the Greek as Dorcas. We further read that she was “full of good
-works,” among which that of making clothes for the poor is specifically
-mentioned. Tabitha had, without doubt, served Christ with her needle
-for many years, and exercised her faith by performing works of love.
-But there came a day when the fingers refused longer to ply the
-needle, and the heart grew faint, and in weariness she laid aside the
-unfinished garment, just to take a little rest, and when the neighbors
-and “widows” came in, they quickly saw the flushed cheek, and her
-critical condition aroused their anxious solicitude to relieve and care
-for and comfort her. The fear of losing her excited and agonized them.
-The apprehension of their great loss, in case she should be removed
-from them, almost drove the little church at Joppa to distraction.
-
-But, notwithstanding the tender ministry of loving hands and aching
-hearts, Tabitha daily grew worse, and finally yielded up her spirit.
-
- “The calm moon looked down while she was dying,
- The earth still held her way;
- Flowers breathed their perfume, and the wind kept sighing;
- Nought seemed to pause or stay.”
-
-Clasp the hands meekly over the still breast, they have no more work
-to do; close the weary eyes, they have no more tears to shed; part
-the damp tresses, they have no more pain to bear. Closed is the ear to
-love’s kind and gentle voice. No anxious care gathers on the marble
-brow as you gaze. No throb of pleasure pulsates from the dear, loving
-bosom, nor mantling flush mounts the blue-veined temple. Can this be
-death? Oh, if beyond death’s swelling flood there was no eternal shore!
-If for the struggling bark there were no port of peace! If athwart that
-lowering cloud sprang no bright bow of promise! Alas for love if this
-were all, and naught beyond the parting at earth’s portals.
-
-The remains of Tabitha were carefully laid in a retired upper chamber.
-And now there was hurry and bustle in preparation for the final rites.
-Friends were sent for, neighbors were present, the funeral arrangements
-were discussed, the mourning procured, the hospitalities of the house
-provided for. All was excitement--the loss was not then perceived in
-all its greatness. But after the preparations were all made, after the
-bustle had subsided, and the watchers had come for the night, then it
-was that the friends of Tabitha began to realize what had befallen
-them. Now the house seemed so still and sepulchral, though in the heart
-of the city, and though its threshold was still trodden by friendly
-feet, it seemed so empty. The apartments--how deserted! especially
-the room where she struggled and surrendered in the last conflict.
-There are the clothes, the garments and unfinished coat, there was the
-vacant chair and idle work-basket. During her sickness they had not
-so much noticed these things, for they were ever hopeful that these
-things might be used or occupied again. But now it can not be, and they
-perceive the dreadful vacancy everywhere.
-
-Oh, how dark and cheerless the shadows came down over that home! No
-moon or stars have ever shown so dimly--no darkness ever seemed so
-utterly dark. The ticking of the clock resounds like bell-strokes all
-over the house. Such deep silence! No footsteps now on the stairs, or
-in the sick-chamber; no nurse to come and say, “she is not so well,”
-and come and ask for you. No, indeed, only the silent watchers move
-about with muffled step, and “you may sleep on now and take your rest,”
-if you can. Ah, poor bereaved hearts! It will be long ere the sweet
-rest you once knew will visit your couch. Slumber will bring again the
-scenes through which you have just passed, and you will start from it
-but to find them all too real. God pity the mourners after the body of
-the loved one lies unburied “in an upper chamber.”
-
-All the members of the Christian congregation of Joppa appear to have
-been deeply moved by the loss which they had sustained, and to have
-entertained the wish in their hearts, although they did not venture to
-express it, that, if it were possible, Tabitha might be recalled to
-life, and yet, in sending for Peter, who at this time was at Lydda,
-ten miles away, they scarcely expected a miracle, and only desired
-that he would address words of consolation to them. Much is already
-gained, when they who abide in the house of mourning sincerely desire
-the consolations of God’s word spoken through human lips. It was only
-after her death that it became known what a treasure she had been to
-the church. It is one of the beautiful charms of the Christian life,
-that in nearly every congregation there is a Tabitha to be found who
-constitutes, as it were, the central point around which the love that
-exists in the society, collects. Every love is guided by her hand, and
-even when she utters no words, she successfully admonishes others.
-
-Such a woman could not well be spared out of the Joppa church, and so,
-with the sunrising, the little congregation despatched two men, who
-hastened over the plain of Sharon to Lydda, with a message to Peter,
-saying, “Delay not to come to us!” There was haste in the matter. The
-body of Tabitha, in accordance with Oriental usage, could not be long
-held “in the upper chamber.” Peter seemed to have recognized this, for
-he at once “arose and went with them.”
-
-As soon as the Apostle, who had made no delay, had arrived at Joppa,
-the elders of the congregation conducted him to the late home, and
-to the upper chamber in which the corpse lay. As Peter entered he
-saw the widows, on whom the deceased had conferred such benefits,
-standing around the bier of Tabitha, weeping, and “shewing the coats
-and garments which Dorcas made, while she was with them.” These acts of
-benevolence which survived their author, were indeed noble testimonials
-of the deceased woman’s love and charity.
-
-After these weeping widows had told out their sorrow and their
-gratitude, Peter directed them all to withdraw. Doubtless he made
-this request that he could more fully engage in prayer when alone. He
-may also have perceived that some were governed by an idle curiosity.
-At all events, he did not yet know whether it was the Lord’s will to
-restore the deceased woman to life. Hence he desired to be alone with
-the Lord, in order to make known to Him the requests of the disciples.
-
-After having poured out his soul in fervent prayer on his knees, Peter
-turned toward the body and called to Tabitha, saying, “Arise.” Luke
-gives us a graphic description of the scene: at first she opened her
-eyes, then, on seeing Peter, rose and sat up, and, at length, when
-Peter had given her his hand, stood up.
-
-The Lord having restored Tabitha to life through the prayers of Peter,
-the Apostle called to the saints and widows, and presented to them the
-woman, who had been raised up by the power of God.
-
-This great miracle, we are further told, produced an extraordinary
-effect in Joppa, and was the occasion of many conversions. “Many,” Luke
-says, “believed in the Lord.”
-
-Doubtless, Tabitha, when she realized what the Lord had done for her,
-for the remainder of her life, said:
-
- “I shall go softly,” since I’ve found
- The mighty arm that girds me round
- Is gentle, as it’s sure and strong;
- “I shall go softly” through the throng
- And with compulsion calm and sweet
- Lead sinners to the Saviour’s feet.
-
-Tabitha, in her good works and alms-deeds, and in her garments that she
-made, is not a fashion-plate, but a model for every Christian woman. We
-may learn, in her life, the glorification of little things. She was not
-rich, at least we are not told that she was, and yet how she glorified
-her needle, until a whole city is moved to bitter weeping at her death.
-Her needle brought her unsought fame. Little acts are the elements of
-all true greatness. They test our disinterestedness. The heart comes
-all out in them. It matters not so much what we have, as to what use we
-put that which we have. A man who had made an immense fortune out of a
-factory in which its builder had sunk $75,000 and failed, said, “I am
-always here to watch the little things, to pick up a bunch of cotton,
-to tighten a screw, to turn on a nut, to regulate a machine, to mend a
-band, to oil a dry place, and so prevent breakages and stopping of the
-work. These little wastes of material and machinery in time will eat up
-the profits of any business. These little things I attend to myself. I
-can hire men to attend the large things.”
-
-This is the secret of success in every department of business and
-walk of life. The principle is equally applicable to women’s work.
-Perhaps no class of people ought to look after little things more than
-the house-wife. Certainly every woman ought to know that careless
-extravagance, and the little wastes in many ways, destroy the profits.
-There are a thousand ways in which opportunities for good may be
-wasted. Never wait for the evil to increase. “A stitch in time saves
-nine,” saves a rent, and, under the well-trained eye of Tabitha, saved
-a garment. Heavy doors turn on small hinges. Fortunes turn on pivots.
-Look out for small things. They are the atoms, the trifles, that make
-up the large things. A stitch is a small thing, but led by the needle
-of Dorcas, the garments and coats multiplied.
-
-So of Christian usefulness. The needle in Tabitha’s hand was a very
-small instrument, but the deeds it wrought, clothed the widows and
-blessed a church. The two mites of the poor widow were a little
-sum, but measured by their motive, they were perhaps the largest
-contribution ever made to Christian charity. It is said that a tract,
-from the hands of a servant girl, led to the conversion of no less than
-Richard Baxter. He awoke to a world of usefulness. Among the library
-of books he wrote was the “Call to the Unconverted.” It fell into the
-hands of Philip Doddridge. It led him to Christ. Doddridge, too, awoke
-to a world of usefulness. His “Rise and Progress” was the means of the
-awakening of William Wilberforce. A book of his writing led to the
-salvation of Leigh Richmond. He wrote the “Dairyman’s Daughter,” that
-fell upon the world like a leaf from heaven--all the fruitage of a
-single tract from the hand of a maid.
-
-“What is that in thine hand?” the Almighty asked Moses while he kept
-Jethro’s flock in the back side of the desert, and Moses said, “A rod,”
-a shepherd’s staff, cut out of the thicket near by, with which he
-guided his sheep. Any day he might throw it away and cut a better one,
-but God said, “With this rod thou shalt save Israel.”
-
-What is that in thine hand, Sarah? Three measures of meal with which I
-prepare my dinner. Hasten, knead it, and make cakes upon the hearth,
-and angels shall sit at thy table to-day. What is that in thine hand,
-Rebekah? A pitcher with which I carry water. Use it in watering the
-thirsty camels of Eliezer, and thou shalt be an heir in the house of
-Abraham? What is that in thine hand, Miriam? Only a timbrel. Use it
-in leading the women of Israel in the song of triumph over Pharaoh’s
-hosts. What is that in thine hand, Rahab? Only a scarlet thread. Bind
-it in the window, and thou shalt save thyself and household. What is
-that in thine hand, poor widow? Only two mites. Give them to God,
-and behold, the fame of your riches fills the world. What hast thou,
-weeping woman? An alabaster box of ointment. Give it to God. Break it,
-and pour it on thy Saviour’s head, and its sweet perfume is a fragrance
-in the church till now. What is that in thine hand? A broom. Use it for
-God. A broom in the hand of a Christian woman may be as truly used for
-His glory, as was the sceptre of David. What is that in thine hand? A
-pen. Use it for God. Oh, matchless instrument! Write words of comfort
-and sympathy that shall echo around the globe. Oh, can you not find
-some poor soul to-day who does not know Jesus? Can you not tell some
-wanderer about the Christ? What is in thine hand? Wealth. Consecrate
-it now to God. What is in thy mouth? A tongue of eloquence. Use it for
-God. The tongue is the mightiest instrument that God ever made. What
-is in thine hand? A kindly grasp? Give that to some sad, desponding
-soul. We need grit and grace to use the common things in the ordinary
-way in the daily occupations of life. Consecrate the pen, the needle,
-the tongue, the hands, the feet, and the heart to Jesus. Our Lord gave
-dignity to labor; the sweat-beads of honest toil stood on His brow.
-
-This is God’s way of working. He chooses to use the least things--even
-things that amount to nothing--to accomplish His work in the salvation
-of the race. Use your leisure. Feed the hungry, clothe the naked, visit
-the sick, comfort the wretched, spread the gospel far and wide. If you
-have nothing else, use your needle, and the garments will multiply,
-and the destitutes will be clothed. A poor girl who had nothing but
-a sewing machine, used it to aid a feeble church; all her earnings
-above her needs were given towards building a house of worship, and
-in a year she paid more than a hundred others richer than she. So you
-can do if you will. If you but knew it, you have Tabitha’s needle in
-your hand--the simple instrumentality with which to do good. When
-the pierced hand of our Lord is laid on consecrated needles, on the
-ordinary means within our reach, on wealth, on learning, on beauty, on
-culture, on every gift and grace in every relation in life, then the
-splendor of the millennial dawn will color the eastern sky with its
-crimson and gold.
-
-From the beautiful home of Tabitha, in Joppa, the Sacred history runs
-on until Lydia, in the city of Philippi, is reached.
-
-While at Troas, Paul had a remarkable vision in the night, of a
-man of Macedonia, standing before him and praying, “Come over into
-Macedonia, and help us.” How Paul knew this man to be a Macedonian is
-not stated. Perhaps he may have frequently seen Macedonian seamen in
-Tarsus, his birthplace, which was a flourishing commercial city on the
-Mediterranean, or he may have recognized him by his speech or national
-dress. This man entreated him, in the vision, to cross over the sea
-from Asia into Europe, and come to the aid of the inhabitants of
-Macedonia. Paul had never been in Europe, and had no thought of going
-there. On the other hand, he had been delivering the decrees issued by
-the church council at Jerusalem, through the maritime cities of Asia
-Minor, and “assayed to go into Bithynia,” but was restrained by the
-Spirit of God. Being thus convinced, he embarked at Troas, taking with
-him as fellow-laborers, Silas, Timothy, and Luke.
-
-After a rapid and successful voyage over the peaceful waters of the
-Ægean Sea, in a direct course to the north-west, they reached the
-island of Samothrace. The next day they proceeded to Neapolis, situated
-on the Strymonic Gulf, and a seaport of Thrace. From this point they
-continued their journey, probably, on foot. Following the ancient
-well-paved road up the steep Symbolum hills, until they reached the
-solitary pass through the mountains, at an elevation of 1,600 feet
-above the sea. Once through this lonely pass and a magnificent view
-is obtained of the plain in which Philippi is located, and of the
-Pangæus and Hæmus ranges, which close in the plain to the south-west
-and north-east. At one point on the summit of Symbolum one can look
-down into Neapolis on the sea, and into Philippi in the plain. From
-this point the Apostles descended to the plain below by a yet steeper
-road than the ascent out of Neapolis. At length, at the end of a twelve
-miles’ jaunt on foot, finds them in “the chief city of that part of
-Macedonia,” and they were quite prepared for a good meal and a night’s
-rest.
-
-The next morning, being the Sabbath day, the Apostles began to look
-about the city for a synagogue. But there was no synagogue in Philippi,
-only one of those light, temporary structures, called proseuchæ, which
-was merely an enclosure without a roof, and was located on the banks
-of the swiftly-rushing Anghista (not the Strymon, as some writers have
-it), and so the Apostles hastened “out of the city” to the “river
-side,” to the proseuchæ, “where prayer was wont to be made.”
-
-[Illustration: THE CITY BY THE ANGHISTA.]
-
-This place without the city wall was not a solitary locality, secluded
-and retired from the endless confusion of city streets, but, on the
-contrary, it was a market place, especially set apart for the mountain
-clans of the Pangæus and Hæmus ranges, who came down with their pack
-animals to trade. No doubt this stream had its fountains high up among
-the Hæmus hills, and with great force came rushing down the mountain,
-and spreading out in the plain, gave a plentiful supply to man and
-beast. It flowed down through the market place; it was within reach of
-every child’s pitcher; it was enough for every empty vessel. The small
-birds came down thither to drink; the sheep and lambs had trodden down
-a little path to its brink. The thirsty beasts of burden, along the
-dusty road, knew the way to the stream, with its soft, sweet murmur of
-fullness and freedom. The clear, sparkling river must have reminded the
-Apostles of the waters of life and salvation, which they were bringing
-to these Philippians. This stream sometimes may cease to flow, and
-every other may be dry in the days of drought and adversity, but the
-heavenly stream whose spring was in Jesus Christ, they well knew, would
-never cease to flow. And they also well knew that whosoever drank from
-the river issuing from under the threshold of divine grace, should
-never thirst.
-
-Amid these surroundings, Paul and his companions sat down in the
-proseuchæ, “and spake unto the women” who had already assembled in
-the place of prayer. It would seem that there were no Hebrew men in
-Philippi, and possibly, for the reason this city was a military, and
-not a mercantile centre. Even the women may have been few in number, so
-that the speaker could not deliver a formal address, but only engage in
-familiar conversation, which could be easier done in a sitting posture,
-and in a comparatively free and conversational intercourse, thus
-assuming at once the attitude of teachers.
-
-The gracious words which fell from the lips of Paul in this first
-attempt to introduce the gospel into Macedonia, are not reported by
-Luke, but he tells us that the Lord opened the heart of a woman named
-Lydia. There is something very beautiful in this incident, that God
-should honor woman with being the first convert in Europe! It was a
-man who stood before Paul in his vision, praying, “Come over into
-Macedonia and help us,” but it is a woman who is first willing to be
-helped. There was, that Sabbath morning, in the proseuchæ, by the
-rippling waters of the Anghista, one solitary woman who was in a
-special degree, open to the influence of the truth, and who listened
-with earnest attention to all that Paul said.
-
-Luke tells us that Lydia was a dealer in purple, and a citizen of
-Thyatira, Asia Minor, and, as Thyatira was a Macedonian colony, we
-may the more readily understand that circumstances connected with
-her trade brought her at this time to Philippi, and was probably
-only a temporary resident. Thyatira was celebrated, at a very early
-period, for its purple dyes and purple fabrics. The purple color, so
-extravagantly valued by the ancients, and even by the Orientals at the
-present day, included many shades or tints, from rose-red to sea-green
-or blue. Philippi being the military centre of Macedonia, the military
-trappings, with all their tinsel and show, made a brisk market for the
-purple cloth of Lydia, and, no doubt, she was a woman who prospered in
-her business, and was in good circumstances, and, possibly, possessed
-of considerable wealth, as she generously offered her home and
-hospitality to Paul and his companions.
-
-But now see how the words and acts of this noble woman demonstrates the
-genuineness of her faith. She at once, with her household, presents
-herself for baptism. While it is quite probable that the baptism was
-not performed on the spot, it took place, no doubt, at the first
-opportunity. Having become a member of the household of faith, she
-addresses the Apostles saying, “If ye have judged me to be faithful,”
-that is, judged that I am one that believeth in the Lord, “come into my
-house, and abide there.” What gentleness in her language, “If ye have
-judged me faithful,” humbly submitting to the experienced judgment of
-her religious benefactors, yet urgently inviting the Apostle and all
-his companions to enter her house, and remain there as her guests. This
-proffered hospitality furnished direct evidence of her love to her
-Redeemer, which proceeded from faith, and which manifested itself by
-disinterested and kind attentions to His messengers. She supported her
-plea by appealing to the judgment which they had themselves pronounced
-in her case, and without which they would unquestionably have declined
-to baptize her.
-
-That these messengers of the gospel acceded to the request of Lydia,
-and entered her house as guests, may be confidently assumed. We also
-see with what beautiful fidelity she remained true to Paul and Silas
-when they were persecuted.
-
-It is also interesting to notice that through Lydia, indirectly, the
-gospel may have been introduced into that very section (Bithynia),
-where Paul had been forbidden directly to preach it. Whether she was
-one of “those women” who labored with Paul in the gospel at Philippi,
-as mentioned afterwards in the Epistle to that place (Phil. iv, 3)
-it is impossible to say, but from what we know of her history, it
-would be just like her, for, surely such a royal entertainer in true
-hospitality, would make a heroic laborer in any gospel field.
-
-We may learn from Lydia’s life that the human heart is closed and
-barred by sin, so that divine truth can not enter to enlighten the
-mind, direct the will, or renew the spiritual life forces until divine
-grace, through operations of the Holy Spirit, opens the heart. When
-the Lord opens the heart, conversion is possible, but it is actually
-effected only when the heart, like the prepared field, with willingness
-receives the seed of divine truth. God calls, and if but few are
-chosen, it is simply because men choose not to obey the call. The
-Lord opens only the hearts of those for His spiritual kingdom who are
-willing to and do accept His conditions.
-
-In the conversion of Lydia we see the Kingdom of Christ in its
-incipient state strikingly illustrated. In the parable of the grain of
-mustard-seed, Jesus told his disciples that the gospel in its beginning
-would be just like that smallest of seeds, but would grow and spread,
-and finally succeed. Lydia is only one convert, a lone woman in a
-great military camp of a heathen city, and women, socially, in those
-days, did not count for much. Humanly speaking, this first European
-convert appeared about as insignificant as a grain of mustard-seed. And
-yet this apparently insignificant seed produced a rich and precious
-harvest in the flourishing congregation of Philippi, in the spread of
-the gospel over all Europe, and it will soon cover the whole world.
-
-From Lydia’s candid reception of the gospel, her urgent hospitality,
-her unfaltering and continued friendship to the Apostles, her modest
-bearing in being accounted worthy of the confidence of her benefactors,
-we are led to form a high estimate of her character. Though possessed
-of considerable wealth, and, possibly, of social rank, she had
-the grace of humility. Her deep humility in the presence of God’s
-messengers was a clear and sufficient proof of her humility before God,
-and that it was real; that humility, if not already a resident in her
-heart, had, with the incoming of divine grace, taken up its abode in
-her, and become her very nature; that she actually, like Christ, made
-herself of no reputation, especially when persecution came to Paul and
-Silas.
-
-When, in the presence of God, lowliness of heart has become, not a
-posture we assume for a time, but the very spirit of our life, it will
-manifest itself, as it did in Lydia, in all our bearing towards others.
-The lesson is one of deep import. The only humility really ours is not
-that which we assume in our devotions to God, but that which we carry
-with us in our ordinary conduct. The insignificances of the daily
-life are the importances of eternity, because they prove what spirit
-really possesses us. It is in our most unguarded moments we really show
-what we are. To know the humble woman, to know how the humble woman
-behaves, you must accept her hospitality as the Apostles accepted the
-hospitality of Lydia, and follow her to her home, and into the common
-course of daily life.
-
-Humility before God is nothing if not proved in humility before men.
-It was when the disciples disputed who should be greatest that Jesus
-taught the lesson of humility by washing their feet. And this heavenly
-grace runs all through the epistles of Paul, the spiritual father of
-Lydia. To the Romans he writes, “In honor preferring one another.”
-“Set not your mind on high things, but condescend to those that are
-lowly.” “Be not wise in your own conceit.” To the Corinthians he said,
-“Love vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up, seeketh not her own, is
-not provoked.” These are all the gracious fruits of humility, for
-there is no love without humility at its roots. To the Galatians the
-Apostle writes, “Through love be servants one of another. Let us not be
-desirous of vain glory, provoking one another, envying one another.”
-To the Ephesians, immediately after the three wonderful chapters on
-the heavenly life, he writes, “Therefore, walk with all lowliness
-and meekness, with long-suffering, forbearing one another in love;”
-“Giving thanks always, subjecting yourselves one to another in the
-fear of Christ.” To the Philippians, “Doing nothing through faction
-or vain glory, but in lowliness of mind, each counting others better
-than himself. Have the mind in you which was also in Christ Jesus, who
-emptied Himself, taking the form of a servant, and humbled Himself.”
-And to the Colossians, “Put on a heart of compassion, kindness,
-humility, meekness, long-suffering, forbearing one another, and
-forgiving each other, even as the Lord forgave you.”
-
-It is in our relation to one another, that the true lowliness of mind
-and the heart of humility are to be seen. Our humility before God has
-no value but as it prepares us to reveal the humility of Jesus to our
-fellow-men. Let us cultivate this beautiful gem of divine grace, which
-was developed in such a marked degree in the life of Lydia, the first
-European Christian.
-
-But we hasten on in our narrative, and gather up in a group, as one
-would gather a handful of flowers, those Women in White Raiment so
-briefly mentioned in the Sacred records as not to give us enough of
-their history to write upon.
-
-Among these are the unnamed four daughters of Philip the evangelist,
-who lived at Cæsarea. These daughters ranked high in the early church.
-They possessed the gift of prophetic utterance, and who apparently
-gave themselves to the work of teaching. Though no record is left us
-of their work, we may well believe their distinguished accomplishments
-brought them into contact with many people of that busy seaport city on
-the Mediterranean, where people of all nations came and went.
-
-Phœbe of Cenchrea, one of the ports of Corinth. She must have been a
-woman of influence, and worthy of confidence and respect. She is not
-only commended by Paul, but was also a deaconess in the church at
-Cenchrea. On her was conferred the honor of carrying the letter of Paul
-from Corinth to Rome. Whatever her errand to Rome may have been, the
-independent manner of her going there seems to imply (especially when
-we consider the secluded habits of Greek women) that she was a woman of
-mature age, and was acting in an official capacity. She was not only a
-woman of great energy, but possessed of wealth. She evidently was of
-great service to Paul, and he had confidence in her integrity, for he
-writes in the very letter of which she was the bearer to the Romans,
-“I commend you unto Phœbe our sister, which is a servant of the church
-which is at Cenchrea.”
-
-Priscilla, the wife of Aquila, who had fled from Rome, in consequence
-of an order of Claudius commanding all Jews to leave Rome. She, with
-her husband, came to Corinth. In the days of the Apostle, Corinth was
-a place of great mental activity, as well as of commercial enterprise.
-Its wealth and magnificence were so celebrated as to be proverbial;
-so were the vices and profligacy of its inhabitants. But it was just
-the kind of city Paul delighted in carrying the gospel to. Where vice
-abounded he would have grace much more abound. Here Priscilla became
-acquainted with Paul, and they abode together, and wrought at their
-common trade of making the Cilician tent. This woman, while taking
-stitches in the haircloth out of which the tents were made, could also
-conduct a theological school with no less apt a student than that of
-Apollos, already noted for his eloquence, and who was “mighty in the
-Scriptures.” But Priscilla, as she heard this eloquent young man, at
-once discovered there was something wanting in his ministry. It seemed
-to her that Apollos knew only the baptism of John. She knew of a more
-excellent way, and so while she was setting stitches, she “expounded
-unto him the way of God more perfectly.” O, for more Priscillas, versed
-in heavenly lore and skilled to impart it! Priscilla is certainly a
-noble example of what a woman in the ordinary walks of life may do for
-the church.
-
-[Illustration: CORINTH, THE GATE OF THE PELOPONNESUS.]
-
-Eunice, the mother, and Lois, the grandmother of Timothy, are beautiful
-examples of women in the home. These women had such unfeigned faith
-in the gospel, and so ably instructed Timothy in the Scriptures,
-that this home scene made a deep and lasting impression upon Paul,
-and later on, in one of his epistles to Timothy, he writes, “When I
-call to remembrance the unfeigned faith that is in thee, which dwelt
-first in thy grandmother Lois, and thy mother Eunice, ... I put thee
-in remembrance (of this excellent home-training, and by reason of its
-superior advantage) that thou stir up the gift of God, which is in
-thee.”
-
-Euodias (or rather Eudia) and Syntyche, deaconesses in the church at
-Philippi. These women afforded Paul active co-operation under difficult
-circumstance, and in them, as well as other women of the same class,
-is an illustration of what the gospel, in the Apostolic times, did for
-women, and also what the women did for the gospel, for the Apostle
-expressly states that these women labored with him in the gospel,
-besides many other elect women, the detailed mention of whom fills
-nearly all of the last chapter of the epistle to the Romans, whose
-history, if known, would doubtless be as interesting as the history of
-those whose names and acts have been preserved to us for our study and
-comfort.
-
-And then there are a host of women whose names are not mentioned,
-but who, we have every reason to believe, were numbered with the
-Princesses of God, women whose faith and patience in labor clothed them
-in White Raiment. Of such we note a few: Noah’s wife and her three
-daughters-in-law, who must have exercised the same faith as their
-husbands, and who must have been in full sympathy with their labors;
-the host of Israelitish women led by Miriam in their song of triumph
-over the Lord’s deliverance from Pharaoh’s army; the wife of Manoah,
-the mother of Samson, who was twice visited by the angel of the Lord;
-Hulda, the prophetess, who lived in the time of King Josiah, to whom
-Hilkiah, the high priest, had recourse, when the book of the law was
-found, to procure an authoritative opinion, for, doubtless, in her
-time she was the most distinguished person for prophetic gifts in
-Jerusalem; the captive Hebrew maid in the house of Naaman, the Syrian
-general, who knew all about the prophet in Samaria, and had faith to
-believe that Elisha would heal him of his leprosy, even though captive
-as she was, and in a strange land; in the days of Saul and David, when
-returning from the conquests, “the women” who “came out of all the
-cities of Israel” to welcome, with tabrets and song, the deliverers of
-God’s people.
-
-Perhaps we should not fail to briefly mention Tamar, the daughter of
-David, for she was not only a chaste virgin, but was also remarkable
-for her extraordinary beauty. Her high sense of honor must ever stand
-as a memorial of her virtue, especially when we take into account the
-low standard of morality which prevailed in her time.
-
-Added to her beauty, she had domestic accomplishments. It would almost
-seem that Tamar was supposed, at least by her perfidious brother Amnon,
-to have a peculiar art in baking palatable cakes.
-
-With no suspicion of any wicked design, this beautiful princess, at
-her father’s request, goes to the house of her supposed sick brother
-to prepare the food she was assured he would relish. So she took the
-dough and kneaded it, and then in his presence (for this was a part of
-his fancy, as though there was something exquisite in the manner of
-performing the work), kneaded it a second time into the form of cakes.
-
-After the cakes were baked, she took them, fresh and crisp, to Amnon
-to eat. When she fully realized his wicked designs, she touchingly
-remonstrated, and held up to him the infamy of such a crime “in
-Israel,” and appealed to his sense of honor, saying, “As for thee, thou
-shalt be as one of the fools in Israel.” Her indignation after his
-unnatural designs were accomplished, and she had been thrust out, was
-even more heroic than her protests. In her agony she snatched a handful
-of ashes and threw them on her beautiful hair, then tore her royal
-gown, and, clasping her hands upon her head, rushed to and fro through
-the streets crying.
-
-While this is one of the most pathetically sad scenes recorded in Bible
-history, yet it brings out in a remarkable manner, the virtue and high
-honor of womanhood in those rude ages of the world.
-
-But over against this dark background of Amnon’s conduct the careful
-home-training of Timothy, under the moulding influence of his mother
-Eunice, and his grandmother Lois, shines with a brightness that
-reflects great credit. And if such careful home-training was so
-far-reaching in its results as to cause Paul, in later years, to remind
-Timothy of this training as an inspiration to stir up the gift of God
-in him, what shall be said of motherhood and wifehood of the many noble
-characters found in the Sacred record? It is a fact that women have
-great influence in shaping the lives of men. Who can tell how greatly
-womanhood influenced the lives of such men as Enoch, who walked with
-God; Noah, whose faith led him to the building of the ark; Abraham,
-whose wonderful life of trust has made him the father of the faithful
-in all generations of men; Melchizedek, king of Salem and priest of
-the most high God; Job, whom adversity could not shake, and who, in
-the midst of his calamities, exclaimed, “Though He slay me, yet will
-I trust in Him;” Caleb and Joshua, whose confidence in God’s ability
-to lead the host of Israel into the promised land, was unwavering
-under most trying circumstances; Elijah and Elisha, who stood as the
-defences of God’s people amid idolatrous times; the good King Hezekiah,
-and his ever faithful counselor, Isaiah, who went up into the Temple
-and spread out the insulting letter of Sennacherib, and “prayed and
-cried to heaven;” Daniel and his companions, who walked through the
-fire and the den of lions, and thus proved their fidelity to truth
-and righteousness; Nehemiah, who, by moonlight, viewed the ruins of
-the city of his fathers, and then, with wonderful courage, repaired
-its broken-down walls and set up its gates that had been burned with
-fire; and the great host of women mentioned by Paul, who, through
-faith, “received their dead raised to life again,” and others who “were
-tortured, not accepting deliverance, that they might obtain a better
-resurrection.” Surely such mothers and wives would raise up heroic
-men. The Spartan mother told her son, when he started for the war, “to
-return with his shield, or upon it.” But the Hebrew women led armies,
-subdued kingdoms, and turned to flight the armies of the aliens.
-
-Such is the womanhood of the Bible, and while with her companion,
-man, she inherited the infirmities brought upon the race in the
-transgression, yet she is infinitely in advance of the women living
-in lands where the Bible is unknown. Indeed, the condition of Hebrew
-women has always presented a marked contrast with heathen women, and
-for the reason, while the Bible seeks to elevate them, heathendom has
-sought to degrade them. Heathen oppression of womanhood rests upon the
-nations where the Bible is not known, like the mountain upon Typho’s
-heart. Buddhism presents no personal god. He is “eyeless, handless,
-never sad and never glad.” For sinning man there is no pity, for of
-all his hundreds of names there is no “Father.” Confucianism, with its
-backward gaze, teaches no sin, no Saviour, and only China for heaven.
-Mohammedanism has its creeds, prayers, alms, fastings and pilgrimages.
-But its creeds were partly written on human bones, its pilgrimages
-are corrupt and its formal prayers are to “Allah,” who bears little
-resemblance to the Christian’s God. Not censure, but pity, hovers over
-these classic religions and the millions who are under the pall of
-paganism.
-
- Hark! From far distances voices are calling;
- Hushed be earth’s clamor, be silent and hear;
- Thrilling the heart with sad cadences falling,
- Comes the appeals in their syllables clear,
- Knowing no song but the breath of a sigh,
- Send o’er the ocean their heart-breaking cry.
-
- Lips that are muffled yet utter their story,
- O the sad plea of their multiplied wrongs;
- Grim superstition grown ancient and hoary,
- Shuts in dim prisons these languishing throngs,
- Heathen womanhood, with piteous pleading,
- Call to us blindly, their woes interceding.
-
-The non-Christian religions offer no light in life and no hope in
-death. The bitter cry of the Hindoo widow’s prayer is, “O God, let no
-more women be born in this land.” The horrors of heathenism are unknown
-in Christian lands. What makes the difference? We have clearly shown
-in these pages that it is the teaching of the Bible, and this one fact
-alone stamps the book as divine. It has God for its Author, and, from
-Genesis to Revelation, it blesses and elevates women.
-
-Why does paganism oppress womanhood? Because these monstrous systems
-are dominated by Satan, and knowing as he must, that woman stands at
-the fountain of the race, he poisons and corrupts the very sources of
-life. For the truth of this one needs only to compare Christian with
-heathen lands. Compare America with its happy Christian homes, with
-India in whose cloistered zenanas are millions of widows, many of them
-under ten years of age, and doomed to a living death--must sleep on
-the ground, feed on herbs, and practice rigid mortification. Before
-Christianity entered that land, the horrors of the suttee (the burning
-alive of the widow with her dead husband), the sacrificing of infants
-to the River Ganges, the slaying of young men and women in Hindu
-temples to appease Kali, the god of the soil, the “Car of Juggernaut,”
-rolling over hundreds of beings annually, and crushing them to death,
-the burning alive of lepers, the hastening of the death of a parent
-by the children in carrying the former to the River Ganges and there,
-on the banks, filling the afflicted one’s mouth with sand and water
-are left to die, the public exhibition of voluntary starvation on the
-part of Hindu devotees,--all these terrible practices, once so popular
-in India, have passed away since the missionary has planted his foot
-upon the soil. To-day none of these things can be found, and India’s
-voice, as well as the voice of all Christendom, can go up to God in
-praise that these things no longer exist there. And what has taken
-place in India, is also fast taking place in China and Africa. Surely,
-the Christian woman needs to press her Bible to her heart, and love
-it as she loves her God, for, were it not for this blessed book, her
-condition would be no better than is the condition of woman in the
-lands where Buddhism, Confucianism and Mohammedanism have crushed out
-of her all that is worth having, and even denies that she has a soul.
-It must be seen that such systems are incapable of elevating womanhood.
-
-The thought uppermost in our mind, when we set out to write these pages
-was, to show that God created man and woman as equals, that Christ came
-to save our whole humanity, and that Christianity is the true friend
-of woman. How beautiful is all this in contrast with the cruelties of
-heathenism. See how patiently Jesus talks with a lone woman by Jacob’s
-well, how tenderly he speaks to the woman who sobbed out her sorrow
-for her sins at His feet, how compassionately He says to the woman for
-whose blood her accusers had clamored, after He had silenced them,
-“Go, and sin no more.” And, to the credit of head and heart, be it
-said, woman has appreciated her Saviour, and in many ways shown her
-gratitude. Perhaps there is no more beautiful and touching incident
-in the life of our Lord than that recorded by Luke, where women
-“ministered unto Him of their substance.”
-
-Finally, if any have been helped to a better understanding and
-appreciation of the Bible by the perusal of these pages, and have been
-lifted nearer to the heart of God, we shall feel that our labors have
-not been in vain.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
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-Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
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-Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
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-Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
-
-Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.
-
-The cover image for this eBook was created by the transcriber and is
-entered into the public domain.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Women in white raiment, by John Lemley</p>
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Women in white raiment</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: John Lemley</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 1, 2022 [eBook #69085]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Juliet Sutherland, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WOMEN IN WHITE RAIMENT ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter hide"><img src="images/coversmall.jpg" width="450" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<h1><span class="smcap">Women in White Raiment</span>,</h1>
-
-<p>BY</p>
-
-<p><span class="xxlarge">JOHN LEMLEY,</span></p>
-
-<p>EDITOR OF</p>
-
-<p><span class="large">THE ZION’S WATCHMAN,</span></p>
-
-<p>AND AUTHOR OF</p>
-
-<p><span class="large">“<span class="smcap">The Christ Lifted Up</span>,” “<span class="smcap">Land of Sacred Story</span>,”<br />
-“<span class="smcap">Wonders of Grace</span>,” “<span class="smcap">Personal<br />
-Recollections</span>,” <span class="smcap">Etc.</span></span></p>
-
-<p>“They shall walk with me in white; for they shall be worthy, ... and
-shall be clothed in white raiment.”—<span class="smcap">Rev.</span> iii: 4, 5.</p>
-
-<p><span class="large">THE FIRST EDITION.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="large"><span class="smcap">Albany, New York</span>,<br />
-1899.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">
-Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1898, by<br />
-<br />
-JOHN LEMLEY,<br />
-<br />
-in the office of the Librarian at Washington.<br />
-<br />
-<span class="smcap">All Rights Reserved.</span><br />
-<br />
-<br />
-CHARLES VAN BENTHUYSEN &amp; SONS,<br />
-Printers, Electrotypers and Binders,<br />
-ALBANY, N. Y.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">INTRODUCTORY.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Women Owe their Elevation to the Bible—The Condition of<br />
-Women in Heathen Lands Contrasted with the Condition of<br />
-Women in Bible Lands—God’s Thought of Woman in the<br />
-Creation—Her Rights Under the Hebrew Economy—Christ’s<br />
-Tenderness Towards Womanhood—Blessing Others.</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_7"> 7</a>-<a href="#Page_19">19</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER I.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">The Paradise Home in Eden.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Man’s First Home a Garden—Eve the Isha—The Scene of the<br />
-Temptation—Hiding from God—Refusing to Confess, Judgment<br />
-is Pronounced—The Sad Results of Sin—Eve Believed<br />
-the Promise.</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_21"> 21</a>-<a href="#Page_35">35</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER II.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">Womanhood in the Patriarchal Age.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Sarah the Beautiful Princess—Her Faith Tested—The Mistake<br />
-of Her Life—Her Lovely Character—Rebekah—An Oriental<br />
-Wooing—Eliezer’s Prayer—The Bride’s Answer—Meeting<br />
-Isaac—A Mother’s Love for Her Son—Jacob’s<br />
-Flight—Rebekah, the Beautiful Shepherdess—Seven Years’<br />
-Service for Her—Laban’s Deception—Leah, the Tender-Eyed—Human<br />
-Favorites—Divinely Honored—Rachel’s Tomb<br />
-the First Monument to Human Love.</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_36"> 36</a>-<a href="#Page_70">70</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER III.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">Womanhood During the Egyptian Bondage and in<br />
-the Desert of Sinai.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Jochebed—Her Remarkable Courage—Thonoris—Her Compassion—Heroic<br />
-Labors Seemingly Unrewarded—Zipporah, the<br />
-Midianite Shepherdess—Glorifying Daily Labor—At a Wayside<br />
-Inn—Miriam—Her Song of Triumph at the Red Sea—Her<br />
-Affliction at Hazeroth—An Eventful Life.</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_71"> 71</a>-<a href="#Page_89">89</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER IV.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">Womanhood During the Conquest and the Theocracy,<br />
-or Rule of the Judges.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Rahab—Great Grace for Great Sinners—The Fall of Jericho—The<br />
-Covenant Remembered—Deborah—Her Remarkable<br />
-Courage—Sisera’s Iron Chariots Broken—The Daughter of<br />
-Jephthah—Her Loving Devotion and Sacrifice—The Story<br />
-of Naomi—Orpah’s Kiss—The Loving Ruth—Gleaning<br />
-Among the Reapers—Her Rich Reward—Hannah—Her<br />
-Consecration—Yearly Visits to Shiloh—Stitching Beautiful<br />
-Thoughts into Samuel’s Coat—Her Beautiful Life.</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_90"> 90</a>-<a href="#Page_117">117</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER V.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">Womanhood During the Reign of the Kings.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Abigail—Churlish Nabal—Chivalrous Appreciation—David’s<br />
-Messengers—Saul’s Daughters—His Treachery—Michal’s<br />
-Stratagem—Rizpah—Her Heroic Endurance and Loving<br />
-Fidelity—The Queen of Sheba—Her Visit to Jerusalem—The<br />
-Glory and Wisdom of Solomon—The Half Not Told—The<br />
-Queen’s Royal Gifts.</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_118"> 118</a>-<a href="#Page_137">137</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER VI.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">Womanhood in the Time of the Prophets and During<br />
-the Captivity.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Wicked Jezebel—The Widow of Sarepta—The Tishbite at<br />
-the City Gate—His Strange Request—The Widow’s Unfaltering<br />
-Obedience—An Appeal to Elisha—A Pot of Oil—The<br />
-Widow’s Wonderful Faith—The Rich Woman of Shunem—Her<br />
-Modest Life—Barley Harvest—A Ride to Carmel in<br />
-the Glare of the Sun—Esther—Her Beautiful Traits of<br />
-Character—Crowned as Queen—Pleading for the Life of<br />
-Her People—Found Favor with the King.</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_138"> 138</a>-<a href="#Page_161">161</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER VII.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">Womanhood in the Time of the Saviour’s Nativity.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">An Angel by the Altar of Incense—His Message—An Israelitish<br />
-Home—In the Spirit of Elijah—The Desert Teacher—The<br />
-Annunciation—The Visit of Mary to Elizabeth—Mary’s<br /><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-Magnificat—Journey to Bethlehem—The Nativity—Home<br />
-Life in Nazareth—After Scenes in Mary’s Life—Her<br />
-Residence and Death at Ephesus—The Prophetess<br />
-Anna—Her Waiting for Redemption in Jerusalem—The<br />
-Lesson of Her Pure and Beautiful Life.</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_162"> 162</a>-<a href="#Page_189">189</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER VIII.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">Womanhood During our Lord’s Galilean Ministry.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Christ and Womanhood—Noontide at Jacob’s Well—The Lord’s<br />
-Wonderful Tact—Fields White to the Harvest—An Uninvited<br />
-Guest at Simon’s Feast—Cold Hospitality—A Concise<br />
-Parable—Forgiving Sin—A Street Scene—Humble Confession—Most<br />
-Gracious Words—Coast of Tyre and Sidon—Syro-Phœnician<br />
-Woman—Strangely Tested—Her Humility—Went<br />
-Away Blessed.</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_190"> 190</a>-<a href="#Page_222">222</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER IX.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">Womanhood During Our Lord’s Judean Ministry.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Sisters of Bethany—Their Characteristics—Not Good, But<br />
-Best Gifts—The Extravagance of Love—Salome’s Strange<br />
-Request—Her Fidelity—Joanna—The Poor Widow’s Gift—How<br />
-Estimated—The Saviour’s Words of Peace.</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_223"> 223</a>-<a href="#Page_244">244</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER X.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdc" colspan="2">Womanhood During the Apostolic Ministry.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Tabitha—Glorified Her Needle—The Results of Little Acts—Lydia—Her<br />
-Humility—Philip’s Four Daughters—Phœbe—Priscilla—Eunice—Lois—<br />
-Eudia—Syntyche—Hulda—The Hebrew Maid—Tamar—Mothers of<br />
-Great Men—The Author of the Bible Woman’s Best Friend.</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_245"> 245</a>-<a href="#Page_266">266</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">ILLUSTRATIONS.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table>
-<tr><td class="tdr" colspan="2"><span class="small">PAGE.</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Accepted Offering</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_31"> 31</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Jacob’s Struggle at the Jabbok</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_67"> 67</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Israelites in Bondage</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_73"> 73</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Moses Rescued from the Nile</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_75"> 75</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Miriam’s Song of Triumph</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_84"> 84</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Fall of Jericho</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_95"> 95</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Ruth, the Faithful Friend</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_108"> 108</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Beautiful Abigail Meeting David</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_121"> 121</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Solomon’s Merchant Ships</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_130"> 130</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Queen of Sheba</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_133"> 133</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Hadassah in the Persian Court</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_153"> 153</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Esther Pleading for Her People</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_157"> 157</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Angel’s Message</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_164"> 164</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Ministry at Ephesus</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_181"> 181</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Anna, the Prophetess</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_185"> 185</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Christ and Womanhood</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_193"> 193</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Noontide Hour at Jacob’s Well</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_198"> 198</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The Uninvited Guest</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_208"> 208</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Seeking the Living Among the Dead</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_237"> 237</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">The City by the Anghista</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_253"> 253</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td><span class="smcap">Corinth, the Gate of the Peloponnesus</span> &#160; &#160; </td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_260"> 260</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">INTRODUCTORY.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> has long been in our mind to write this book, in which
-we seek to set forth the beautiful lives of representative
-women of the Bible. There has been much written about
-prophets, kings and priests, about our Lord and His Apostles,
-about scenes, of different types of character, customs
-and manners of Oriental life, but so far as we know, nothing
-has been written about the womanhood of the Bible. We
-believe a study of these lovely Princesses of God will be
-both profitable and instructive.</p>
-
-<p>That we may have a suitable background for our pen
-pictures of these Daughters in Israel, and also, by way of
-contrast, show what the Bible has done for womanhood, let
-us briefly take a glance into countries where the Bible has
-been a sealed book, for the position of women among the
-Hebrews has always afforded a pleasing contrast with that
-of their heathen sisters. The position of Jewish women is
-just what we would expect among a people who were indebted
-for their laws to the Creator.</p>
-
-<p>It has always been Satan’s shrewdest trick to degrade
-motherhood, and to cause her to be treated with contempt,
-knowing that she it is who stands at the fountain head of
-the race, and her hand always shapes the life and forms the
-civilization, hence the universal oppression of womanhood in
-all heathen lands.</p>
-
-<p>The effect of religion (for all nations worship something)
-upon the people affords overwhelming evidence of its origin.
-In all heathen lands the people are exceedingly religious.
-In India alone they worship 360,000,000 gods, but they know
-nothing about morality. Their religion offers no light in life
-and no hope in death. The condition of women in India is
-indescribable. If a man speaks of his wife he never says<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-“wife,” but “family”; and if away, he never speaks of going
-home, but he is going to his house. There is no home
-life, as we look upon it, in all that heathen land. Women
-are considered by the Hindus as a thing that exists solely
-for their use. She is given away like a lifeless thing to the
-man who is to be her husband, but who does not consider
-her his equal. He is commanded by his religion to “enjoy
-her without attachment,” and never to love her or put his confidence
-in her. Some women are set apart religiously for the
-use of the men of all classes and castes. They are consecrated
-and “married” to the idols in the temples, and are
-brought up from their girlhood to live as prostitutes. Hindoo
-sacred law reaches its climax of cruelty and degradation in
-the rules it lays down for the control of a woman after her
-husband has died. She may be young and beautiful, she
-may belong to a wealthy and powerful family; it matters
-not; custom is as relentless as death in its weight of woe to
-crush her completely down.</p>
-
-<p>One of the Hindoo sacred books says: “It is unlawful for
-any man to take a jewelless woman,” whose eyes are like the
-weeping cavi-flower; being deprived of her beloved husband,
-she is like a body deprived of the spirit. She may have
-only been a betrothed infant or a child of a few years. It
-makes no difference. The Shasters teach that if a widow
-burns herself alive on the funeral pile of her husband, even
-though he had killed a Brahmin, that most heinous of deeds,
-she expiates the crime. For long centuries widows have
-been a literal burnt offering for the redemption of husbands.</p>
-
-<p>Another law is laid down after the following fashion: “On
-the death of their attached husbands, women must eat but
-once a day, must eschew betel and a spread mattress, must
-sleep on the ground, and continue to practice rigid mortification.
-Women who have put off glittering jewels of gold must
-discharge with alacrity the duties of devotion, and neglecting
-their persons, must feed on herbs and roots, so as barely
-to sustain life within the body. Let not a widow ever pronounce
-the name of another man.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>There are, in India, twenty-three millions of widows, of
-these fourteen thousand are baby widows under four years
-of age, and sixty thousand girl widows between five and
-nine years of age. Nearly one-fourth of the whole number
-of widows are young. Besides, there are many millions of
-deserted wives, whose condition is as bad, and in some cases
-worse, than that of the widows. The lives of many millions
-of these poor women are made so miserable that they prefer
-death to life, and thousands commit suicide yearly.</p>
-
-<p>And all these helpless women have never heard the message
-of salvation from God’s Holy Word.</p>
-
-<p>It so happens in these days of missionary work among the
-heathen that now and then the light of the Gospel finds its
-way into these benighted hearts. Such was the case of a
-Brahmin widow, who had lived in the home of her uncle, but,
-for a fancied offence, was beaten and turned into the street
-naked. She was a woman of commanding manner and appearance,
-such as few suffering widows possess. She was
-tall, elegant of bearing, and attractive. Her story, in short,
-is this: “I was married when only five years of age. I soon
-became a widow, and then my father and mother took care
-of me, though I was kept secure in their home. My father
-and mother died, and since I was fifteen years of age I have
-been with their relatives, who let me work in the fields and
-earn an honorable living. Then my mother’s own brother
-came along, and persuaded me to come to his house. I
-hoped for kindness, but I have been their slave from that
-day.”</p>
-
-<p>When asked whether she had been led astray, she replied,
-“I might have been, and sat with jewels on my neck and
-arms, with a frontlet on my brow, and gems would have bedecked
-my ears had I yielded to the machinations of my
-uncle and the desires of his friends to betray me into a life
-of glittering slavery! Because I would not, I am in rags,
-and now turned homeless into the streets.”</p>
-
-<p>Such is the suffering of women in India. And the saddest
-of all is, the only heaven they look for after this world, is a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-place where they can be their husband’s servants. Sad and
-terrible is their state!</p>
-
-<p>The condition of womanhood in China is but little better.
-In fact she is unwelcome at her birth. If she is suffered to
-live, she is subjected to inhuman foot-binding. The feet are
-supposed to merit the poetical name of “golden lilies.” But
-how sad it is to discover that such a result is produced by
-indescribable torture, and that the part of the foot that is not
-seen is nothing but a mass of distorted or broken bones!</p>
-
-<p>This binding process commences when the girl is about
-six years old. There is a Chinese proverb that says, “For
-every pair of bound feet has been shed a <i>kong</i> full of tears.”
-And yet, the most important part of a Chinese girl’s dress is
-her tiny shoe of colored silk or satin, most tastefully embroidered,
-with bright painted heels just peeping beneath the
-neat pantalets. Missionary ladies tell us how they themselves
-have seen three strong women holding a little girl by
-force to compel her to submit to this awful torture. It is not
-an uncommon thing for a mother to get up in the night and
-beat a poor child of seven or eight for keeping her awake
-by her stifled sobs from the terrible pain produced by the
-bandages. Through the weary summer days, instead of
-romping and enjoying the fresh air and sports with brothers,
-the poor little girl will lie, restless with fever, upon her little
-couch, and when the cold nights of winter come, she is
-afraid to wrap her limbs in any covering, else they grow
-warm and the suffering becomes more intense.</p>
-
-<p>At last the much desired smallness is obtained, the feet
-are deformed for life and she is greatly admired by all her
-friends. If she is not betrothed until she is ten or more
-years of age, one of the first questions is, “What is the
-length of her feet?” Three inches is the correct length of
-the fashionable shoe, but some are only two.</p>
-
-<p>But this has respect only to those girl-babies who are suffered
-to live. The horrors of heathenism permits the new-born
-girl baby to be disposed of. There is outside the city walls
-of Fuchan, China, a structure of stone without doors, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-with two window-like openings. This well-known and frequently
-visited building is the baby tower—not a day nursery
-for the care of the infants of the poor, not an orphanage
-where the little waifs are clothed and fed and educated, but
-a place where girl-babies can be thrown and left to die. In
-larger cities, such as Pekin, carts pass through the streets at
-an early hour of the day and gather up the babies abandoned
-to the streets by their inhuman parents.</p>
-
-<p>Women in the common walks of life are the slaves of their
-husbands. The wife rises early in the morning, does the housework
-for the day, and prepares the morning meal for her
-husband, who always eats it by himself while she serves.
-Having finished her own meal, after her husband has eaten
-his, she cleans up the dishes, and then hastens to the fields to
-toil all day under a burning sun. The husband, meanwhile,
-spends the day in sleeping, or gambling, or when opportunity
-occurs, in thieving or marauding. Sometimes, frequently
-indeed, the women are carried off by other tribes while out
-in the fields, and are only released at a price, varying with
-the excellencies of the woman in question. And yet, if any
-one were to offer to relieve these women of their work, their
-offer would be rejected, for this life of toil is what they have
-been brought up to and trained in, and they know of nothing
-better. They especially like to be in the fields by themselves,
-for then they are alone, and are free from the hated
-presence of man (curiously enough they are said to hate
-their men), and surely no one would grudge them their
-liberty.</p>
-
-<p>In dark Africa, where lives one-sixth of the heathen population
-of the globe, human sacrifice is something awful.
-And the saddest of all is, the victims are mostly from the
-ranks of women. Of the languages and dialects, five hundred
-have never been reduced to writing. What scenes of
-horrors are locked up in oblivion among these wild tribes of
-that dark land. Almost daily, the numerous wives of the
-rulers, as they die, are buried alive in their graves, being
-compelled to hold the dead bodies of their husbands on their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-laps, until they themselves are relieved by death. The
-witch doctors annually slay thousands of innocent women.
-Among the Masai, a woman has a market value equal to
-five glass beads, while a cow is worth ten of the same.</p>
-
-<p>Woman’s life in the harem of the Mohammedan is but
-little better. The code of morals is a very loose one, and the
-degradation of women beyond our pen to describe. The
-women of the harems are divided into three classes: The
-Rhadines, or legitimate wives. The Ikbals, or favorites, out
-of whose ranks the Rhadines are chosen, and Ghienzdes or
-“women who are pleasing to the eye of their lord,” and
-who have the chance to advance to the rank of Ikbals. If
-the wife of a Turkoman asks his permission to go, and he
-says, “go,” without adding, “come back,” they are divorced.
-If he becomes dissatisfied with the most trifling acts of his
-wife, and tears the veil from her face, that constitutes a
-divorce. In the streets, if a husband meets one of his
-numerous wives, he never recognizes her, or ever introduces
-her to a male friend. A Mohammedan never inquires after
-the female portion of the household of his friend. The system
-is full of cruelty and despotism. In Mohammedan
-countries women suffer from the low opinion held of them by
-men. The prophet said: “I stood at the gates of hell, and
-lo! most of its inhabitants were women!” And yet, strange
-to say, while the religion of Islam denies that woman has a
-soul, it teaches a sensual paradise.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, in all nations where the Bible is unknown, woman
-is the slave of man’s lust. She is a drudge or a toy, whose
-reign is as short-lived as her personal charms. She may not
-be trusted out of sight of her guardians, though the masculine
-members of the family are anything but choice in their
-associations. Indeed, in some countries a woman can not
-visit even her own mother without being carried in a palanquin
-or guarded by slaves.</p>
-
-<p>One of the strangest, saddest sights we ever saw was at
-Mersina, in the Levant. Passing a field one day there were
-six native women (noble in form and of beautiful olive complexion)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-hoeing what looked to be cucumbers, while a step
-or two in their rear stood a negro, a full-blooded Nubian,
-with a long stick, like an ox-goad, in his hand, evidently
-their master.</p>
-
-<p>In Ceylon, when it was proposed by a missionary to teach
-women to read, one native said to another, “What do you
-think that man is talking about? He wants to teach the
-women to read! He’ll be wanting to teach the cows
-next!”</p>
-
-<p>Such is the disrespect in which women are held by heathen
-people. Five words describe the biography of women in all
-lands where the Bible is not known: Unwelcomed at birth;
-untaught in childhood; uncherished in widowhood; unprotected
-in old age; unlamented when dead.</p>
-
-<p>Such, in brief, is the treatment of womanhood in lands
-where the Bible is a sealed book, and truly, in comparison
-with their heathen sisters, women living under the blessed
-teachings of Christianity are “clothed in white raiment.”</p>
-
-<p>But, perhaps, we ought not to think it so very strange
-that men who dishonor God, and who want Him blotted
-out of their thoughts, should abuse God’s best gift to man.
-This much we know, that God created man in His own
-image, in the image of God created He him; male and
-female created He <i>them</i>. And God blessed <i>them</i>, and God
-said unto them, “Have dominion over every living thing that
-moveth upon the earth.” When the Pharisees, in their malignity,
-framed the question, “Is it lawful for a man to put
-away his wife for every cause?”—a problem beset with many
-difficulties, our Lord very promptly asked a counter question,
-“What did Moses command you?” Instead of entering into
-their vexed question, He appeals at once to the law and the
-testimony, and requires them to recite the provision made by
-Moses for such cases; not as settling the difficulties, but as
-presenting the true <i>status quaestionis</i>, which was not what the
-Scribes taught or the Pharisees practiced, but what Moses
-meant and God permitted. They said, “Moses suffered to
-write a bill of divorcement, and to put her away.” Quickly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-Jesus replied, “For the hardness of your heart he wrote you
-this precept.” The substance of our Saviour’s answer was,
-Moses gave you no positive command in the case; he would
-not make a law directly opposite to the law of God; but
-Moses saw the wantonness and wickedness of your hearts,
-that you would turn away your wives without any just and
-warrantable cause; and to restrain your extravagancies of
-cruelty to your wives, or disorderly turning of them off upon
-any occasion, he made a law that none should put away his
-wife but upon a legal cognizance of the cause and giving her
-a bill of divorce. “From the beginning,” that is, in the very
-act of creation, God embodied the idea of equality. Capricious
-divorce is a violation of natural law.</p>
-
-<p>What a beautiful picture Solomon gives us of womanhood.
-“Her price,” he says, “is far above rubies. The heart of
-her husband doth safely trust in her, so that he shall have
-no need of spoil. She will do him good and not evil all the
-days of her life. She seeketh wool, and flax, and worketh
-willingly with her hands.” After the grace of God in the
-soul, a good wife, one planned on the Divine model, is the
-Lord’s best gift. To the husband who has such a woman to
-stand at the head of his home, nothing can measure her
-value. His heart rests safely in her integrity. He has no
-need to add to his wealth by spoils, for she will do him good
-and not evil all the days of his life. She is industrious.
-She not only works into comfort the wool and flax that are
-at hand; she seeks to add to her store from the outside world.
-She does not ask to be kept in idleness. She worketh willingly
-with her hands. Not content to be a consumer, she
-becomes a producer. Not satisfied with home production,
-she brings suitable comforts and luxuries from afar into her
-home. She is careful in the use of her time. She is not
-feebly self-indulgent. She riseth while it is yet night to look
-after her domestic affairs. She is a business woman, knowing
-the laws that underlie the rise and fall of real estate.
-She considereth a field, and buyeth it. Then with her hands
-she planteth a vineyard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>She does not produce inferior goods, neither is she cheated
-in a bargain. She perceiveth that her merchandise is good.
-She loves to share her husband’s business burdens, that he
-may share her society; and they twain are one in service and
-one in recreation. Like our Lord, she delights not to be
-ministered unto, but to minister. She is benevolent. Being
-a recognized producer, she has the luxury of giving of her
-own means to the poor. She provides well for her household,
-keeping her dependents in comfort, and even in luxury. As
-the Revised Version puts it, “She maketh herself carpets of
-tapestry.” Her own clothing is of the best.</p>
-
-<p>The husband of such a wife has the gentle manners that
-belong with such a home, and he can but succeed in life.
-He is known and honored among the best in the land. As
-her business grows, her products become finer and more expensive;
-and as she puts them upon the market, her profits
-increase. This woman is clothed with strength and honor.
-She has no anxiety about the future. She knows that though
-her beauty may fade, and her social charms become a thing
-of the past, her strength and honor will become richer and
-more glorious as the years go by. “In her tongue is the law
-of kindness.” She is too busy with her own affairs to look
-after those of her neighbors. In heathen countries it is a
-great disgrace for a woman’s voice to be heard in the presence
-of men. Where women are held back from the real
-interests that concern them and for which they have so often
-proved themselves fully qualified, what else could take up
-their active minds but the pettiness of gossip?</p>
-
-<p>Such are the beautiful tributes paid to women by Solomon,
-the wisest of men. Nor are the prophets behind in acknowledging
-the worth and quality of women. Eight hundred
-years before the Christian era, the prophet Joel wrote, “And
-it shall come to pass in the last days, saith God, I will pour
-out of my Spirit upon all flesh: and your sons and your
-daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see
-visions, and your old men shall dream dreams: and on my
-servants and on my handmaidens I will pour out in those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-days of my Spirit; and they shall prophesy.” In the Christian
-dispensation, the daughters as well as the sons were to
-be filled with the Spirit of God, and the Spirit would use
-their lips in the declaration of His truth as certainly as the
-lips of men, and Paul defined prophecy to be speaking “unto
-men to edification, and exhortation, and comfort.” It has
-been one of the devices of the evil one to padlock the lips of
-that half of the race who are most loyal to God and who
-have the most helpful knowledge of human nature.</p>
-
-<p>Aside from all these high social and spiritual relations of
-the Hebrew women, they had a legal status. The rights of
-the Jewish wife were carefully guarded. Her husband was
-not allowed to go to war for a year after they were married;
-and though the eastern institution of polygamy was not
-utterly prohibited, yet it was so restricted that it must not in
-any way invade the rights and privileges of the wife. If a
-husband became jealous of his wife’s fidelity, the legal presumptions
-were all in her favor. The husband was not
-allowed to inflict summary punishment; but she was subjected
-to an ordeal which could by no possibility work injury
-to her, unless through the guilt of her own conscience or
-the interposition of divine Providence.</p>
-
-<p>As a mother, the Jewish woman must be honored by her
-children. As a daughter, she had rights and an inheritance.
-If the wife or daughter uttered rash and foolish vows, the
-husband or father had a right to disannul them, provided he
-did it from the day it came to his knowledge. Even the
-Gentile woman taken captive by a young Israelite warrior
-must have been surprised to receive treatment so strangely
-different from that received by captives in her own country,
-or even among modern nations who profess to be civilized.
-Her captor could not offer her an insult; she must be taken,
-not to a prison, but to his home, where she must neither be
-abused nor outraged, but treated with patient consideration;
-and she could not be taken, even as a wife, until a full month
-had elapsed, during which he might secure her affections or
-reconsider his determination. And if after her marriage she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
-was discontented and made herself disagreeable, she could
-never again be held as a servant, but must be allowed to go
-free. Widows, who in heathen lands have been degraded
-and sometimes murdered or burned, were to be treated with
-the utmost tenderness. They shared in the tithes, and were
-admitted to the public festivities. They had a right to glean
-in the fields and gather up the forgotten sheaves, to gather
-which the owner was not allowed to go back. Injustice
-against widows was treated with fearful punishment. “Thou
-shalt not take the widow’s raiment to pledge” (Deut. xxiv, 17),
-was a benevolent law which can not be paralleled in any
-modern code. The command to lend to an Israelite in his
-poverty was imperative, but no pledge of raiment could be
-exacted from a widow.</p>
-
-<p>Thus in a variety of ways was the Lord pleased to manifest
-his kindness and compassion for the fatherless and the
-widow, and in consequence womanhood was honored and
-honorable in the Jewish nation, beyond anything known in
-the heathen world. From the vile and degrading orgies of
-heathenism the women of Israel were exempt. They feared
-the Lord, and at his hand received blessings and mercies
-without number.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it is seen that Hebrew women had rare privileges.
-They tower like desert palms above the women in pagan
-lands. In her home she is honored and respected. In India
-a woman eats her first and last meal with her husband on
-her wedding day. In the Hebrew home her children are
-like “olive plants” round her table. In China they may kill
-their little daughters by the thousands. She has legal rights
-in her Hebrew home. In all Mohammedan lands a man has
-the same power over the life of his wife that he has over the
-life of his horse.</p>
-
-<p>What makes this difference? We answer, It is God’s
-thought of womanhood, for there was nothing in the Hebrew
-men to bring about such thoughtful consideration. There
-were periods in the history of the Hebrew nation when they
-departed from God, and sank into the vices of the heathens<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-around them. It was during these periods that womanhood
-was degraded to that of their pagan sisters. There were
-times when the Hebrews had taken on heathen manners to
-such an extent as to regard it a disgrace for a rabbi to recognize
-his wife if he met her on the street. It was commonly
-said that he was a fool who attempted the religious instruction
-of a woman, and the words of the law had better be
-burned than given to a woman.</p>
-
-<p>So it was not Hebrew manhood that saved the daughters
-of Israel from the suicidal injustice practiced among the
-heathens, but the sure Word of God. Under its wise provisions
-and recognized equality they became prophetesses,
-leaders of armies, and judges. And they taught a pure morality,
-trained their children according to principles of justice
-and righteousness, and lived in expectation and hope of the
-coming of the Messiah in whom all the nations of the earth
-were to be blessed.</p>
-
-<p>And above all, Christ was the true Friend of womanhood.
-No teacher in any age of the world or in any land ever taught
-woman as He did, when He came that glorious morning to
-Jacob’s well, or in the house of Simon the Pharisee, when the
-sin-stained woman of the street, who had unobserved entered
-the banquet hall, and taken up her position at the feet of
-Jesus, and there poured out the great sorrow of her heart in
-a paroxysm of humble and grateful love, and bathed His feet
-with her tears, and wiped them with the hair of her head,
-anointing them also with ointment, when He personally addressed
-her and said, “Thy sins are forgiven.” How beautiful
-is all this, and how grandly these women showed their
-gratitude and appreciation by following Him and ministering
-unto “Him of their substance.” They were last at the cross
-and first at the tomb, and first to publish the Saviour’s resurrection.</p>
-
-<p>From that day to this, women owe their spiritual elevation
-and their opportunities of usefulness to the recognition Christ
-gave them in His ministry. In all places untouched by
-Christian light they are not sure that they have souls. Where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-the light shines clearly they have equal rights with the men
-by whose side they are privileged to labor for God’s glory.
-This being so, how ought they to love God, and in every way
-possible, spread the light of Christianity through all the earth.
-We would say to every woman who loves her Lord, the field
-is wide enough, and opportunities present themselves in every
-passing hour, therefore, if you have a message which will
-help and bless some struggling soul heavenward, tell it.</p>
-
-<p>With these brief, introductory words, we come to our subject
-proper. And should you, dear woman, whom we seek
-to glorify in the following pages, be blessed and comforted in
-the unfolding of God’s love towards womanhood, and your
-own faith take a firmer hold upon the Father’s thought of
-you, do not, after reading this book, put it away in your
-book-case, but place it in the hands of some tempted, discouraged,
-struggling soul, and thereby let others become
-sharers of the same helpful words, and, possibly, in so doing,
-you may not only save precious souls, but add many stars
-to your own crown of life.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="indentright">As ever, respectfully,</span><br />
-
-THE AUTHOR.</p>
-
-<p> &#160; &#160; <span class="smcap">Albany, N. Y.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-
-<p class="ph2">WOMEN IN WHITE RAIMENT.</p>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I.<br />
-
-The Paradise Home in Eden.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><span class="smcap">Man’s First Home a Garden—Eve the Isha—The Scene of the
-Temptation—Hiding from God—Refusing to Confess, Judgment
-is Pronounced—The Sad Results of Sin—Eve Believed
-the Promise.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Perhaps</span> there never lived a woman who has been “talked
-about” so much as this first woman in White Raiment, for
-who has not said, If Eve had not been beguiled into a violation
-of the one commandment by partaking of the fruit of
-the forbidden tree, we would all be as happy and sinless as
-was she and her husband before that act of disobedience.
-But we shall miss the great lesson Eve’s experience intended
-to convey if we fail to recognize that God put humanity on
-probation, and the fact of the first temptation is the symbol
-of every temptation; the fact of the first fall is the symbol
-of every transgression; the great mistake that lay in the
-first sin is the symbol of every effect of sin.</p>
-
-<p>After the Lord God had formed man, we read that He
-“planted a garden eastward in Eden; and there He put the
-man.” What pen could describe the garden of the Lord’s
-planting? There were splashing fountains. There were
-woodbine, and honeysuckles, and morning-glories climbing
-over the wall, and daisies, and buttercups, and strawberries
-in the grass. There were paths with mountain mosses, bordered
-with pearls and diamonds. Here and there cooling
-streams sparkled in the sunlight or made sweet music as
-they fell over ledges and rippled away under the overstretching
-shadows of palm trees or fig orchards, and their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-threads of silver finally lost amid the fruitage of orange
-groves. Trees and shrubs of infinite variety added their
-beauty to the many picturesque scenes everywhere spread
-out. In the midst of the overhanging foliage were all the
-bright birds of heaven, and they stirred the air with infinite
-chirp and carol. Never since have such skies looked
-down through such leaves into such waters. Never has
-river wave had such curve and sheen and bank as adorned
-the Pison, the Havilah, the Gihon and the Hiddekel, even
-the pebbles being bdellium and onyx stone. What fruits,
-with no curculio to sting the rind! What flowers, with no
-slug to gnaw the root! What atmosphere, with no frost to
-chill and with no heat to consume! Bright colors tangled
-in the grass. Perfume filled the air. Music thrilled the
-sky. Great scenes of gladness and love and joy spread out
-in every direction.</p>
-
-<p>We know not how long, perhaps ever since this man had
-been created in the “image” of his God, he had wandered
-through this Eden home, had watched the brilliant
-pageantry of wings and scales and clouds, and may have
-noticed that the robins fly the air in twos, and that the fish
-swim the waters in twos, and that the lions walk the fields
-in twos, and as he saw the merry, abounding life of his subject
-creatures, every one perfectly fitted to its environment,
-and each mated with another of the same instincts and
-methods of living, he felt the isolation of his own self-involved
-being, and, possibly, a shadow of loneliness may have crept
-into his face, and God saw it. And so He said, “It is not
-good that the man should be alone.” So “He caused a deep
-sleep to fall upon Adam,” as if by allegory to teach all ages
-that the greatest of earthly blessings is sound sleep.</p>
-
-<p>When he awoke, a most beautiful being, the crowning
-glory of creation, stood beside him, looking at him with
-heaven in her eyes, her exquisite form draped with perfect
-feminine grace and strength. As Adam looked into the face
-of this immaculate daughter of God, this Woman in White
-Raiment, he said, “This is now bone of my bones, and flesh<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-of my flesh. She shall be called Woman” (Hebrew Isha),
-because God had clothed in separate flesh the gentler and
-more conscientious part of Adam’s nature, that it might share
-the work and bliss of Paradise.</p>
-
-<p>How long that first married pair lived in Paradise we are
-not informed. The story of their disastrous disobedience is
-given in as few words as possible. Eve may have sauntered
-out one beautiful morning and as she looked up at the fruit
-of the various trees of the garden must have recognized “the
-tree of the knowledge of good and evil,” and doubtless she
-had heard Adam say that this was the forbidden tree, and
-possibly may have cautioned her, “For,” said he, the Lord
-had said, “in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt
-surely die.” As she looked up at the tree and saw the beautiful
-fruit hanging on the branches, she may have admired
-its bright, fresh color without any thought of evil in her
-heart. It is the characteristic of woman to admire the beautiful.
-Indeed her finer feelings can better appreciate than
-man, the blendings of color and shadings that combine to
-give expression to the beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>But it was Satan’s moment. We do not know how long he
-had been in hiding among the recesses of the garden waiting
-for just such an opportunity. Quickly he entered a serpent,
-which, it is declared, “was more subtle than any beast
-of the field,” and came up to Eve as she admired the tree
-and its fruit, and in most questioning surprise said, “Yea
-hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?”
-The query is very cautiously made, expressing great surprise:
-Yea, truly, can it be possible? The query, with its
-questioning surprise, had in it now a yes, and now a no,
-according to the connection. This is the first striking feature
-in the beginning of the temptation. The temptation of
-Christ, in the wilderness, was very similar to this. Satan
-twice challenged our Lord on the point of his divine Sonship:
-“If thou be the Son of God.” As if he had said,
-“You claim to be the Son of God, I doubt it, and challenge
-the claim. If you are, prove it by doing what I suggest.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-This was also a blow at the confession of God Himself, “This
-is My beloved Son.” So here, Satan, in the most cautious
-manner, would excite doubt in the mind of Eve. Then the
-expression also aims to awaken mistrust at the goodness and
-wisdom of God, and so weaken the force of the temptation.
-As if he had said, “What, not eat of every tree of the garden?
-I doubt it. Such a prohibition seems unreasonable.”</p>
-
-<p>Here Eve would assure the tempter that she was not mistaken
-in regard to the prohibition. “We may eat of the
-fruit of the trees of the garden. But of the fruit of the tree
-which is in the midst of the garden, God hath said, Ye shall
-not eat of it, <i>neither shall ye touch it, lest ye die</i>.” Notice the
-Italic words are added by Eve to the command of God concerning
-the tree. No doubt, as she stood there admiring the
-tree, the monitor of her heart kept saying, “Don’t touch it,
-don’t touch it,” and, in her guileless simplicity, she adds the
-words to the prohibition. And yet by this very addition
-does her first wavering disguise itself under the form of an
-overdoing obedience. The first failure is her not observing
-the point of the temptation, and allowing herself to be drawn
-into an argument with the tempter; the second, that she
-makes the prohibition stronger than it really is, and thus
-lets it appear that to her, too, the prohibition seems too
-strict; the third that she weakens the prohibition by reducing
-it to the lesser caution. God had said, “Thou shalt
-surely die.” She reduces it to “<i>lest ye die</i>,” thus making the
-motive of obedience to be predominantly the fear of death.</p>
-
-<p>Her tempter, who could quote Scripture to our Lord in his
-second temptation, after he had failed in the first, was quick
-to take up the woman’s rendering of the prohibition, and
-makes answer, “Ye shall not surely die!” What an advance
-over the first suggestion, “Yea, hath God said.” No doubt
-he had noted her wavering, and, instead of turning promptly
-away from the author of her wavering, saw her disposed to
-inform him of what God had said concerning this “tree of
-the knowledge of good and evil,” and he promptly steps out
-from the area of cautious craft into that of a reckless denial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-of the truth of God’s prohibition, and a malicious suspicion
-of its object. Eve had not repeated the words of the prohibition,
-and of the penalty, in its double or intensive form,
-but Satan repeats it, in blasphemous mockery, as though he
-had heard it in some other way, and stoutly denies the truth
-of the threatening, that is, the doubt becomes unbelief.</p>
-
-<p>The way, however, is not prepared for the unbelief without
-first arousing a feeling of distrust in respect to God’s love,
-His righteousness, and even His power. So the tempter
-denies all evil consequences as arising from the forbidden
-enjoyment, whilst, on the contrary, he promises the best and
-most glorious results from the same. “Instead of your eyes
-closing in death,” he said, “they shall be opened.” The
-tempter would have the woman believe that, in eating of the
-fruit, she would become wonderfully enlightened, and, at
-the same time, raised to a divine glory—“shall be as gods,
-knowing good and evil.” And so, in like manner, is every
-sin a false and senseless belief in the salutary effects of sin.</p>
-
-<p>We tremble for Eve at this point of her interview with her
-tempter. It is an awful moment, a moment in which her
-own happiness and that of her husband’s and all the generations
-of earth are in the balances.</p>
-
-<p>“And when the woman saw.” She was now looking at
-the tree and its fruit from a far different standpoint from
-that in the morning. She beheld it now with a look made
-false by the distorted application of God’s prohibition by her
-tempter. In fact, she had become enchanted by the distorted
-construction put upon God’s plain commandment.
-The satanic promises seemed to have driven the threatening
-of that prohibition out of her thought. Now she beholds the
-tree with other eyes. Three times, it is said, how charming
-the tree appeared to her.</p>
-
-<p>But where has Adam been all this time? Doubtless he
-was busy with his duties, for God had set him “to dress and
-to keep” the garden in which he had been placed. He may
-have seen Eve passing down one of the beautiful paths of
-the garden in her morning walk, beguiled by the splash of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-the fountains, the song of the birds, and the beauty of the
-flowers at her feet. He may have observed her stay longer
-than usual, and so turned aside from his duties to see
-what had become of her, and following down the path over
-which he had last seen her disappear among the trees and
-shrubbery of the garden, soon came to the place where “the
-tree of the knowledge of good and evil” stood, and then,
-from the lips of his own pure, sweet wife, learned what had
-taken place. Possibly she was holding the very fruit of
-which she had said, “neither shall ye touch it,” in her
-hands, admiring its beauty and wondering how it tasted.
-And, while examining the fruit, she told her husband what
-had passed between her and her tempter, and as she finished
-her story she said, “I do not think there can be any
-harm in my just breaking the rind of it, to see how it looks
-inside.” Prompted by womanly curiosity, she broke open
-the fruit, and, before she was really conscious, she “did
-eat!” “Why, how nice!” she exclaimed, at the same time
-handing the other half to her husband. As a good gardener,
-he would naturally share the curiosity of his wife to
-taste this fruit, “and he did eat!”</p>
-
-<p>The next statement we have, “And the eyes of them
-both were opened.” But how were they opened? Each of
-them had two good eyes before eating the fruit; in fact,
-Eve had been admiring the fruit as it hung among the
-branches of the tree, and as she had turned it over in her
-hands. Before they tasted they saw with their natural eyes.
-Now they see with a higher knowledge of sense—there is
-added a con-sense—a conscience or self-consciousness. In
-the relation between the antecedent here and what followed
-there evidently lies a terrible irony. The promise of the
-tempter becomes half fulfilled, though, indeed, in a sadly
-different sense from what they had supposed. They had
-attained, in consequence, to a moral insight. Self-consciousness
-was awakened with their knowledge of right and
-wrong, good and evil. It belongs to the very beginning of
-moral cognition and development.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>How strange it all is. Eden full of trees, fruits of every
-kind, luscious and satisfying, but, excited by false and
-wicked statements in respect to the prohibition of the fruit
-of one tree, she straightway desires to taste for herself, and
-that curiosity blasted her and blasted all nations. And
-thousands in every generation, inspired by unhealthful inquisitiveness,
-have tried to look through the keyhole of
-God’s mysteries—mysteries that were barred and bolted
-from all human inspection—and they have wrenched their
-whole moral nature out of joint by trying to pluck fruit
-from branches beyond their reach.</p>
-
-<p>We may also learn that fruits which are sweet to the taste
-may afterward produce great agony. Forbidden fruit for
-Eve was so pleasant she invited her husband also to take of
-it; but her banishment from paradise and years of sorrow
-and wretchedness and woe paid for that luxury.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes people plead for just one indulgence in sin.
-There can be no harm to go to this or that forbidden place
-just once. Doubtless that one Edenic transgression did not
-seem to be much, but it struck a blow which to this day
-makes the earth stagger. To find out the consequences of
-that one sin you would have to compel the world to throw
-open all its prison doors and display the crime, throw open
-all its hospitals and display the disease, throw open all the
-insane asylums and show the wretchedness, open all the
-sepulchres and show the dead, open all the doors of the lost
-world and show the damned. That one Edenic transgression
-stretched chords of misery across the heart of the world
-and struck them with dolorous wailing, and it has seated
-the plagues upon the air and the shipwrecks upon the tempest,
-and fastened, like a leech, famine to the heart of the
-sick and dying nations. Beautiful at the start, horrible at
-the last. Oh, how many have experienced it! Beware of
-entertaining temptations to first sins! Turn away and flee
-for thy life to the sure and only Refuge—Christ Jesus.</p>
-
-<p>In the cool of the day, as the evening hours drew on,
-Adam and Eve “heard the voice of the Lord God walking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-in the garden.” They were used to hearing that voice
-walking in the garden in the cool of the day. Eden had
-become a dear spot to the heart of their Father, and doubtless
-He often came down to converse with them. So now
-He seeks companionship with the majestic human masterpieces
-of His creation. And why should he not?</p>
-
-<p>But, passing strange! instead of running to Him out of
-their Eden home, as doubtless they had been wont to do,
-“Adam and his wife hid themselves from the presence of
-the Lord God amongst the trees of the garden.” This act,
-no doubt, was prompted by self-consciousness and the shame
-and guilt which it brought. So we clearly see that sin separates
-from God. They had pronounced judgment upon
-their transgression by their very conduct. Instead of meeting
-God as they had been doing, a feeling of distrust and
-servile fear entered their hearts, and a sense of the loss of
-their spiritual purity, together with the false notion that
-they can hide themselves from God. And so it has come to
-pass that ever since the first transgression men have been
-hiding from God, running away from his presence.</p>
-
-<p>“And the Lord God called unto Adam, and said unto him,
-Where art thou?” The Lord is the first to break the
-silence; the first to seek erring humanity. Not for His
-own sake does God direct this inquiry, for He knew where
-Adam was, but that Adam might take courage and open his
-mouth in confession—it was an invitation to tell the whole
-sad story. But, instead, he multiplies the difficulties by his
-answer, “I was afraid, because I was naked.” That is to
-say, Adam, instead of confessing the sin, sought to hide
-behind its consequences, and his disobedience behind his
-feeling of shame. His answer to the interrogation is far
-from the real cause of the change that had come over his
-conduct, which was sin, and made his consciousness of
-nakedness to be the reason. To still make Adam see the
-true reason for his hiding, God farther asked, “Hast thou
-eaten of the tree whereof I commanded thee that thou
-shouldst not eat?” Observe this question is so framed as to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-contain in it the eating and the tree from which he ate, and
-could have been answered with, “Yes!” How easy God
-made it for Adam to confess. But, alas! How far from it.
-He answered, “The woman whom thou gavest unto me, she
-gave me of the tree and I did eat.” How deep the root of
-sin had taken hold upon Adam’s heart. What does he say
-in this answer? Why this, he acknowledged the guilt, but
-indirectly charges God as the author of the calamity. Eve
-is referred to as “the woman” who is the author of his sin,
-and, since she was given to him by the hand of the Lord,
-therefore it is the Lord’s fault, for if He had not given her to
-Adam, he would not have partaken of the forbidden tree!
-How passing strange is all this. And yet that is just what
-men are doing after six thousand years of experience with
-sin. Instead of breaking away from it, they say, God put it
-before them, and they could not resist the temptation to sin.
-The loss of love that comes out in this interposing of the wife
-is, moreover, particularly observable in this, that he grudges
-to call her Eve (Isha—married) or my wife.</p>
-
-<p>Failing to return unto God by way of confession, the Lord
-next deals with Adam in judgment. “Cursed is the ground
-for thy sake ... thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth
-to thee.” The very soil he had been sent to cultivate, and
-to carry forward in a normal unfolding, to imperishable life
-and spiritual glory, is now cursed for his sake, and therewith
-changed to that of hostility to him. Referring to the
-curse upon mankind, in consequence of the fall, Hugh
-MacMillan has called attention to the remarkable fact that
-weeds, the curse of the cultivator, accompany civilization.
-“There is one peculiarity about weeds which is very
-remarkable,” says this writer, “namely, that they only
-appear on ground which either by cultivation or for some
-other purpose, has been disturbed by man. They are never
-found truly wild, in woods or hills, or uncultivated wastes
-far away from human dwellings. They never grow on
-virgin soil, where human beings have never been. No weeds
-exist in those parts of the earth that are uninhabited, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-where man is only a passing visitant.” And what is true of
-mother earth is in a sense true of the human heart. The
-youthful mind no sooner awakes to thought and reason, than
-it gives evidence of abundance of weeds. In surprise the
-mother asks where the little one has learned disobedience
-and questions how so young a mind can assert such strong
-opposition to wholesome discipline.</p>
-
-<p>And now, lest a worse calamity should fall on Adam and
-his wife, by stretching forth their hands “and take also of the
-tree of life, and eat, and live forever,” God “drove out the
-man” from Eden, and placed “cherubims, and a flaming
-sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the tree
-of life.” The act of driving Adam and Eve out of Eden has
-always been looked upon as a harsh measure. If, however,
-we stop to reflect what awful consequences would have followed
-the rash act of eating of the tree of life, we shall see
-that it was an act of mercy. For, after placing himself
-under the law of sin, what endless sorrow would have come
-upon the race, if men could not be removed by death. Think
-of such human monsters as history has time and again produced.
-Men and women degraded by thousands of years
-in sin would indeed be dangerous characters. So God cut
-off this possibility by guarding the tree of life.</p>
-
-<p>But there came a great change over all life. Beasts that
-before were harmless and full of play put forth claw and
-sting and tooth and tusk. Birds whet their beak for prey,
-clouds troop in the sky, sharp thorns shoot up through the
-soft grass, blastings are on the leaves. All the chords of
-that great harmony are snapped. Upon the brightest home
-this world ever saw our first parents turned their back and
-led forth on a path of sorrow the broken-hearted myriads of
-a ruined race.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus031.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE ACCEPTED OFFERING.</p>
-
-<p>When Eve looked into the face of her first-born, she remembered
-the words of the Lord, in His judgment upon Satan,
-“I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and
-between thy seed and her seed; it shalt bruise thy head and
-thou shalt bruise his heel,” and, misunderstanding the
-meaning of the promise, she called him Cain, meaning, “I
-have gotten a man from the Lord,” mistaking him for the
-Redeemer. But how bitter must have been her disappointment
-as she saw the child grow up, saw his characteristics
-manifest themselves in acts of hatefulness and revenge.
-However, but little is said of Cain and his younger brother
-Abel, until they bring their offerings to the Lord. We read
-that Abel was a “keeper of sheep,” and Cain was a “tiller
-of the ground.” While it is not stated, we must believe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-these brothers knew what was, and what was not, an acceptable
-offering to the Lord, that Cain could easily have
-exchanged his fruits of the soil for a lamb of Abel’s flock.
-Evidently Cain was lacking in that fine moral insight which
-would lead him to have respect as to the nature of the sacrifice
-necessary to atone for sin. There must be the shed
-blood of the victim, for, “without shedding of blood,” there
-is no remission. Either Cain did not regard himself a sinner,
-or, if he did, he thought one sacrifice as good as
-another, and so he brings “of the fruit of the ground an offering
-unto the Lord.” God could not accept this act of disobedience.
-Because his offering was rejected, and seeing
-Abel’s offering accepted, Cain rose up and slew his brother.
-He failed to shed the blood of a lamb for his sin, but was
-quick to shed the blood of his brother, and thereby add to
-his sin. But what a crushing blow was this to the hopes of
-the mother heart who had supposed that her first-born was
-the promised “seed.” How she must have broken down
-under her sorrow, as she saw the blood dripping from Cain’s
-fingers, and that, too, the blood of his own brother. And
-sadder still as she looked upon the face of death for the first
-time. However she might have understood the lying words
-of her tempter, “Ye shall not surely die,” she now sees in the
-lifeless body of her second child, the awful reality of death.
-And when the first grave was made, how she must have
-daily wept over the precious mound, not only over this her
-first experience in bitter bereavement, but also over the circumstances
-under which it was brought about, and as she
-plants the flowers on the tomb, she fancies she hears the
-blood of the innocent victim continually crying unto heaven
-to be avenged. Oh, the bitter, bitter fruits of disobedience,
-who can know to what misery they bring us?</p>
-
-<p>And then also observe Cain’s conduct in this awful crime.
-God’s arraignment of this fratricide was analogous to that of
-Adam and Eve. But Cain evades every acknowledgment of
-it. He not only tells a barefaced falsehood, but in a most
-impudent manner asks, “Am I my brother’s keeper?”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-What a fearful advance on the timid explanations of Adam’s
-transgression as he spoke to the Lord out of his hiding
-place. How men should tremble at the very thought of sin.</p>
-
-<p>But the sorrowing Eve took heart once more in the birth
-of Seth, “for,” said she, “God hath appointed another seed
-instead of Abel.” So hope in the heart, like the perpetual
-altar fires in the sacrifices of the temple, seemed to sing a
-sweet song of comfort, and every child born seemed to outweigh
-the bitter disappointments in the realization of the
-promised Redeemer.</p>
-
-<p>With this hope in the heart of Eve, and this beautiful
-language upon her lips, the Scripture account closes.
-How long she lived after the birth of Seth we are not
-informed, but of this we are assured, she believed God
-in His promise of the Messiah. That she misunderstood
-when that promise was to be realized, is quite evident,
-but there is every reason to believe she died in the faith
-of its ultimate realization, for she judged God to be
-righteous in the promise.</p>
-
-<p>What is the lesson the loss of Paradise has for us? Plainly
-this: The perverted use of things good in themselves. Eve
-saw that the tree was pleasant to the eyes. From that day
-to this there have been women who would throw their health,
-their home happiness, their chance of training their children
-for God, their life, their honor, their hope of heaven, into a
-cauldron out of which might be brought something pleasant
-to the eyes. Eyes are good, useful and necessary, but we
-need to make a covenant with them not to see more than is
-good for our souls.</p>
-
-<p>After she saw, she “desired.” This would seem to imply
-that the real source of all sin is in the spirit of our own
-desires. The last of the Ten Commandments strikes down
-to the very tap-root of all evil, “Thou shalt not covet.” All
-sin commences with the kindling of desire. The apostle
-James gives us the pedigree, “Every man is tempted when
-he is turned away of his own lust and enticed; then, when
-lust and desire hath conceived, it bringeth forth sin, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-sin, when it is finished, bringeth forth death.” The secret
-of victory, therefore, is not to allow the mind and heart
-to dwell for a moment upon any forbidden thing. The
-whole modern life is terribly fitted to stimulate unholy
-desire. The little child is taught from infancy to covet the
-vain and glittering attractions of the world—dress, equipage,
-pleasure, praise, fashion, display and a thousand worldly
-allurements. The city bill boards are covered with nude
-harlots. There are no less than 200,000 houses for these
-social outcasts in our fair land. These open gateways to
-immorality, where the virtue of the nation is ground out, are
-not only guarded by police force, but young girls by the
-100,000 a year are stolen from country homes by the paid
-agents, and sold into these open dens of vice and crime,
-where these poor girls die in a short time, the average length
-of this life of sin being only five years. And still the people
-have not a word to say for the suppression of these crime-breeding
-dens of vice, but legalize and protect them by law
-to the ruin of our homes. These are the things that are
-eating out the spiritual life of the nation, and for that reason
-many do not want to retain the thought of God in their
-hearts. Hence the responsibilities of life are pressing upon
-us. As you have seen the child trundling its little hoop by
-touching it on both sides alternately to keep it from either
-extreme, so God teaches us both with warning and with
-promise, as our spiritual condition requires. Sometimes it
-is warning we need, and He shouts in our ear the solemn
-admonition, as a mother would cry to her babe in wild alarm
-if in danger of falling over the precipice. But, again, when
-we are in danger of being too much depressed, He speaks to us
-with notes of encouragement and promise, and tells us there
-is no real danger of our failing utterly, and that He will
-never suffer us to be tempted above what we are able. And
-so we hear Him saying on one hand, “Let him that thinketh
-he standeth take heed lest he fall;” but immediately after
-adding on the other side, “God is faithful, who will not
-suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able, but will,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-with the temptation, make a way of escape that ye may be
-able to bear it.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“Fear not! When temptations try thee</div>
-<div class="indent">Trust the Saviour’s loving care;</div>
-<div class="verse">No temptation will come nigh thee</div>
-<div class="indent">More than thou has strength to bear.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“Fail not! In the hour of testing,</div>
-<div class="indent">Christ is pledged to bring thee through</div>
-<div class="verse">In His arms securely resting</div>
-<div class="indent">There thou shalt thy strength renew.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>We are also impressed with the influence woman has for
-good or evil. What we need as a nation is consecrated
-womanhood. When at last we come to calculate the forces
-that decide the destiny of nations, it will be found that the
-mightiest and grandest influence came from home, where the
-wife cheered up despondency and fatigue and sorrow by her
-own sympathy, and the mother trained her child for heaven,
-starting the little feet on the path to the celestial city, and
-the sisters, by their gentleness, refined the manners of the
-brother, and the daughters were diligent in their kindness
-to the aged, throwing wreaths of blessing on the road that
-led father and mother down the steep of years. God bless
-our homes. And may the home on earth be the vestibule of
-our home in heaven.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II.<br />
-
-Womanhood in the Patriarchal Age.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sarah the Beautiful Princess—Her Faith Tested—The Mistake
-of Her Life—Her Lovely Character—Rebekah—An Oriental
-Wooing—Eliezer’s Prayer—The Bride’s Answer—Meeting
-Isaac—A Mother’s Love for Her Son—Jacob’s
-Flight—Rebekah, the Beautiful Shepherdess—Seven Years’
-Service for Her—Laban’s Deception—Leah, the Tender-Eyed—Human
-Favorites—Divinely Honored—Rachel’s Tomb
-the First Monument to Human Love.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">From</span> the prominence given to Eve in connection with the
-temptation and the overwhelming disasters which followed
-the loss of the Eden home in Paradise, we are surprised the
-Sacred historian passes over a period of about two thousand
-years without giving us any record of women. The names
-of good men are mentioned. Enoch walked before God for
-over three hundred years, and the walk was such a perfect
-one, and it pleased God so well, that He translated Enoch.
-Noah also “found grace in the eyes of the Lord,” and he was
-“a just man and perfect in his generations,” and “walked
-with God,” doubtless as Enoch had done. No doubt there
-were others who lived clean, pure lives. Of this number was
-Lamech, the father of Noah, for he was comforted in the birth
-of his son, saying, he “shall comfort us concerning our work
-and toil of our hands, because of the ground which the Lord
-hath cursed.” Surely such men must have had good mothers
-to train them, and good wives for companions. But nothing
-is said about these women that walked in White Raiment in
-that dark and sinful age, when “all flesh had corrupted his
-way upon the earth,” until Sarah, the fair wife of Abraham,
-is reached.</p>
-
-<p>We find this beautiful princess willing to leave her home
-and her people in the land of Ur of the Chaldees and journey<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-for more than a thousand miles to the land of Canaan.
-However, this journey was not a continuous one, for a long
-stop was made at Haran, in Mesopotamia, perhaps half way
-between Ur and Palestine.</p>
-
-<p>Of her birth and parentage we have no certain account in
-Scripture. In Gen. xx, 12, Abraham speaks of her as “his
-sister, the daughter of the same father, but not the daughter
-of the same mother.” The Hebrew tradition is that Sarai
-is the same as Iscah, the daughter of Haran. This tradition
-is not improbable in itself, and certainly supplies the account
-of the descent of the mother of the chosen race.</p>
-
-<p>The change of her name from Sarai to Sarah was made on
-the establishment of the covenant of circumcision between
-Abraham and God, and signifies “princess,” for she was to
-be the royal ancestress of “all families of the earth.”</p>
-
-<p>The beautiful fidelity of this noble woman is shown in her
-willingness to accompany her husband in all the wanderings
-of his life. Her home in Mesopotamia was gladly and willingly
-exchanged for a tent, and that tent was often taken
-down and set up during the nomadic life which formed the
-basis of the patriarchal age. God intended to set forth in
-Abraham not only the thought that here man has no continuing
-city, but also the life of faith. And this faith of Abraham
-is distinguished from the faith of the pious ancestors in
-this, that he obtained and held the promises of salvation, not
-only for himself, but for his family; and from the Mosaic
-system, by the fact that it expressly held the promised blessing
-in the seed of Abraham, as a blessing for all people. But
-this faith had not only to be developed, but also tested. It
-is beautiful to read that Abraham believed God, but his
-faith when he went down into Egypt was far from that when
-he went “into the land of Moriah” to offer up Isaac. Nothing
-is plainer in the Bible than that a man’s faith is not a
-matter of indifference. He can not be disobedient to God’s
-calls, and yet go to heaven when he dies. This is not an
-arbitrary decision. There is and must be an adequate
-ground for it. The rejection of God’s dealings with us is as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>
-clear a proof of moral depravity, as inability to see the light
-of the sun at noon is a proof of blindness.</p>
-
-<p>Now let us look at a few of these testings or trials of faith
-that came into the life of this woman in White Raiment, this
-princess in Israel. She was asked to give up her native
-land. How dear the fatherland is to the heart, only those
-who have passed through the experience can realize. This
-was not all. She was asked to give up her kindred. To
-move away from all the associations of childhood and youth,
-requires a brave heart. But she was also asked to give up
-her home, and what is dearer to a woman’s heart than her
-home? We have no doubt Sarah’s home by the beautiful
-streams that flow down from the high table-lands of Armenia
-into the rich valleys of Mesopotamia, was a lovely one, and
-to exchange it for tent-life was a brave sacrifice. Her love
-to God must have been deep and constant.</p>
-
-<p>After a long, weary journey through the desert sands, the
-land of promise is finally reached, only to find it afflicted with
-a famine. How often Sarah must have longed for one look out
-over the fig orchards, the olive yards and waving grain fields
-ripening in the summer’s sun of her native Mesopotamia, as
-she looked out over the barren hills, burned-up fields, and
-dried-up water courses of Palestine. Night after night,
-Abraham’s tent is pitched, only to be taken down in the
-morning, in quest of pasturage for their herds and flocks,
-until the wilderness in the southern extremity of Canaan is
-reached. How all this must have tested their faith. Had
-they not mistaken the call of God? Is it possible that this
-parched land is the land of promise? How disappointments
-and failures test our faith, and the heart of poor Sarah must
-have been sorely tried.</p>
-
-<p>But there was yet another test, and a humiliating one at
-that, and it seems to look as if their united faith was wavering.
-She was a beautiful woman, and they were now upon
-the very borders of Egypt, and there was no other alternative
-but to perish with famine or to go down into the land of
-the Pharaohs. Both Abraham and Sarah seemed to realize<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-the hazard they were running, for, possibly, the bloom and
-beauty of Sarah’s face might cost Abraham’s life. So they
-agreed between them that Sarah should say that she was his
-sister, lest he should be killed. The declaration was not
-false. She was his half-sister, but it was not the whole
-truth, and it would seem, from their present conduct, that
-their faith, tested by the famine, was now wavering, for,
-why not appeal their cause to God, instead of taking it into
-their own hands? The reason for resorting to this deception
-was, if she was regarded as his wife, an Egyptian could only
-obtain her, when he had first murdered her husband. But
-if she was his sister, then there was a hope that she might be
-won from her brother by loving attentions and costly gifts,
-or, if her beauty came to the notice of Pharaoh she would
-be taken to his harem by arbitrary methods. They had not
-reasoned in vain. The princes of the land saw her, “and
-commended her before Pharaoh,” and “Sarah was taken
-into Pharaoh’s house.”</p>
-
-<p>It is hard for us to understand what a trial of her
-faith this harem life must have been to the pure-minded
-Sarah. How often her mind must have gone out over
-the stretches of desert wastes to her own land abounding
-with streams and fertility. And to be conscious that the
-charms of her person were the centre of attraction in the
-court of Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>But all this time God’s eye was a witness to all that was
-passing. When we get to the end of self, He always comes
-to our rescue—our extremity is His opportunity. In her
-resided the religious disposition in the highest measure, and
-just at a time when the nations appeared about to sink into
-heathenism, hence her faith must be saved to the race, so
-“the Lord plagued Pharaoh with great plagues,” that is to
-say, God administered “blow on blow,” and these were of
-such a nature as to guard Sarah from injury. At length the
-ruler of the land, whose heart does not seem to be hardened
-like the later kings, concludes that his punishment is for the
-sake of Sarah, and restores her to Abraham.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>After Abraham had separated from Lot, the Lord again
-appeared unto him, at which time Abraham complained
-for the want of an heir. So the Lord leads Abraham
-out of his tent, under the heavens as seen by night, and in
-that land of blue skies, the night heavens are beautiful indeed.
-God had promised at first one natural heir, but now
-the countless stars which he sees, should both represent the
-innumerable seed which should spring from this one heir,
-and at the same time be a warrant for his faith.</p>
-
-<p>At this point the human element again seeks to aid in
-bringing about the realization of the divine promise. The
-childless state of Abraham’s house was its great sorrow, and
-the more so, since it was in perpetual opposition to the calling,
-destination, and faith of Abraham, and was a constant
-trial of his faith. Sarah herself, doubtless, came gradually
-more and more, on account of her barrenness, to appear as a
-hindrance to the fulfillment of the divine promise, and as
-Abraham had already fixed his eye upon his head servant,
-Eliezer of Damascus, so now Sarah fixes her eye upon her
-head maid, Hagar the Egyptian. It must be this maid not
-only had mental gifts which qualified her for the prominent
-place she occupied in the household, but also inward participation
-in the faith of her mistress. So Hagar is substituted,
-for, in the substitution, Sarah hopes to carry forward the
-divine purpose of the family. In this she certainly practiced
-an act of heroic self-denial, but still, in her womanly excitement,
-anticipated her destiny as Eve had done, and carried
-even Abraham away with her alluring hope. Though she
-greatly erred in this effort to assist God in bringing in the
-realization of the promise, and thereby revealed a lack of
-faith in the divine appointments, yet we have here a beautiful
-exhibition of her heroic self-denial even in her error.
-Perhaps, viewed from the human standpoint, we should here
-bring into our narrative also, the fact, that they had been
-already ten years in Canaan, and Sarah was now seventy-five
-years of age, waiting in vain for the heir, through whom
-the great blessing was to come to all the families of the earth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>However, in all this, Sarah, the noble generous hearted,
-had not counted upon the conduct Hagar would assume in
-her new relation. As an Egyptian, Hagar seemed to have
-regarded herself as second wife, instead of recognizing her
-subordination to her mistress. This subordination seems to
-have been assumed by Abraham, and hence the apparent
-indifference probably was the source of Sarah’s sense of injury,
-when she exclaimed, “My wrong be upon thee.” She
-felt that Abraham ought to have redressed her wrong—ought
-to have seen and rebuked the insolence of the maid. Beyond
-a doubt, looking at the pride and insolence of Hagar, from
-Sarah’s standpoint, it was very trying. The Hebrews regarded
-barrenness as a great evil and a divine punishment,
-while fruitfulness was held as a great good and a divine
-blessing. The unfruitful Hannah received the like treatment
-with Sarah, from the second wife of Elkanah. It is still
-thus, to-day, in eastern lands. With almost the tenderness
-of Elkanah to the sorrowing Hannah, Abraham says, “Behold
-the maid is in thy hand.” He regards Hagar still as
-the servant, and the one who fulfills the part of Sarah. But
-now the overbent bow flies back with violence. This is the
-back stroke of her own eager, overstrained course. Sarah
-now turns and deals harshly with Hagar. How precisely,
-we are not told. Doubtless, through the harsh thrusting her
-back into the mere position and service of a slave. But
-Hagar, it appears, would not submit to such treatment.
-She, perhaps, believed that she had grown above such a position,
-and fled from the presence of Sarah.</p>
-
-<p>What need was there for Sarah to learn the lesson of the
-patience of faith. God had promised her great honors and
-blessings. There was in her nature much that needed toning
-up by the grace of patience, and God would take his
-own best time in developing her life. Her haste to anticipate
-the blessing promised, not only delayed its realization,
-but brought sorrow to her own heart, and untold trouble to
-her posterity, for Ishmael’s hand has been “against every
-man, and every man’s hand against him.” The Ishmaelites,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-it is said, “dwelt from Havilah unto Shur,” and it is certain
-that they stretched in very early times across the desert to
-the Persian Gulf, peopled the north and west of the Arabian
-peninsula, and eventually formed the chief element of the
-Arab nation, which has proved to be a living fountain of
-humanity whose streams for thousands of years have poured
-themselves far and wide. Its tribes are found in all the
-borders of Asia, in the East Indies, in all Northern Africa,
-along the whole Indian Ocean down to Molucca, they are
-spread along the coast to Mozambique, and their caravans
-cross India to China. These wandering hordes of the desert
-have always and still lead a robber life. They justify themselves
-in it, upon the ground of the hard treatment of Ishmael,
-their father, who, driven out of his paternal inheritance,
-received the desert for his possession, with the permission to
-take whatever he could find. Mohammed is in the line of
-Ishmael, and the followers of Islam, in their pride and delusion,
-claim that the rights of primogeniture belong to Ishmael
-instead of Isaac, and assert their right to lands and
-goods, so far as it pleases them. Vengeance for blood rules
-in them, and the innocent have often fallen victims to their
-horrible massacres. So that the disaster which overtook the
-race in this premature anticipation of divine Providence is
-second only to the disaster that overtook Eve in the temptation
-and the loss of Paradise. Could Sarah have foreseen all
-the sad consequences of her unseemly haste to pluck the
-unripened promise God meant to give her, she certainly
-would have cultivated the patience of faith.</p>
-
-<p>But the years passed on—fifteen of them nearly—since
-the child Ishmael had been in the home of the patriarch, and
-the visit of the angels under the Oaks in the plain of Mamre.
-During this time God had once more renewed his promise to
-Abraham, and also the rite of circumcision had been established,
-and, doubtless, the symbolical purification of Abraham
-and his house, opened the way for the friendly
-appearance of Jehovah in the persons of the angels, or men,
-as the patriarch at first thought them to be, as he looked up,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
-while seated in his tent door through the heat of the noontide
-hours.</p>
-
-<p>When he saw the angels, “he ran to meet them,” and, it
-seems, instantly recognized among the three the one whom
-he addressed as the Lord, and who afterwards was clearly
-distinguished from the two accompanying angels. “If
-now,” Abraham asks, “I have found favor in Thy sight,
-pass not away.” This cordial invitation, while it has in it
-the marked hospitality of Orientals, to the inner consciousness
-of Abraham it had a deeper meaning, the covenant
-relation between himself and Jehovah, that is, he hopes this
-relation is still continued. His humble and pressing invitation,
-his zealous preparations, his modest description of the
-meal, his standing by to serve those who were eating, are
-picturesque traits of the life of faith as it here reveals itself,
-in an exemplary hospitality. This is the custom still in
-Eastern lands, and is referred to by our Lord in that passage
-where He speaks of His second coming, and shall find His
-people watching, for He will “make them to sit down to
-meat, and will come forth and serve them” (Luke xii, 37),
-and seems to be one of the countless instances where, in the
-web of the Holy Scriptures, the golden threads of the Old
-Testament are interwoven with those of the New, and form,
-as it were, one whole. And the fact that this beautiful custom
-of hospitality is still observed among the Bedouins, as
-we can speak from personal knowledge, is remarkable, and
-impresses us with the thought that the covenant blessings,
-like some sweet, heavenly fruitage, refuses to be lost out of
-the lives of that ancient people.</p>
-
-<p>The meal having been served in this beautiful Oriental
-manner, the Lord asks, “Where is Sarah?” Abraham made
-answer, “Behold, in the tent.” Then the Angel of the Lord,
-not only renews the promise, but that it should be fully
-realized in the birth of Isaac within a year. Sarah, behind
-the tent door, hears this unqualified assurance, but, viewing
-it from nature’s standpoint, rendered doubly improbable
-from her life-long barrenness, “laughed within herself.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-We can not regard this as a laugh of unbelief, or the scoff of
-doubt, as some do, but as a laugh falling short in her conception
-of God. The thing which was impossible according
-to the established laws of nature, her faith had not yet
-grasped as being possible with God. But the Lord, nevertheless,
-observed Sarah’s laugh, and this divine hearing on
-the part of the Angel of the Lord, startled her, and had its
-part in the strengthening of her faith. It prepared the way
-for the question, “Is anything too hard for the Lord?” To
-her own mind one thing, namely, that she should be a
-mother at ninety years of age, seemed too hard. And so the
-question had to do with this very thought, and must be settled
-on the side of her faith. And she grandly and heroically
-asserted her belief that nothing, not even the seeming
-insurmountable obstacle which nature interposed, was too
-great for God to overcome, and her faith was strengthened,
-for we read, “through <i>faith</i> Sarah received strength to conceive
-seed, and was delivered of a child when she was past
-age, because she <i>judged</i> Him faithful who had promised”
-(Heb. xi, 11). The trial of her patience of faith was a long
-struggle. It took twenty-five years to bring her up to the
-point where her faith could grasp the truth that nothing
-was too hard for the Lord to perform. But this blessed
-woman at length stood in right relation to God, for, without
-faith, be it observed, it is impossible to please God, or to
-receive anything at His hands.</p>
-
-<p>In due time Isaac was born. It was the great event in
-Sarah’s life. As the mother looked down into the face of the
-son of her bosom she breaks forth in an exultant song of
-thankfulness, not unlike that of Mary, the blessed virgin.
-The little song of Sarah, it has beautifully been said, is the
-first cradle hymn. Our Lord reveals the profoundest source
-of this joy, when, in addressing the Pharisees, who held
-Abraham to be their father, said, “Your father Abraham
-rejoiced to see my day.” Sarah, in the birth of Isaac, is the
-ancestress of Christ. Spiritually viewed, the birthday of
-Isaac becomes the door or entrance of the day of Christ,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-and the day of Christ the background of the birthday of
-Isaac.</p>
-
-<p>Another beautiful incident in connection with the childhood
-of Isaac is, that Sarah, his mother, even at her advanced
-age and exalted station in life, did not deem it a burden to
-nurse him. Calvin has well said, “Whom God counts
-worthy of the honor of being a mother He at the same time
-makes a nurse; and those who feel themselves burdened
-through the nursing of their children, rend, as far as in them
-lies, the sacred bond of nature, unless weakness, or some
-infirmities, form their excuse.”</p>
-
-<p>But along with the growing child is the mocking Ishmael.
-He was fourteen years of age at the birth of Isaac, and
-therefore in the first years of Isaac, appears as a playful lad,
-and true to his nature, doubtless developed a characteristic
-trait of jealousy which would not escape the ever watchful
-eye of Sarah, as she observed his dancing and leaping, and
-now and then making hateful faces at the mother’s darling,
-mocking his childish fears and appeals to the mother for
-protection. This seems to have been endured by Sarah
-until the great feast day, held to celebrate the weaning of
-Isaac. Seeing special attention paid to Isaac by all the invited
-guests, his jealousy suddenly developed into envy,
-and this, in turn, found expression in mockery. Sarah could
-endure these mockings no longer, for to her sensitive nature,
-Ishmael’s mocking the child of promise was but the outward
-expression of his unbelief in the faith of his parents, and
-therefore the word and purpose of God. His conduct revealed
-his unbelief, and hence was unworthy and incapable
-of sharing in the blessing, which then, as now, was secured
-only by faith, and which had already cost her so much.
-Hence she said to Abraham, “Cast out this bondwoman and
-her son.” The treatment may seem harsh, but there could
-be no peace or happiness in that household until the mocking
-Ishmael was out of it. This mother, whose spiritual faith
-had been quickened in a marvelous manner, was clear-sighted
-enough to see that the purposes of God in reference<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-to Isaac could only become actual through this separation.
-The fact that the prompt, sharp determination that “the
-son of this bondwoman shall not be heir” with Isaac, “was
-very grievous in Abraham’s sight,” shows that his prejudice
-in favor of the rights of the natural first-born needed correction.
-And God confirmed the judgment of Sarah. For the
-exclusion of Ishmael was requisite not only to the prosperity
-of Isaac and the line of the promise, but to the welfare of Ishmael
-himself. And the man of faith, who should later offer
-up Isaac, must now be able to offer up Ishmael also.</p>
-
-<p>After the sending away of Hagar and her son Ishmael,
-there is but one incident recorded in the life of Abraham,
-namely the treaty or covenant of peace with Abimelech,
-King of Gerar, though probably several years passed away
-between the departure of Hagar and the last great test or
-trial of Abraham in the offering up of Isaac on Mt. Moriah.</p>
-
-<p>The son of promise had grown to be a lad of sixteen or
-seventeen years of age, when the voice of the Lord called
-unto Abraham, saying, “Take now thy son, thine only son
-Isaac, whom thou lovest, and get thee into the land of
-Moriah; and offer him there for a burnt offering upon one of
-the mountains which I will tell thee of.” It would seem that
-this message came to Abraham while asleep—in a dream as
-we would say—and therefore all the more trying as such a
-revelation, under such circumstances might well be questioned.
-Upon waking out of his sleep he might reasonably
-question the import of such a dream, especially since Isaac
-was his only child, and the son of promise. But it appears
-that Abraham did not stop to explain away this command,
-and we must believe that he did not even inform Sarah of
-this heart-crushing revelation, for neither she nor Isaac
-knew at the time the special object of the journey. Promptly
-Abraham made the necessary preparations, and set out on
-the three days’ journey. His obedience is absolute. There
-is not even a question raised as to his correctly understanding
-the duty required of him. To suppose that Abraham
-did not have the bleeding heart of a father in this great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-trial, would be to destroy the force of this testing of his
-faith. And the fact that he had three days’ time in which
-he could change his purpose, made the conflict within him
-all the harder.</p>
-
-<p>The lad and the mother could easily see from the wood, and
-the fire, and the knife, that he went not merely to worship, but
-to sacrifice. The testing was still more heart-breaking when,
-at the end of the journey, at the foot of Moriah, while Abraham
-is in the act of laying the wood upon the obedient Isaac,
-the heir of promise said, “My father, behold the fire and the
-wood, but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?” How the
-bleeding heart of the father must have been touched afresh
-as he looked upon Isaac as “the lamb,” yet, as if the hour
-for the fuller revelation had not yet come, made answer,
-“My son, God will provide Himself a lamb.”</p>
-
-<p>And so the two, the father and the son, slowly climb the
-rugged sides of Moriah to its very summit, and Abraham
-built an altar, as he so often had done before, for, wherever
-Abraham had a tent, God had an altar, and in the building
-of this altar we may well believe the loving, obedient Isaac
-assisted. Then the wood was laid upon it. All was ready
-for “the lamb!” But God had not yet provided the victim.</p>
-
-<p>What passed between father and son the Sacred record
-has not revealed. However, we must believe it was the
-Gethsemane struggle with Isaac, and that in the end he said
-to Abraham, as Christ, under similar circumstances, said to
-His heavenly Father, “Thy will be done.” And, perhaps,
-this loving self-surrender of Isaac made it all the harder for
-the father’s heart. But, somehow, we can not understand it,
-only in the light of complete self-surrender to the will of God,
-he “bound Isaac his son, and laid him on the altar upon the
-wood,” and, nerving himself for the last great act, he
-“stretched forth his hand, and took the knife to slay his
-son.”</p>
-
-<p>But God, during this scene on Mount Moriah, was an
-interested spectator. He saw that the obedience of faith—the
-complete self-surrender of Abraham’s will—was perfect.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-“And the angel of the Lord called unto him out of heaven,
-and said, ‘Lay not thine hand upon the lad, neither do thou
-anything unto him, for now I know that thou fearest God,
-seeing thou hast not withheld thy son, thine only son, from
-me.’”</p>
-
-<p>It is worthy of observation that, while the command to
-offer up Isaac came in a dream, and therefore open to misgiving,
-the command to stay his hand is spoken by the angel
-of Jehovah out of heaven. Abraham was perfect in his faith,
-and how far it reached into the great love for God and self-surrender
-to His will, we shall never know. Paul, speaking
-of this wonderful victory over self, said that Abraham
-accounted that God was able to raise up Isaac, “even from
-the dead; from whence also he received him in a figure.”
-Though all his hope, humanly speaking, perished out of his
-heart when he took up the sacrificial knife on Moriah, yet
-his faith overleaped human limitations into the infinite
-ability of God to raise up Isaac out of the ashes upon his
-altar.</p>
-
-<p>Such faith was possible for Abraham, for God asks no
-impossibilities at the hands of men, and what was possible
-for this man of faith is possible for any of us, if we are willing
-to pay the price. Let no one think, however, that such
-fruits of righteousness drop into the lap of the faithless.</p>
-
-<p>But through this severe testing, Sarah nowhere appears
-on the scene. It may be, infinite love would spare the
-mother’s heart. It may be, also, the last great trial of her
-faith took place in the tent, stretched under the oaks, in the
-plain of Mamre. There is a Jewish tradition that when
-Sarah fully learned the nature of the journey to Moriah, and
-the scene which there took place, the shock of it killed her,
-and Abraham found her dead on his return home. This
-may do as a tradition, but not as the <i>finale</i> of God’s dealing
-with His people. The potter, as he fashions the vessel upon
-the wheel, does not seek to break it. So God does not test
-us beyond our capacity to endure. Then, also, if Isaac was
-born when Sarah was ninety years of age, and she died at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-the age of one hundred and twenty-seven, and the scene on
-Moriah took place when Isaac was a lad of sixteen or seventeen,
-she lived for twenty years after that event, to be a
-comfort and a blessing in her home.</p>
-
-<p>At length this princess in Israel, tested and tried, and
-found true, died at Hebron at the good age of one hundred
-and twenty-seven years, and Abraham wept over her, and
-well he might, for she had shared his trials and was a good
-and faithful wife, and she was a mother, even more than a
-wife.</p>
-
-<p>Abraham purchased the cave of Machpelah of Ephron, the
-Hittite, and tenderly laid the remains of this lovely woman
-to rest in one of the chambers of the cave. It is the first
-burial mentioned in the Sacred records. And the tomb
-remains unto this day, hallowed in the eyes of Jews, Christians
-and Mohammedans alike, and was visited by the
-writer.</p>
-
-<p>The lesson which God would teach us in the life of this
-woman in White Raiment is that testings are necessary to
-the development of faith, and that these testings come to us
-in the most ordinary events of our daily lives. All Christians
-surely know by experience that events which seemed
-all darkness at first have ultimately brought them nearer to
-the light. The much-dreaded cloud has proved to be only a
-veil under which God hides His mighty power. His gracious
-query, “Is anything too hard for the Lord?” has comforted
-us, and has turned what we thought to be a curse into a
-blessing. O, can we not trust Him in the darkness as well
-as in the light, knowing that He can bring calm out of
-storm, and that he often chooses the darkness and the cloud
-as a special medium by which to reveal himself? Could we
-climb to heaven by some other way, and escape the shadows
-and the storms of life, how much should we miss of the
-blessed manifestations of God’s revelations of His power.</p>
-
-<p>God speaks to listening ears and waiting hearts as truly
-to-day as He did before the tent door under the oaks in the
-plain of Mamre. He may speak to us through his providence,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-through the voice of a friend, through a book or a
-sermon; but perhaps He does so most frequently in the
-little details of everyday life, in which we can not fail to see
-His dealings with us if our hearts are turned expectantly
-toward him. Only let us be admonished by Sarah’s sad
-mistake. That she made it, proves that she was human.
-But let us be afraid of sin. The door once open, none of us
-can tell into what endless labyrinths of sorrow it will lead
-us. God wants a tried people, not only for their own sake
-but that they may be a blessing to others.</p>
-
-<p>And now we come to a most beautiful scene in Sacred
-History. While, as a whole, the Bible gives the drama of
-human sin and divine redemption, yet it pauses in its wonderful
-revelations to let us look into the homes of the people
-who lived ages ago. It somehow touches human life on all
-its sides. Other books which are held sacred by eastern
-nations, give woman only contemptuous mention. This one
-recognizes the dignity and beauty of her life and work.
-It tells in seven verses the story of Enoch, who walked with
-God three hundred and sixty-five years and who was holy
-enough to escape death, while it gives sixty-six verses to the
-wooing and wedding of Rebekah and Isaac. In the pictures
-which the Sacred Record opens to us of the domestic life of
-the patriarchal age, perhaps this is the most perfectly characteristic
-and beautiful idyl of a marriage, and how it was
-brought about. In its sweetness and sacred simplicity, it is
-a marvelous contrast to the wedding of our modern fashionable
-life. And surely, since God’s Book gives so much time
-and space to the domestic life of women, the daughters of
-modern Christianity ought to regard themselves and their
-affairs of the utmost importance. For the sake of Him who
-gave them such prominence and recognition, they ought to
-love Him.</p>
-
-<p>Abraham, the friend of God, understood fully that it would
-never do to have the heir of promise fall into the hands of a
-heathen wife. He could not bear the thought of taking
-one of the corrupt Canaanites into his family, with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-chance of her leading Isaac into the abominable worship
-of her gods.</p>
-
-<p>Parents often frustrate the grace of God and mar His
-plans irreparably by being careless of the worldly associations
-and affinities of their children.</p>
-
-<p>Sarah, the beautiful and beloved, had been tenderly laid
-away in the cave of Machpelah, and Isaac is now forty years
-of age. Forty years, however, in those good old times, is
-yet young, when the thread of mortal life ran out to a hundred
-and seventy-five or eighty years. As Abraham has
-nearly reached that far period, his sun of life is dipping
-downwards toward the evening horizon. He has but one
-care remaining—to settle his son Isaac in life before he is
-gathered to his fathers.</p>
-
-<p>The scene where Abraham discusses the subject with his
-head servant sheds a peculiar light on the domestic and
-family relations of those days.</p>
-
-<p>Calling Eliezer, his most trusty servant, he discloses to
-him his purpose, and makes him take an oath that he will
-faithfully carry out his wishes. But Abraham’s steward saw
-the difficulties of such a proxy wooing, and expressed a fear
-that the young woman would object to so hazardous a journey
-to share the home of a man whom she had never seen
-and of whom she had possibly never before heard. So, to
-make matters sure, he asks if it would not be better to take
-Isaac with him? To this request the patriarch replied,
-“Beware thou that thou bring not my son thither again.”
-Abraham saw that there was too much risk in allowing Isaac
-to go back to the old home. He might have to be scourged
-out of it as was Jacob, the next in the line, a few years later.
-He must do right and trust God. So he told his steward,
-“The Lord, before whom I walk, will send his angel before
-thee and prosper thy way, and thou shalt take a wife for my
-son of my kindred and of my father’s house.” Then, as he
-saw the ever-present contingency with which human free
-agency may frustrate even Divine Providence, he added,
-“And if the woman will not be willing to follow thee, then<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-thou shalt be clear from this thine oath; only bring not my
-son thither again.”</p>
-
-<p>The picture of the preparations made for this embassy
-denotes a princely station and great wealth. “And the
-servant took ten camels of the camels of his master, and
-departed; for all the goods of his master were in his hand;
-and he arose and went to Mesopotamia, unto the city of
-Nahor.”</p>
-
-<p>Now comes a quaint and beautiful picture of the manners
-of those pastoral days. He made his camels to kneel down
-without the city by a well of water, at the time of the evening
-when the women go out to draw water. With the kneeling
-camels around the well, the aged Eliezer uncovers his
-head in the evening twilight, and with closed eyes and face
-raised towards heaven, he talks to God in this simple and
-yet eloquent way, “O, Lord God of my master Abraham, I
-pray thee, send me good speed this day, and show kindness
-unto my master Abraham. Behold! I stand here by the
-well of water; and the daughters of the men of the city come
-out to draw water: And let it come to pass that the damsel
-to whom I shall say, Let down thy pitcher, I pray thee, that
-I may drink; and she shall say, Drink and I will give thy
-camels drink also: let that same be she that Thou hast appointed
-for Thy servant Isaac; and thereby shall I know
-that Thou hast shewed kindness unto my master.” It is to
-be observed that this aged servant talked to God with all the
-simplicity and directness of a child with its mother. He
-told the Lord where he stood, and it was in the most likely
-place about an Oriental city at evening time, for all the damsels
-come out to the well at that hour of the day to draw
-water. He did not doubt that there was a bride for Isaac in
-the town; and he wanted to find the right one immediately.
-The care of Abraham’s affairs pressed him, and he wanted
-to get through the matter with as little waste of time
-and sentiment as possible. That he might not make any
-mistake in his delicate mission, he tells the Lord of a little
-test he thought of using. He needed a sign from God to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-select the bride from among the women who should come to
-the well. He used his own judgment as far as it went; but
-it stopped short of a decision. He specified that the chosen
-one should be industrious, hospitable, deft, courteous. She
-should be qualified to stand at the head of a princely establishment.</p>
-
-<p>His prayer was speedily granted, for thus the story
-goes on, “And it came to pass, before he had done
-speaking, that, behold Rebekah came out, who was born
-to Bethuel, son of Milcah, the wife of Nahor, Abraham’s
-brother.”</p>
-
-<p>It is noticeable, how strong is the sensibility to womanly
-beauty in this narrative. This young Rebekah is thus
-announced: “And the damsel was very fair to look upon,
-and a virgin, and she went down to the well, and filled her
-pitcher, and came up.” Drawn by the bright eyes, and fair
-face, the old servant hastens to apply the test, doubtless
-hoping that this lovely creature is the appointed one for his
-young master.</p>
-
-<p>“And the servant ran to meet her, and said, Let me, I
-pray thee, drink a little water of thy pitcher. And she said,
-Drink, my Lord; and she hastened, and let down her
-pitcher upon her hand, and gave him drink.”</p>
-
-<p>She gave with a will, with a grace and readiness that outflowed
-the request, and then it is added: “And when she
-had done giving him drink, she said, I will draw water
-for thy camels also, until they have done drinking. And
-she hastened and emptied her pitcher into the trough, and
-ran again unto the well to draw water, and drew for all his
-camels.” Let us fancy ten camels, all on their knees, in a
-row, at the trough, with their long necks, and patient, care-worn
-faces, while the pretty young damsel, with cheerful
-alacrity, is dashing down the water from her pitcher, filling
-and emptying in quick succession, apparently making nothing
-of the toil; the gray-haired old servant, looking on in
-devout recognition of the answer to his prayer, for the story
-says: “And the man, wondering at her, held his peace, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-wit (know) whether the Lord had made his journey prosperous
-or not.”</p>
-
-<p>There was wise penetration into life and the essentials of
-wedded happiness in this prayer of the old servant. What
-he asked for his young master was not beauty, or talent, but
-a ready and unfailing outflow of sympathy and kindness.
-He asked not merely for a gentle nature, a kind heart, but
-he asked for a heart so rich in kindness that it should run
-even beyond what was asked, and be ready to anticipate
-the request with new devices of helpfulness; the lively,
-lighthearted kindness that could not be content with waiting
-on the thirsty old man, but with cheerful alacrity took
-upon herself the care of all the ten camels. This was a gift
-beyond that of beauty, yet when it came in the person of a
-maiden exceedingly fair to look upon, no marvel that the old
-man wondered joyously at his success.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly, as the camels had done drinking, he produced
-from his treasury golden earrings and bracelets with
-which he adorned the maiden. We can easily imagine
-the maidenly delight with which she ran to exhibit
-the gifts of jewelry that thus unexpectedly descended
-upon her.</p>
-
-<p>Nor does Eliezer fail to offer up a prayer of thanksgiving
-for divine guidance. In this he set a worthy example to all
-who seek direction from God. He said, “I, being in the
-way, the Lord led me.” A free translation would be, “I
-used my own judgment as far as it would go, which was a
-long distance from a safe conclusion, and the Lord led me
-the rest of the way.”</p>
-
-<p>Bethuel, when he saw the gifts and heard the words of
-Rebekah, hastened to the well and said to Eliezer, “Come
-in, thou blessed of the Lord; wherefore standest thou without?
-for I have prepared the house, and room for the camels.
-And the man came into the house: and he ungirded the
-camels, and gave straw and provender for the camels, and
-water to wash his feet, and the men’s feet that were with
-him. And there was set meat before him to eat: but he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-said, I will not eat, till I have told my errand. And he said,
-Speak on.”</p>
-
-<p>He then related the purport of his journey, of the prayer
-that he had uttered at the well, and of its fulfillment in a
-generous-minded and beautiful young maiden, and thus he
-ends his story: “And now, if ye will deal kindly and truly
-with my master, tell me: and if not, tell me; that I may
-turn to the right hand or to the left.”</p>
-
-<p>Bethuel answered, “Behold, Rebekah is before thee; take
-her, and go, and let her be thy master’s son’s wife, as the
-Lord hath spoken.”</p>
-
-<p>“And it came to pass, that when Abraham’s servant heard
-their words, he worshipped the Lord, bowing himself to the
-earth.”</p>
-
-<p>And now comes a scene most captivating to female curiosity.
-“The servant brought forth jewels of silver, and jewels
-of gold, and raiment, and gave them to Rebekah; he gave
-also to her brother and to her mother precious things.” The
-scene of examining jewelry and garments and rich stuffs in
-the family party would have made no mean subject for a
-painter. No wonder such a suitor sending such gifts found
-welcome entertainment. So the story goes on: “And they
-did eat and drink, he and the men that were with him, and
-tarried all night; and they rose up in the morning and he
-said, Send me away unto my master. And her brother and
-her mother said, Let the damsel abide with us a few days,
-at the least ten, and after that she shall go.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he said unto them, Hinder me not, seeing the Lord
-hath prospered my way; send me away, that I may go to
-my master. And they said, We will call the damsel and inquire
-at her mouth. And they called Rebekah, and said
-unto her, Wilt thou go with this man? And she said, I will
-go.” Her prompt reply to this important question was an
-index to her character. The Divine approval of her ready
-obedience gave her a grand prophetic Messianic promise
-that thousands of millions should be gathered into His Kingdom
-from the conquest “of those which hate them.” This<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-extra Hebrew prophecy was a flash of God’s light on the fact
-that our Lord should be the Saviour, not only of the Jews,
-but of the entire world.</p>
-
-<p>Thus far this wooing seems to have been conceived and
-conducted in that simple religious spirit recognized in the
-words of the old prayer, “Grant that all our work may be
-begun, continued and ended in thee.” The Father of nations
-has been a never-failing presence in every turn.</p>
-
-<p>“And Rebekah arose, and her damsels, and they rode
-upon the camels, and followed the man; and the servant
-took Rebekah, and went his way.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a long way from the city of Nahor, in Mesopotamia
-to Hebron in the southern borders of Palestine, and between
-the Euphrates and the land of promise stretched leagues of
-hot desert sands, through which the camels slowly and
-patiently toiled day after day with their precious burden.
-But at length Damascus with its refreshing streams, and Mt.
-Hermon with its dome lifted among the clouds, were passed,
-and, towards evening of the last day, just as they reached
-the head of the valley of Eschol, from the summit of which
-opens a magnificent view through the whole length of the
-valley, “Rebekah lifted up her eyes, and when she saw
-Isaac she lighted off the camel. For she had said unto the
-servant, What man is this that walketh in the field to meet
-us? And the servant had said, It is my master; therefore
-she took a veil and covered herself.”</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless for days Isaac had walked the mile and a half
-from his mother’s tent to where the valley of Eschol forms a
-junction with the plain of Mamre, from whence he could look
-up the narrow valley and view the approaching caravan at a
-considerable distance. The expectant bridegroom, brought
-up with the strictest notions of filial submission, waits to
-receive his wife dutifully from his father’s hand, and yet, we
-fancy, day after day he goes out to meet her, and now the
-long-expected caravan, with Eliezer, his father’s most trusted
-servant, at its head, is approaching at eventide, and he
-quickens his step to meet his bride.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>From what we have already seen of Rebekah, she is lively,
-lighthearted, kind, possessed of an alert readiness, prompt
-to see and do what is to be done at the moment. No dreamer
-is she, but a wideawake young woman who knows her own
-mind exactly, and has the fit word and fit action ready for
-each short turn in life. She was quick, cheerful and energetic
-in hospitality. She was prompt and unhesitating in
-her resolve; and yet, at the moment of meeting, she knew
-the value and propriety of the veil. She covered herself that
-she might not unsought be won.</p>
-
-<p>“And Isaac brought her into his mother Sarah’s tent.”
-Tent life in the days of Abraham, in our estimation, must
-have been not only desirable, but grand and glorious. Living,
-as they did, so closely in contact with nature, as God
-made it, fresh, pure air, babbling brooks, rippling streams,
-and blue skies, theirs was a happy life. They were not
-confined in crowded cities, surrounded by dismal walls, but
-on the hillsides, the open valleys and the unbounded plains.
-Their tent was pitched in a clump of oaks, near a living
-stream, and overlooked the plain of Mamre—a beautiful
-picture of freedom, ease and comfort. To such a place he
-took Rebekah, and she became his wife; and he loved her;
-and Isaac was comforted after his mother’s death. So ends
-this most charming story of domestic life in the patriarchal
-age. For beauty, simplicity and directness it has no equal.
-We also see, in the closing words, one of those delicate and
-tender natures that find repose first in the love of a mother,
-and when that stay is withdrawn, lean upon a beloved wife.</p>
-
-<p>So ideally pure, and sweet, and tenderly religious has
-been the whole inception and carrying on and termination
-of this wedding, that Isaac and Rebekah have been remembered
-in the wedding ritual of Christian churches as models
-of a holy marriage according to the divine will.</p>
-
-<p>Though for nineteen years Rebekah was childless, yet
-retained she her husband’s love. This may have been a
-trial to Isaac, since the line of the blessing was to pass
-through him. That he thought much about it is evident,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-for, at length, he “entreated the Lord for his wife,” and his
-intercession was based upon a divine foundation in Jehovah’s
-promise. And, possibly, even Isaac had to be educated
-up to this point, namely, that the seed of promise must be
-sought from God, so that it should be regarded, not as the
-fruit of nature, but as the gift of divine grace.</p>
-
-<p>In due time Esau and Jacob were born, and they were
-twins, but with natures and characteristics marked more for
-their contrasts than similarity. Beyond the bare statement,
-“And the boys grew,” nothing is said of their childhood and
-youth—the formative periods of their lives.</p>
-
-<p>When they had grown to manhood’s estate, we are
-informed that “Esau was a cunning hunter, a man of the
-field; and Jacob was a plain man, dwelling in tents.” The
-free and easy life in the chase developed in Esau a robust
-appearance, and for that reason, and also “because he did
-eat of his venison,” Isaac loved Esau. Jacob is represented
-to us as of a more delicate make-up and naturally appealed
-more to the mother heart. “Rebekah loved Jacob.” From
-merely a parental standpoint, both were wrong. Even
-though the characteristics of these boys were wide apart, the
-parents should have been united in their love, and impartially
-discharged their duties, and let God, in his own good
-time, make His selection. But here, as in the lives of
-Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebekah delayed the blessing
-God designed they should have, and brought sorrow into
-their own lives. It is evident that the ardent Rebekah, by
-her animated, energetic declarations, formed a very significant
-complement to Isaac, confiding more in the divine
-declarations as to her boys than Isaac did, and therefore
-better able to appreciate the deeper nature of Jacob. But
-when Isaac shows his preference for Esau to be the heir, the
-courageous woman forgets her vocation, and with artifice
-counsels Jacob to steal the blessing from Isaac—a transgression
-for which she had to atone in not seeing her favorite
-son after she sent him away, out of reach of his brother’s
-anger. She had only Esau left, and he must have made her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-feel that it was her partiality that had robbed him of what
-he prized most highly. His heathen wives had been a
-“grief of mind” to her. She said, in her diplomatic effort to
-get Jacob off to a place of safety, “I am weary of my life
-because of the daughters of Heth. If Jacob take a wife from
-the daughters of Heth, such as these which are the daughters
-of the land, what good shall my life do me?” Probably
-Esau did not mend matters by adding to his family the Ishmaeltish
-woman.</p>
-
-<p>Rebekah’s habit of managing affairs may be more common
-than we think. It is the fault of energetic souls. She loved
-Jacob with the passionate, tropical strength of her fervid
-heart. She would not trust God to give him what she believed
-he ought to receive. It is very hard for such as she
-to wait patiently for the Lord when His delays are developing
-faith.</p>
-
-<p>However, viewed from a human standpoint, her faith in the
-divine purposes was much more clear-sighted than that of
-Isaac. Consenting to be laid on the altar as a sacrifice to
-God, Isaac had the stamp of submission early and deeply
-impressed on his soul. Hence, in the spiritual aspect of his
-character, he was the man of patience, of acquiescence, of
-susceptibility, of obedience. Rebekah, on the other hand,
-was energetic, intensely active, self-confident, a most excellent
-manager, even tricky, but nevertheless capable and efficient.
-She had the faults which usually go with such traits
-of character. Taking things into her own hands, she even
-meddled with Providence.</p>
-
-<p>But was she not provoked to this act by Isaac himself?
-Isaac’s willful act does not consist alone in his arbitrary determination
-to present Esau with the blessing of the theocratic
-birthright, although Rebekah received that divine sentence
-respecting her children before their birth, and which,
-no doubt, she had mentioned to him, but the manner in
-which he intends to bless Esau. He arranges to bless him
-in unbecoming secrecy, without the knowledge of Rebekah
-and Jacob. The preparation of the venison, in its main<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-point of view, is an excuse to gain time and place for the
-secret act. In this point of view, the act of Rebekah appears
-in a different light. His well-calculated prudence was skillfully
-caught in the net of Rebekah’s shrewdness.</p>
-
-<p>A want of divine confidence may be recognized through
-all his actions. Rebekah, however, has so far the advantage
-of him that she in her deception has the divine assurance
-that Jacob was the heir, while Isaac has only his human
-reason without any inward spiritual certainty. Rebekah’s
-error consists in thinking that she must direct divine Providence
-by means of human deception. The divine promise
-would have been fulfilled without her assistance. Of course,
-when compared with Isaac’s fatal error, she was right.
-Though she deceived him greatly, misled her favorite son,
-and alienated Esau from her, there was yet something saving
-in her action according to her intentions. For to Esau
-the most comprehensive blessing might have become only a
-curse. He was not fitted for it.</p>
-
-<p>Viewed from Rebekah’s point of view, the lesson for us is,
-we are not to do evil, that good may come. The sinful element
-in her act was the wrong application of her assurance
-of faith, for which she suffered, perhaps, many long years of
-melancholy solitude.</p>
-
-<p>Had this noble woman in White Raiment not erred she
-would not have been human. As a whole, she has a beautiful
-character—beautiful in its generous helpfulness, in its prudence,
-in its magnanimity, and in her theocratic zeal of faith.</p>
-
-<p>Here Rebekah obviously disappears from the stage of life.
-It has been conjectured that she died during Jacob’s sojourn
-in Padan-aram, whither she had sent him to escape the tragic
-consequences of her hasty conduct, for she is not mentioned
-when Jacob returned to his father, nor do we hear of her
-burial till it is incidentally mentioned by Jacob on his deathbed.
-She was buried in the cave of Machpelah, by the side
-of Sarah.</p>
-
-<p>After Jacob had obtained the theocratic birthright he fled
-from his father’s home in Beer-sheba to Padan-aram, or the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-city of Haran, in Mesopotamia. Haran was situated about
-four hundred and fifty miles north-east from Beer-sheba. If
-the young man walked thirty miles a day, for he performed
-this long journey over the mountains and through the desert
-on foot, it took him fifteen days. No doubt, as he drew near
-the well, before the city, he was footsore, dust-covered,
-homesick, and greatly depressed in mind, for the occasion
-of his sudden departure and the anger of his brother Esau
-were still fresh in memory.</p>
-
-<p>But what a quaint, picturesque scene of Oriental life is
-presented to our view. It is yet early evening. The shepherds,
-with their flocks, are moving from various points over
-the plain to one common centre. Three of the shepherds
-had already arrived, and Jacob salutes them, and asks,
-“My brethren, whence be ye?” And they answered, “Of
-Haran.” Then he inquired, “Know ye Laban?” They
-made reply, “We know him,” then, pointing to a shepherdess
-slowly leading her flock over the plain towards the
-well, said, “Behold Rachel, his daughter, cometh with the
-sheep.” While he was yet talking with the shepherds,
-Rachel drew near “with her father’s sheep.” Jacob saw his
-opportunity, for the great stone over the mouth of the well
-had not been removed, and, though it was the work of three
-men to remove the stone, he hastens to perform this task for
-the beautiful shepherdess alone, and does for her what his
-mother had done for Eliezer’s camels, watered her flock.
-Clearly, it was love at first sight. Rachel must have deeply
-impressed him. And what could have been her thoughts as
-she stood by her flock and saw this youth pour bucketfull
-after bucketfull into the stone troughs for her sheep? It
-was certainly an impressive introduction.</p>
-
-<p>The sheep watered, and before he made himself known,
-he stepped up to the bewitching shepherdess, and kissed her.
-This story of Rachel, the pretty shepherdess of the plains of
-Mesopotamia, who took with a glance the heart of the loving,
-homesick Jacob, and held it to the end of her days, has
-always had a peculiar interest, for there is that in it which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-appeals to some of the deepest feelings of the human heart.
-The beauty of Rachel, the deep love with which she was
-loved by Jacob from their first meeting by the well of Haran,
-when he showed to her the simple courtesies of the desert
-life, and kissed her and told her he was Rebekah’s son; the
-long servitude with which he patiently served for her, in
-which the seven years “seemed to him but a few days, for
-the love he had to her;” their marriage at last, after the
-cruel disappointment through the fraud which substituted
-the elder sister in the place of the younger; and the death
-of Rachel “in the way to Ephrath, which is Bethlehem,”
-when she had given birth to Benjamin, and had become
-still more endeared to her husband; his deep grief and ever-living
-regrets for her loss—these things make up a touching
-tale of personal and domestic history which has kept alive
-the memory of Rachel through all the long centuries down
-to the present time. Her untimely death has been likened
-to a “bunch of violets pulled up by the roots, with the soil
-clinging to them—their exquisite perfume reminding one
-of the leafy nook in which they grew.”</p>
-
-<p>What a mystery is love! We can not define it. It can
-only be unlocked by the key of experience. Love is not a
-product of the reason. It is the free play of the spiritual
-sensibilities in the possession of its object. And if human
-love is inexplicable, divine love is an ocean too deep for the
-plummet of man, and by far too broad to be bounded by the
-thought of the loftiest intelligence in the universe.</p>
-
-<p>Chaste human love is a beautiful thing, by which conjugal
-love is afterwards more and more strengthened and confirmed.
-And, in this scene at the well, we have emphasized
-the fact that virtuous maidens do not need to attend large,
-exciting assemblies or popular resorts, to get husbands. If
-they are true to themselves, they can safely trust God, who
-is able to give them pious, honorable and upright husbands.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Rachel learned that Jacob was her father’s
-nephew, and that he was Rebekah’s son, “she ran and told<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-her father.” When Laban heard Rachel’s story, he hastened
-to meet Jacob, and brought him to his house.</p>
-
-<p>After a short stay as the guest of the family, it seemed
-best to Laban that wages should be given to Jacob for his
-services, but instead of wages he desires Rachel, and, instead
-of service for an indefinite time, he promises a service of
-seven years. Jacob’s service, it is thought by some writers,
-represents the price which was usually paid for the wife.
-Doubtless, Rachel was worth to Jacob the years of service
-he paid, but doubtless then, as now, prices varied according
-to age and beauty, and in some Eastern countries the prices
-are higher than in others. The custom still exists. A man
-without means serves from three to seven years for his bride.
-To Jacob, these years of service seemed but a few days. His
-love for Rachel made his long service a delight to him. He
-was cheerful and joyful in hope.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the years of service Laban made a great
-nuptial feast. These Oriental weddings last seven days.
-Doubtless Laban arranged this feast, the better to facilitate
-Jacob’s deception by the coming and going of guests, and
-the general bustle and noise characteristic of such occasions.
-The deception was also possible through the custom, namely,
-the bride was led veiled to the bridegroom and the bridal
-chamber. Laban probably believed, as to the base deception,
-that he would be excused, because he had already in
-view the concession of the second daughter, so Leah, the
-elder daughter, was substituted. The motive for this is not
-stated. Perhaps Laban recognized a skillful and useful
-shepherd in Jacob. He may also have acted from regard to
-his own interest, especially since he knew that Jacob possessed
-a great inheritance at home.</p>
-
-<p>The substitution of Leah for Rachel is the first retribution
-Jacob experienced for the deceitful practices of his former
-days. He had, through fraud and cunning, secured the
-place and blessing of Esau—he, the younger, in place of
-the elder. Now, by the same deceit, the elder is put upon
-him in the place of the younger. God has somehow so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
-arranged the affairs of men, that what a man sows, that
-shall he also reap. Sin is often punished with sin.</p>
-
-<p>When Laban was asked for an explanation of his conduct,
-he replied that it was not the custom in his country to give
-the younger into marriage before the first-born, a bit of
-information he should have given Jacob when he first made
-suit for Rachel. His excuse does not justify in the least his
-deception, but there was, however, a sting for Jacob in his
-reply, namely, in the emphasis of the right of the first-born.</p>
-
-<p>There was, therefore, nothing left for Jacob but to give
-another seven years’ service for Rachel. So, at the end of
-the marriage week or feast of Leah, the second wedding
-followed, and the years of service were rendered afterwards.
-We do not know why Rachel was affectionately loved, while
-Leah held but an indifferent place in Jacob’s heart. But
-then there is no accounting for, or explaining, love. Leah,
-it is said, was “tender-eyed,” that is to say, weak-eyed.
-This, however, does not necessarily mean she was sore-eyed
-or blear-eyed, but simply they were not full, clear, and
-sparkling, not in keeping with the Oriental idea of beauty,
-though otherwise she might have been comely. But to an
-Oriental, black eyes, clear, lustrous, full of life and fire,
-especially, when in addition to all these, the eye is expressive,
-are considered the principal part of female beauty.
-Rachel was the fortunate possessor of all these charming
-qualities of Eastern beauty, and so must have charmed, captivated,
-and held Jacob in spite of all other obstacles.</p>
-
-<p>That Leah tried to win his affections is evident from what
-she says in connection with the birth of Reuben, her first
-born. “Now therefore,” she says, “my husband will love
-me.” No doubt, during the seven years that Jacob was in
-the home of Laban, her love for him became deep and
-strong, which had, no doubt, induced her to consent to
-Laban’s deception. So, after the birth of the first son, she
-hoped to win, through her child, Jacob’s love in the strictest
-sense. After the birth of the second, she hoped to be put on
-a footing of equality with Rachel, and to be delivered from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-her disregard. After the third one, she hoped at least for a
-constant affection. At the birth of the fourth, she looked
-entirely away from her surroundings to Jehovah by calling
-him Judah—praised be Jehovah.</p>
-
-<p>If Rachel obtained Jacob’s affections because of her beauty
-and loveliness, and he refused to bestow upon Leah that
-affectionate consideration for which she was grieving her life
-away, it may be a comfort to those who suffer as Leah did,
-to know that God does not look for beauty from man’s standpoint,
-and that the sweet graces of mind and heart go farther
-than personal charms, for He certainly conferred more
-honor upon her than He did upon Rachel. He gave her
-more children than to Rachel. She was also, through her
-posterity, the mother of Moses, David, John the Baptist, and
-the greatest honor of all, was the mother of our precious
-Lord Jesus Christ. Leah was not an idolator, so far as we
-know, while the beautiful Rachel was tainted with this
-abomination, and it seems to have clung to her posterity, for
-it was the tribe of Ephraim that led Israel in the sin of idol
-worship. So that while Leah may not have been as beautiful
-as her fair sister, she was more loyal to God, and doubtless
-was, on that account, so greatly honored of Him.</p>
-
-<p>But the fair, clear-eyed, beautiful Rachel, like the lovely
-Sarah and sprightly Rebekah, was barren and childless, and
-because of this became very much dejected, and exclaimed,
-“Give me children or else I die!” From this expression we
-are to understand, she would die from dejection. Doubtless
-this dejection led to the substitution of her maid Bilhah.
-Her jealous love for Jacob is overbalanced by her envy of her
-sister. The favored Rachel desired children as her own, at
-any cost, lest she should stand beside her sister childless.
-The ambition to be among the progenitors of the Messiah
-made Hebrew women eager to have children. Rachel was
-not willing to leave the founding of the people of God to her
-sister only, but wished also to become an ancestress, as well
-as Leah, but in very deed, not until Joseph’s birth, her very
-own, could she say, “Now God has taken away my reproach.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>At length, after a service of twenty years or more, God
-called Jacob to return to his own people. Laban had been a
-hard master, not only to Jacob, but to his own daughters.
-“Are we not counted of him strangers?” said they in their
-conference with Jacob concerning the return. He had sold
-them as strangers, more as slaves, for the service of their
-husband. Hence they had nothing more to hope for from
-him, for this very price, that is, the blessing resulting from
-Jacob’s service, he had entirely consumed. The daughters
-had received no share of it. Hence it is evident that they
-speak with an inward alienation from their father, and are
-quite willing to go with Jacob to the land of promise.</p>
-
-<p>The time set for the departure was the feast of sheep-shearing.
-Either Laban had not invited Jacob to this feast,
-or Jacob took the opportunity of leaving, in order to visit his
-own flocks. As the sheep-shearing lasted several days, the
-opportunity was very favorable for his flight.</p>
-
-<p>“But Rachel had stolen the images,” the Penates or household
-gods, which were honored as guardians, and as oracles.
-From this incident we may infer that she was not altogether
-free from the superstitions and idolatry which prevailed in
-the land whence Abraham had been called, and which still,
-to some degree, infected even those families among whom
-the true God was known. It is thought she was actuated
-to steal them with the superstitious idea that her father, being
-prevented from consulting them as oracles, would not be able
-to pursue Jacob. This act, however, as also the well-planned
-and ready dexterity and presence of mind with which she
-concealed her theft, and prompt denial to her father, reveals
-a cunning which is far more befitting the daughter of Laban
-than the wife of the prudent patriarch.</p>
-
-<p>Jacob continued his journey without interruption until the
-fords of the Jabbok were reached. While at Mahanaim he
-sent messengers to Esau, with a view of bringing about a
-reconciliation with his grieved brother. When he reached the
-Jabbok the messengers returned and brought the alarming
-intelligence that Esau was coming to meet him, and four<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-hundred men were with him. This greatly distressed Jacob,
-and led him to divide his family and his flocks, and to send
-them in bands before him. Once more, in a critical time,
-when he expected an attack from Esau, his discriminate
-regard for Rachel is again shown by placing Leah and her
-children in the place of danger, in advance of Rachel and
-her child.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus067.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">JACOB’S STRUGGLE AT THE JABBOK.</p>
-
-<p>Having thus disposed of his family and his flocks, Jacob
-remains behind to pray. It was the great struggle of his
-life. And the burden of that midnight cry was, “Deliver
-me, I pray Thee, from the hand of my brother, from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-hand of Esau; for I fear him, lest he will come and smite
-me, and the mother with the children.” At length the angel
-of the Lord said, “Let me go, for the day breaketh!” But
-Jacob, as if his life hung on the issue, which it doubtless did,
-replied, “I will not let Thee go, except Thou bless me!”</p>
-
-<p>God heard his prayer and delivered him out of the hands
-of his brother, Esau.</p>
-
-<p>As Jacob passed over the Jabbok “the sun rose upon him,”
-and he set forward on his journey a changed man.</p>
-
-<p>In due time Jacob reached the Jordan at Succoth, thence
-to Shechem, and then to Bethel. At each of these places he
-halted.</p>
-
-<p>It seems that for a considerable time after the return to
-Palestine, the images, or household Penates, which Rachel
-had stolen from her father, remained in the family, perhaps
-connived at by Jacob, till, on being reminded by the Lord of
-the vow which he had made at Bethel when he fled from the
-face of Esau, and being bidden of Him to erect an altar to
-the God who appeared to him there, Jacob felt the glaring
-impiety of thus solemnly appearing before God with the taint
-of idolatry cleaving to his beloved Rachel, said, “Put away
-the strange gods from among you.” After thus casting out
-the polluting things from his house, Jacob, at Bethel, amidst
-its sacred associations, received from God an emphatic
-promise and blessing.</p>
-
-<p>After his spirit had been purified and strengthened by
-communion with God, by the assurance of the divine love
-and favor, by the consciousness of evil put away and duties
-performed, it was, as he journeyed away from Bethel, that
-the chastening blow fell and Rachel died. Doubtless the
-blessings that came as a result of the cleansing and purging
-from idolatry at Bethel had their effect in bringing Rachel
-to a higher sense of her relation to that Jehovah in whom her
-husband, with all his faults of character, so firmly believed.</p>
-
-<p>Five miles south of Jerusalem, and a mile and a half from
-Bethlehem, in the way to Hebron, is a beautiful chapel,
-sacred to the memory of Rachel. This is the place where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-beautiful Rachel surrendered her own life for the life of her
-second son, whom she named Ben-oni (son of my pain). The
-wish she had uttered at Joseph’s birth, that God would give
-her another son, now, after a long period, perhaps sixteen or
-seventeen years, is at last realized.</p>
-
-<p>Rachel held Jacob’s love to the last, and even down to his
-old age he mourned her loss. The stone pillar which he set
-up at her grave is the first recorded instance of the setting
-up of a sepulchral monument; caves having been up to this
-time spoken of as the usual places of burial. The tomb of
-Rachel is one of the shrines which Mohammedans, Jews and
-Christians unite in honoring, and concerning which their
-traditions are identical. At the time of our visit, it happened
-to be the time of new moon, when the chapel was
-open and all lighted up with olive oil lamps, and the chapel
-and crypt filled with weeping women. The lamentations
-were real and sincere, and, had we remained very long, we
-should have wept out of very sympathy for the grief-stricken
-mourners of this princess of Israel. The thought that here
-this lovely woman in White Raiment sacrificed her own life
-for another was in itself depressing. This first mortuary
-monument, sacred to the memory of a great love and a great
-sorrow, has come down to us through more than three
-thousand years. One may see it “but a little to come to
-Ephrath.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="indent2a">“Tell me, ye winged winds,</div>
-<div class="indent3">That round my pathway roar,</div>
-<div class="indent2">Do ye not know some spot</div>
-<div class="indent3">Where mortals weep no more?</div>
-<div class="indent2">Some lone and pleasant dell,</div>
-<div class="indent3">Some valley in the west,</div>
-<div class="indent2">Where, free from toil and pain,</div>
-<div class="indent3">The weary soul may rest?</div>
-<div class="verse">The loud wind dwindled to a whisper low,</div>
-<div class="verse">And sighed for pity as it answered, ‘No!’”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Leah probably lived for some years after Jacob reached
-Hebron. Whether she ever found grace in his sight is not
-stated. However, in Jacob’s differences with Laban both<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-Leah and Rachel appeared to be attached to him with equal
-fidelity, while later, in the critical moment, when he expected
-an attack from Esau, his discriminate regard for the
-several members of his family was again shown by his placing
-Rachel and her child hindermost, in the least exposed
-situation, Leah and her children next, and the two hand-maids,
-with their children, in front. Of her death nothing
-is said. From the expression, “There I buried Leah,”
-(Gen. xlix, 31), we are led to believe that she died at Hebron
-before Jacob went down into Egypt. She was buried in the
-family sepulchre, “in the field of Machpelah, which is before
-Mamre.” Since Hebron is only twenty-five miles from
-Rachel’s tomb, near Bethlehem, it is quite strange that Jacob
-did not bury his beloved Rachel in the family sepulchre,
-along with Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebekah, and
-Leah, and where he was himself finally buried.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III.<br />
-
-Womanhood During the Egyptian Bondage and in
-the Desert of Sinai.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Jochebed—Her Remarkable Courage—Thonoris—Her Compassion—Heroic
-Labors Seemingly Unrewarded—Zipporah, the
-Midianite Shepherdess—Glorifying Daily Labor—At a Wayside
-Inn—Miriam—Her Song of Triumph at the Red Sea—Her
-Affliction at Hazeroth—An Eventful Life.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> history of the human race runs on from the tomb of
-Rachel for over four hundred years without bringing to our
-notice any woman in White Raiment until Jochebed, the
-mother of Moses, is reached. In the meantime, the dreams
-of Joseph are told, his wandering in the fields of Shechem,
-and the finding of his brethren in Dothan, the heartless
-transaction with the Midianites, who, in turn, sold Joseph
-into Egypt, his prison life followed by his elevation next to
-the throne and a seven years’ famine, when Jacob and his
-sons, as Abraham had done before them, went down into
-Egypt, the years of favor in the house of Pharaoh, and the
-bondage, bitter and hard, all are told. But, in spite of all,
-the suffering Israelites, because blessed of God, prospered
-and “increased abundantly, and multiplied, and waxed
-exceedingly mighty; and the land was filled with them.”</p>
-
-<p>The reigning Pharaoh became alarmed at this state of
-affairs, and, to repress the Israelites, “made their lives bitter
-with hard bondage, in mortar, and in brick, and in all
-manner of service in the field.” But, as a stream in a spring
-freshet bursts through every obstruction, so the Israelites
-overleaped every barrier thrown in their way by the Egyptian
-taskmasters. At length a decree was issued that every
-son born to the Israelites should be cast into the Nile.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>But there was at least one woman in the house of bondage
-who feared the Lord more than she feared Pharaoh. Her
-name was Jochebed, which means, whose glory is Jehovah.
-If ever a name had attached with it the characteristic of the
-person bearing it, it was Jochebed, the wife of Amram, and
-daughter of Levi. That the glory of this woman in White
-Raiment was Jehovah, is evident from the fact the hard circumstances
-in which she was placed by the command of
-Pharaoh could not make her lose faith in God. Others
-might obey the unwarranted and heartless, as well as wicked
-decree, she would not, for she believed it was better to obey
-God rather than man, and to this belief her faith was
-anchored, and held steady amid the awful wail of bereaved
-motherhood as it ascended into the ear of God from the fields
-of Goshen.</p>
-
-<p>Jochebed was already the mother of Miriam and Aaron,
-and, since Aaron was three years older than Moses, the
-decree that all Hebrew male children should be cast into the
-Nile could not have been in force at Aaron’s birth, or at
-least had not reached its dangerous climax. As a member
-of the house of Levi, Jochebed shows the daring and energetic
-boldness for which her tribe had become distinguished,
-and indicated the qualities needful for the future priesthood.
-That the child was so fair, she recognized in it as a good
-omen. Josephus traces this intuition of faith, which harmonized
-with the maternal feeling of complacency and desire to
-preserve his life, to a special revelation. The means of preservation
-chosen by Jochebed is especially attributed to her
-genius and courage. It was all the more daring, since in the
-use of it she seemed to have, from the outset, the daughter
-of Pharaoh in mind.</p>
-
-<p>Prompted by an heroic faith, this poor Hebrew slave
-woman, in the house of a cruel and heartless bondage, dared
-to disobey the royal decree, trusting in God to carry her
-through the perilous enterprise of saving the life of her well-favored
-child. The chrism of hot tears which fell on the
-babe’s forehead, set him apart to the tremendous task of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-leading up to nationhood a race of degraded slaves whose
-hands were horny with unpaid toil, whose faces had grown
-scowling and knotted under the overseer’s lash.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus073.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE ISRAELITES IN BONDAGE.</p>
-
-<p>Jochebed held the boy hard against her heart when she
-found she could no longer hide him, and said, more to herself
-and God than to any human helper, “My baby shall
-not die.” The resolution once formed in the mother’s heart,
-the next task was to carry it into effect. Then came the
-gathering of the papyrus leaves, the getting of the bitumen,
-the building of the little ark, and the finding of the best
-place for it among the flags of the Nile.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>At length the little craft, with many a scalding tear mingled
-with the bitumen, was found waterworthy. Then, with
-many a prayer and heartache, and no small faith in the
-righteousness of her act, the dear child of promise, with
-many a passionate kiss, such as mothers only can give, was
-laid asleep in as soft a nest as the loving hands of mother
-could devise. Then the little craft, baby and all, was carried
-to the great river of Egypt, “and she laid it in the flags
-by the river’s brink.” Quickly the mother walked away,
-though her heart was crushed and bleeding, for how could
-she look upon her child if any disaster should overtake his
-small boat on the bosom of the mighty Nile? But her faith
-in God was sure. Her good sense had done its best. Her
-courage made her equal to facing the anger of the king;
-and she would leave the care of her little darling to the God
-of her fathers.</p>
-
-<p>But the mother-love could not wholly abandon the little
-craft to its fate, without at least knowing how it fared with
-the child. So, back a little from the river, where the tall
-flags formed a gracious shade over the little brother, and
-her body concealed in the rank grass, the large, bright eyes
-of Miriam were fixed on the babe’s hiding-place, and the
-swift feet of the sister were ready to run to tell the mother
-whatever might happen.</p>
-
-<p>Pretty soon the watchful eyes of Miriam saw a royal
-retinue issue from the palace gate, and as it drew near the
-river’s brink she discerned that it was Thonoris, the daughter
-of Pharaoh, and her maidens, come down to the Nile to
-bathe in the open stream, as was the custom of ancient
-Egyptians. As the princess and her maidens walked along
-the river’s side, she saw the little ark among the flags, and
-sent one of the maids to fetch it. And when she saw the
-child she had compassion on it, and said, “This is one of the
-Hebrew’s children.” But the eyes of Miriam, the faithful
-sister, closely watched the scene, and when the little ark was
-safely drawn to shore by the maids of Thonoris, she ran up
-to the Egyptian princess and said, “Shall I go and call to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-thee a nurse of the Hebrew women, that she may nurse the
-child for thee? And Pharaoh’s daughter said to her, Go.
-And the maid went and called the child’s mother.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus075.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">MOSES RESCUED FROM THE NILE.</p>
-
-<p>The compassion of the princess towards the beautiful
-child led her to adopt him; and when she did so, making
-him, therefore, prospectively an Egyptian, she did not need,
-we may well believe, to educate him secretly. The taking
-of the child into the royal household, doubtless rendered the
-cruel edict less severe, if not wholly inoperative.</p>
-
-<p>All this reads like a fairy tale, but there is no end of the
-wonders wrought by our God on behalf of those who trust
-His love and power.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>“And the child grew.” Of course it would under the
-watchful care of such a nurse. One can easily see how during
-those years in which Jochebed was nursing her boy as
-the adopted son of the Egyptian princess, she made the most
-of her opportunity. In a tongue not understood in the palace
-she taught the child of Him who should redeem the race.
-She held him loyal to the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
-Her instruction had been careful, thorough, and direct from
-her father, Levi, the son of Jacob; and she was true to her
-faith from her very heart’s core. So that, with the very life
-of his mother, the growing boy had drank in the Hebrew
-spirit.</p>
-
-<p>At first it must have been a surprise to the young heir to
-the Egyptian throne when his Hebrew nurse unfolded to him
-the secret of his descent. That while legally and formally
-he was the son of the Princess Thonoris, inwardly he was
-the son of another mother, and belonged to another race, not
-of the dominant, but of the servile, race; not a worldly, but
-a spiritual prince. Probably he had the usual struggle with
-self. It was no easy matter to lay aside the flattering prospect
-of one day sitting on the throne of Egypt, to forever
-renounce the glory and glitter of an earthly court, and to
-identify himself with the slave people whose lives were made
-bitter in all manner of service. Surely, Jochebed must not
-only have been a loving mother, but a wise spiritual teacher
-to thus gain the surrender of all that was dear to her child
-of the earthly life, that he might gain the heavenly. He
-must have been completely regenerated when he refused to
-be called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter, but chose to suffer
-affliction with the people of God. Only a personal knowledge
-of the Redeemer could have brought him to esteem the
-reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>No better compliment could have been paid Jochebed than
-the fact that in that corrupt, magnificent, heathen court she
-was able to do her work so well. Her son’s flawless choice
-of the Divine will made him the greatest man, the Son of
-God excepted, ever veiled in human flesh. That was the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-best possible sign and seal of her capability and faithfulness.</p>
-
-<p>When her child had passed beyond the years of childhood,
-and, as a nurse, could no longer retain him, “she brought
-him unto Pharaoh’s daughter,” and Thonoris, with almost
-infinite care, completed the boy’s education by instructing
-him in all the wisdom of Egypt; hence Moses was prepared
-both negatively and positively for his life work. Positively
-by his great-hearted mother, Jochebed; negatively by the
-Egyptian princess Thonoris, thereby, by her own hand, brought
-up the deliverer and avenger of the oppressed Israelites.</p>
-
-<p>At this point Jochebed is lost to view. She drops out of
-history, and nothing more is known of her. Hers emphatically
-was a work of faith, for in all probability she died
-while Moses was under discipline in the land of Midian.
-Her people, for whom she had wrought so heroically, were
-still serving “with rigor” in building for Pharaoh the
-“treasure cities Pithom and Raamses.” The son from whom
-she had hoped so much as the crown prince of the land was
-in exile in the back side of the desert; yet her faith held
-steady as she said with her parting breath, “God will
-deliver His people. He saved Moses from the wrath of
-Pharaoh and from the reptiles of the Nile; He will yet bring
-him back to lead Israel out of this cruel bondage.”</p>
-
-<p>How many a mother has gone down to her grave in sorrow
-without realizing the fruit of her toil, perhaps broken-hearted,
-as Jochebed may have done, when she saw her son
-hastening into the desert to escape the vengeance which
-would surely have overtaken him for smiting the Egyptian.
-Doubtless she never again saw his face, and may have wondered
-to what purpose was all her labor. It is difficult to
-conceive of a grander purpose in motherhood than that of
-sending out into the world young men spiritually, morally
-and physically healthy, with correct principles and holy
-purposes; and it is one of the saddest spectacles in life when
-these preparations are cast aside by ungrateful or wayward
-acts. All human help is vain, her sorrow and her anguish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
-are too deep to be reached by sympathy. God alone is her
-refuge. She is often at the throne of grace with strong cries
-and tears, and with a faith that will not shrink. Doubtless
-such were the last days of the brave, the courageous, the
-heroic Jochebed, as she saw the form of her beloved Moses
-disappear in the desert of Midian. But God honored her
-faith as no woman’s faith had ever been honored in the life
-and works of Moses, the great law-giver, and leader of
-Israel’s hosts out of the land of bondage.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“Faithful, O Lord, Thy mercies are,</div>
-<div class="indent">A rock that can not move:</div>
-<div class="verse">A thousand promises declare</div>
-<div class="indent">Thy constancy of love.”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>But though Moses had fled from the face of Pharaoh
-because, in his effort to defend a Hebrew who was being
-smitten by an Egyptian, slew the oppressor, he had not gone
-into the land of Midian so far but His eye followed the
-young refugee.</p>
-
-<p>Away in the south-eastern part of Arabia, toward the close
-of what we may well believe to have been a long day’s travel
-through the burning sand of that arid country, the young
-refugee sat down under the grateful shade of a cluster of
-palm trees that flourished by the side of a well. As he sat
-there resting, possibly quite homesick, the daughters of
-Jethro, a Midianite sheik and priest, came with their father’s
-flock to the well to water them. The fact that it took seven
-of these daughters to lead the flock to the well, shows that
-the Midianite was wealthy. These maidens lowered their
-buckets into the well and then drew them up brimming full
-of water, and poured it out into the stone troughs. They did
-this again and again, while Moses was a silent observer. It
-does not appear that he in any way interrupted the work.</p>
-
-<p>But scarcely had the panting nostrils of the flocks begun
-to cool a little in the brimming troughs than some rough
-Bedouin shepherds came with their flocks and drove the
-maidens and their flock from the well. This was too much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-for Moses. His face began to color up, and his eyes flash
-with indignation, and all the gallantry of his nature was
-aroused. He naturally had a quick temper, as he demonstrated
-in the case of the Egyptian oppressing an Israelite,
-and as he showed afterward when he broke all the Ten Commandments
-at once by shattering the two granite slabs on
-which the law was written. Hence the harsh treatment of
-the girls sets him on fire. The injustice of these Bedouin
-shepherds was more than he could bear, and he came to the
-rescue of the maidens of the Midianite sheik. Driving the
-shepherds away, he told the daughters of Jethro to gather
-their flock once more and bring them again to the watering
-troughs. Here the beautiful character of Moses comes out,
-and shows that the careful training of his faithful mother
-had not been in vain. Though brought up as a prince in
-the court of Egypt, he takes hold of the water buckets and
-draws water from the well, and waters the immense flock
-which had taken seven maidens to drive to the well! What
-a sight it must have been to these daughters of the priest of
-Midian as they stood by and saw this brave, unselfish act.
-What wonder that Zipporah fell in love with such a young
-man?</p>
-
-<p>Hard as the task must have been, it was quickly finished
-and the flock early sheltered in the fold. So much so that
-Jethro asked of his daughters, “How is it that ye are come
-so soon to-day?” They answered, “An Egyptian delivered
-us out of the hand of the shepherds, and also drew water
-enough for us, and watered the flock.” Jethro further
-inquired, “Where is he? Why is it that ye have left the
-man?”</p>
-
-<p>We confess it was a somewhat ungrateful act on the part
-of these girls not to invite the young man to their father’s
-home, but it only shows that they were so modest as to be
-too bashful to make such an advance.</p>
-
-<p>So Moses was invited to the home of the Midianite sheik,
-and in due time Zipporah was given to him in marriage, and
-she became the mother of his two sons, Gershom and Eliezer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>The Bible does not record much of Zipporah’s life, but,
-evidently from the fact that she was a shepherdess, she was
-industrious, notwithstanding the great wealth and influence
-of her father. What was the use of Zipporah’s bemeaning
-herself with work when she might have reclined on the hillside
-near her father’s tent, and plucked buttercups, and
-dreamed out romances, and sighed idly to the winds, and
-wept over imaginary songs to the brooks. But no. She
-knew that work was honorable, and that every girl ought to
-have something to do, and so she led her father’s flock to the
-fields, to the watering troughs, and to the safe shelter of the
-fold. In how many households are there young women without
-practical and useful employments? Many of them are
-waiting for fortunate and prosperous matrimonial alliance,
-but some lounger like themselves will come along, and after
-counting the large number of father Jethro’s sheep and
-camels will make proposal that will be accepted; and neither
-of them having done anything more practical than to chew
-chocolate caramels, the two nothings will start on the road of
-life together, every step more and more a failure. Not so
-with the daughter of the Midianite sheik. Moses found her
-at the well drawing water. And Zipporah soon learned that
-Moses could also draw water. Ye daughters of idleness,
-imitate Zipporah. Do something helpful. The reason that
-so many men now condemn themselves to unaffianced and
-solitary life is because they can not support the modern young
-woman—a thousand of them not worth one Zipporah. There
-needs to be a radical revolution among most of the prosperous
-homes of America, by which the elegant do-nothings
-may be transformed into practical do-somethings. Let useless
-women go to work and gather the flocks. The stranger
-at the well may prove to be as good a man as was Moses to
-Zipporah.</p>
-
-<p>Still further, watch this spectacle of genuine courage. No
-wonder when Moses scattered the rude shepherds he won
-Zipporah’s heart. Sense of justice fired his courage; and
-the world wants more of the spirit that will dare almost anything<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-to see others righted. There are many wells where
-outrages are practiced, the wrong herd getting the first
-water. Those who have the previous right come in last, if
-they come it at all. Thank God we have here and there a
-strong man to set things right!</p>
-
-<p>This child of the desert, full of industry and energy, very
-naturally had a quick temper, and, for once at least, it came
-out in her life. Moses was on his way to Egypt, as the deliverer
-of Israel. Zipporah and sons set off to accompany
-him, and went part of the way. While stopping for the
-night at a wayside inn the Lord suddenly withstood Moses.
-It appears, for some reason, possibly because Zipporah opposed
-it, their sons, Gershom and Eliezer, had not been circumcised.
-And, since the neglect of this rite would cut
-them off from God’s covenanted people, the Lord suddenly
-afflicted Moses so that his life must have been despaired of
-by the wife and mother. In her distress, to save the life of
-her husband, she herself performs this rite. The expression,
-“took a sharp stone,” means a sharp stone-knife (more
-sacred than a metallic knife, on account of the tradition).
-Under the trying ordeal, and notwithstanding the life of her
-husband was still in the balance between life and death, she
-was unable to conceal her ill-humor, and charged him with
-being “a bloody husband.” Which may mean that the rite
-of his people was distasteful to her, and doubly so since she
-had to perform it with her own hand to save the life of Moses.</p>
-
-<p>It appears, probably on account of the performance of this
-rite upon their two sons, she had to return to her father’s
-house, as the children would not be in a condition to continue
-the journey into Egypt, and Moses had to perform the
-remainder of the way alone.</p>
-
-<p>The only other incident recorded in Zipporah’s life is the
-bringing of herself and her two sons to Moses by her father,
-when the host of Israel had reached the Peninsula of Sinai,
-after they had departed out of the land of Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>It has been suggested that Zipporah was the Cushite
-(A. V. Ethiopian) wife who furnished Miriam and Aaron<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-with the pretext for their attack on Moses. (Num. xii, 1).
-The death of Zipporah is not mentioned, but undoubtedly
-it occurred before Moses took the Cushite to be his wife.</p>
-
-<p>It has also been thought that Jethro and his house, before
-his acquaintance with Moses, was not a worshipper of the
-true God. Traces of this appear in the delay which Moses
-had suffered to take place in respect to the circumcision of
-his sons. But the fact that Zipporah started from her home
-in Midian to accompany her husband upon his mission in
-Egypt, and of her joining him when he had reached the
-wilderness, upon his return, shows that she was in sympathy
-with his work, and, doubtless, if up to the time the Lord
-suddenly withstood Moses at the wayside inn, she was not
-fully in accord with him in her faith, that this incident fully
-established her in the true faith. There is a legend which,
-if not true, is characteristic of the priest of Midian. This
-Midrash tale relates that Jethro was a counselor of Pharaoh,
-who tried to dissuade him from slaughtering the Israelitish
-children, and consequently, on account of his clemency, was
-forced to flee into Midian, but was rewarded by becoming
-the father-in-law of Moses.</p>
-
-<p>The wife of so excellent and remarkable a man as Moses,
-and one who possessed so many womanly qualities as did this
-shepherdess whom Moses found by the well in Arabia, in the
-faithful discharge of her duties, deserves a place in the galaxy
-of Women in White Raiment.</p>
-
-<p>The hospitality, freehearted and unsought which Jethro at
-once extended to the unknown, homeless wanderer, on the
-relation of his daughters that he had watered their flock,
-is a picture of Eastern manners no less true than lovely, and
-gives us a fine view of the quaint habits and honest simplicity
-of the Oriental people.</p>
-
-<p>We now pass to the daughter of Jochebed, namely, Miriam.
-She first came to our notice when the little ark of Moses was
-placed among the flags of the Nile. Her mother set her to
-watch the little craft as it floated on the bosom of the great
-river. When the princess Thonoris, Pharaoh’s daughter, discovered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-the child and sent her maid to rescue him from his
-perilous surroundings, Miriam, then probably a young girl,
-appeared before the Egyptian princess, and asked if she
-should call a nurse for the child. In reply to this question,
-Thonoris said to her she might find for her a nurse. And
-Miriam hastened to the home of her parents, “and called
-the child’s mother.”</p>
-
-<p>This act shows that Miriam was not only quick-witted, but
-had the courage to carry her convictions into effect. Though
-very human, as fully demonstrated in after years, she was
-faithful to her mother when she watched the boat woven of
-river plants and made water-tight with asphaltum, carrying
-its one passenger. And was she not very courageous and
-did she not put all the ages of time and of a coming eternity
-under obligation when she defended her helpless
-brother from the perils of the Nile? She it was that brought
-that wonderful babe and its mother together, so that he was
-reared to be the deliverer of his nation. What a garland for
-faithful sisterhood!</p>
-
-<p>What part Miriam took in the care of her illustrious brother
-while in the arms of his mother-nurse, we are not told, but
-we may well believe her sisterly love was strong and unwavering
-during the years while the precious charge was in the
-care of the mother.</p>
-
-<p>But there was a long period of eighty years between the
-infancy of Moses and his return from the desert of Midian,
-so that the clear-eyed and sprightly girl had grown away
-from the buoyancy of youth during the years of his exile,
-and must have been nearly, if not quite, a hundred years
-old, when God’s chosen people were led out of the iron furnace
-of bondage, a fact we must not lose sight of in the
-brief narrative of this noble woman in White Raiment. Her
-age may, in part at least, account for the high position given
-her. “The sister of Aaron,” is her biblical distinction which
-she never lost. In Numbers xii, 1, she is placed before
-Aaron, and in Micah vi, 4, reckoned as one of the three
-deliverers of God’s chosen people, “I sent before thee Moses<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-and Aaron and Miriam.” Hence it is quite evident that
-she had no small part in the redemption of the house of
-Israel from the land of oppression. Whether or not the
-prejudices of that day gave her full honor, the Lord admitted
-her to the triumvirate of deliverance, the three children
-of the brave, faithful Jochebed.</p>
-
-<p>She was also the first person in her father’s house, and the
-first woman in the history of God’s people to whom the prophetic
-gifts are directly ascribed. “Miriam the prophetess,”
-is her acknowledged title in Exodus xv, 20. She stood, as
-the leader of Hebrew women, appropriately by the side of
-the future conductor of the religious service.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus084.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">MIRIAM’S SONG OF TRIUMPH.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>In the song of triumph which the children of Israel sang
-after their passage of the Red Sea, Miriam, with cymbal in
-hand, led the women in their part of the glad song of
-deliverance. It does not appear how far the Hebrew women
-joined in the song, that is, the part led by Moses, but in the
-antiphony, Miriam repeats the opening words, in the form
-of a command to the women, saying, “Sing ye to Jehovah,
-for he hath triumphed gloriously; the horse and his rider
-hath He thrown into the sea.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“Sound the loud timbrel o’er Egypt’s dark sea!</div>
-<div class="verse">Jehovah has triumphed, His people are free!</div>
-<div class="verse">Sing, for the pride of the tyrant is broken;</div>
-<div class="indent">His chariots, his horsemen, all splendid and brave;</div>
-<div class="verse">How vain was their boasting! the Lord hath but spoken,</div>
-<div class="indent">And chariots and horsemen are sunk in the wave.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“Sound the loud timbrel o’er Egypt’s dark sea!</div>
-<div class="verse">Jehovah has triumphed, His people are free!</div>
-<div class="verse">Praise to the Conqueror, praise to the Lord!</div>
-<div class="verse">His word was our arrow, His breath was our sword.</div>
-<div class="verse">Who shall return to tell Egypt the story</div>
-<div class="indent">Of those she sent forth in the hour of her pride?</div>
-<div class="verse">For the Lord hath looked out from His pillar of glory,</div>
-<div class="indent">And all her brave thousands are dashed in the tide.</div>
-<div class="verse">Sound the loud timbrel o’er Egypt’s dark sea!</div>
-<div class="verse">Jehovah has triumphed, His people are free!”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Miriam must have been exempt from the infirmities of
-age to a remarkable degree, to be able at her advanced
-years to lead the host of Hebrew women and maidens in the
-music and songs of triumph and general rejoicings over the
-mighty deliverance out of the hand of Pharaoh on the farther
-shores of the Red Sea. The victory, however, was such a
-marked one, and the deliverance so great as to cause old age,
-for the time being, to be swallowed up in the youth of praise
-and thanksgiving.</p>
-
-<p>Taking up their line of march from the shores of the Red
-Sea, we do not learn anything farther concerning Miriam
-until Hazeroth is reached. Here she seems to have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
-the instigator of an insurrection against Moses. In some
-respects it must have been grievous to him, all the more so,
-from the fact that Aaron had also suffered himself to be carried
-away by his sister’s fanaticism. By virtue of their
-office as prophet and prophetess, in the minds of the people,
-they held almost equal rank with Moses.</p>
-
-<p>The occasion of this insurrection was a marriage which
-Miriam regarded as objectionable, though, notwithstanding,
-she had the example of Joseph, who married an Egyptian
-woman, before her, and which marriage did not prove to be
-antitheocratic. Moses had married a Cushite. It is true
-the prohibition to marry with the daughters of other than
-their own people had special reasons of religious self-preservation,
-and for that reason the High Priest was allowed
-to marry only a Hebrew virgin, but that was a limitation
-belonging to his symbolic position. The prophetic class, on
-the other hand, had the task of illustrating the greatest possible
-letting down of legal restraint. The union of Moses
-with this Cushite may have symbolized the future calling of
-the Gentile nations, a sort of first fruit, as Rahab and Ruth
-later on proved to be, and it offers a remarkable parallel
-that the next greatest man of the law, Elijah, lived for a
-considerable time as the table companion of a heathen widow
-of Zarephath.</p>
-
-<p>It is manifest that Moses endured in silence the domestic
-obliquity which his sister drew down upon him, patiently
-committing his justification to God, until her would-be pious
-zeal assumed a more alarming aspect. Since Aaron had
-made common cause with Miriam, Aaron, who wore the
-breast-plate, Urim and Thummim, and Miriam, who, as a
-prophetess, had already led the chorus of the women of
-Israel, must have held high places in the minds of the people;
-hence, when they raised the question, “Hath the Lord
-indeed spoken only by Moses? hath he not spoken also by
-us?” there is no telling where this sedition of Miriam and
-Aaron might have ended, had not the Lord Himself taken
-it promptly in hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>But the Lord heard that complaint, which implied that the
-prophetic gift was exercised by them also, that they were
-prophets, vested with authority, and if they even suffered
-Moses, since his objectionable marriage, to remain in the
-prophetic college, they could at least outvote him. So Moses,
-Aaron and Miriam were suddenly cited to the tabernacle of
-the congregation. When the three presented themselves at
-the place appointed, the Lord came down in a cloud at the
-door of the tabernacle, and “called Aaron and Miriam”
-apart from Moses, and there, at the door of the tabernacle,
-administered a stern rebuke to both of them. They had
-lived with Moses so long, and yet knew so little of his
-exalted position. As a brother he stood too near to them,
-and they themselves, with their self-consciousness, stood too
-much in their own light.</p>
-
-<p>“And the cloud departed from off the tabernacle.” As
-Aaron saw the cloud lifting up and moving off, he must have
-been inwardly crushed at this punishment. The fires on
-his altar went out, the pillar of smoke no longer mounted up
-as a token of grace, the divine presence was withdrawn, and
-it was as if an interdict of Jehovah lay on the services of the
-Sanctuary. But this was not all. “Miriam became leprous,
-white as snow.” There seems to be a singular connection
-between the punishment of Aaron as the representative of
-the Church, and Miriam, who had thought herself and
-Aaron above Moses, snow-white in righteousness, while she
-looked down on him as unclean. She would dominate the
-Church, for she dominated Aaron, and now, as a leper, she
-must be excluded from the Church.</p>
-
-<p>When Aaron looked upon his afflicted sister, though High
-Priest, the Lord having withdrawn the symbol of his favor
-from the altar of sacrifice, was as helpless as Miriam, and he
-now implores Moses, as his superior, to intercede. Here
-only the spiritual high priesthood of a divine compassion can
-deliver the helpless High Priest himself and his unfortunate
-associate in the prophetic office. In his appeal, Aaron
-almost speaks as if Moses could heal the leprosy. Moses,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-however, understood it as an indirect request to intercede for
-Miriam.</p>
-
-<p>“And Moses cried unto the Lord, saying: Heal her now,
-O God, I beseech thee.” The Lord granted the request,
-accompanied with a sharp reproof, “If her father had but
-spit in her face, should she not be unclean seven days?”
-The figurative expression compares her, who desired to be
-the prophetic regent of the nation, to a dependent maiden in
-whose face her father had spit on account of unseemly
-behavior. Such a one must conceal herself seven days on
-account of her shame. The same treatment was dictated for
-Miriam, and she was “shut out from the camp seven days.”
-The silent grief of the nation must have been profound, for
-the people remained encamped at Hazeroth during the
-seclusion of Miriam, and not until she was pronounced
-clean, and the prescribed sacrifices required on her reception
-back again, were made, did the Lord’s host depart from
-their encampment. All these are proofs of the high place
-she held in the affections of the people.</p>
-
-<p>This sad stroke, and its most gracious removal, is the last
-public event of Miriam’s life. She died toward the close of
-the wilderness wanderings at Kadesh, and was buried there.
-According to Jewish tradition, the burial took place with
-great pomp on a mountain in the edge of the wilderness of
-Zin, and the mourning of the whole camp of Israel lasted for
-thirty days, Jerome tells us that her tomb was shown near
-Petra.</p>
-
-<p>According to Josephus she was the wife of Hur and the
-grandmother of Bezaleel, the inspired artisan of the Tabernacle.
-According to the Targum, the miraculous supply of
-water at Rephidim was given in her honor. It failed when
-she died at Kadesh, and was restored only at the second
-stroke of Moses’ rod, and later, by the digging of the princes
-with their staves of office, while the people sang a hymn of
-praise and faith.</p>
-
-<p>These traditions are of but little value except to show in
-what high esteem she was held.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>A long, beautiful, eventful, inspired life—one of patient
-waiting, intense activity, deep enthusiasm and triumphant
-faith—transformed the brave little slave girl into the mighty
-princess and leader of the Lord’s hosts. But for the one
-assumption of unwarranted authority at Hazeroth, her record
-would have come down to us untarnished.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV.<br />
-
-Womanhood During the Conquest and the Theocracy,
-or Rule of the Judges.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><span class="smcap">Rahab—Great Grace for Great Sinners—The Fall of Jericho—The
-Covenant Remembered—Deborah—Her Remarkable
-Courage—Sisera’s Iron Chariots Broken—The Daughter of
-Jephthah—Her Loving Devotion and Sacrifice—The Story
-of Naomi—Orpah’s Kiss—The Loving Ruth—Gleaning
-Among the Reapers—Her Rich Reward—Hannah—Her
-Consecration—Yearly Visits to Shiloh—Stitching Beautiful
-Thoughts into Samuel’s Coat—Her Beautiful Life.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">After</span> the death of Miriam at Kadesh, on the borders of
-Zin, and the death of Aaron on Mount Hor, and of Moses
-on lofty Pisgah, Joshua “sent out of Shittem two men to spy
-secretly, saying, Go, view the land, even Jericho. And
-they went, and came into an harlot’s house, named Rahab,
-and lodged there.”</p>
-
-<p>The occupation of this woman has called out much comment,
-and many attempts have been made to clear her character
-of the stains of vice by affirming that she was only an
-inn-keeper, and not a harlot. No doubt there is much truth
-in this statement, for we can not entertain the thought that
-two pure-minded young men sent out by a leader like Joshua
-would pass by an inn and purposely seek an house of ill repute.
-It is also possible that to a woman of the age in which
-she lived, such a calling may have implied a far less deviation
-from the standard of morality than it does with us, with
-nearly two thousand years of Christian teaching. We must
-not forget that Rahab was a heathen; and the heathen knew
-very little of the simplest principles of truth and purity. In
-the first chapter of Paul’s Epistle to the Romans he gives a
-life picture of pagan morals. Even among the polished
-Greeks, loyalty to their religion made personal purity impossible.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-The Canaanites were so vile that, in the emphatic
-language of Scripture, the land vomited them out. The
-glimpse we catch of Lot’s neighbors may show in what a
-cesspool of vice Rahab was brought up. But even if we
-judge this woman by our modern standards, and admit that
-she was all that is implied in the opprobrious term, the fact
-that she is listed among God’s elect women shows the wondrous
-power of divine grace. God can save a great sinner just
-as easy as a small one. Notwithstanding she carried the
-double disability, that of being a heathen and a great sinner,
-her story is told in full. She has honorable mention by
-the Apostle James as an illustration of the works that show
-strong faith; and by the spirit of inspiration in the Epistle
-to the Hebrews, giving her a place among the mighty heroes
-and heroines who wrought marvels through confidence in God.</p>
-
-<p>At the time when the Israelites were encamped in Shittem,
-ready to cross the Jordan and enter the land of promise,
-Jericho was the strongest fortified city in Canaan, and, as
-the key to Western Palestine, commanded the two mountain
-passes which led into the land that was to be possessed. It
-was to be taken; but how? Joshua sent two of his most
-trusted men to spy out the land, remembering, no doubt
-with much trepidation, the failure of forty years before,
-which made them go back and die in the desert.</p>
-
-<p>The life of the spies, the success of the enterprise, and the
-courage their report would give the Israelites, all turned on
-the faith and skill of Rahab. She saved to God’s people the
-battle they had lost forty years before. No wonder that
-Hebrew writers have thrown the glamor of romance over her
-story.</p>
-
-<p>Her house was situated on the wall, probably near the
-city gate, so as to be convenient for persons coming in and
-going out of Jericho. She seems not only to have kept an
-inn for wayfaring men, but also to have been engaged in
-the manufacture of linen and the art of dyeing, for which
-the Phœnicians were early famous, since we find the flat
-roof of her house covered with stalks of flax, put there to dry,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
-and a stock of scarlet or crimson line in her house, a circumstance
-which, coupled with the mention of Babylonish garments
-as among the spoils of Jericho, indicates the existence
-of a trade in such articles between Phœnicia and Mesopotamia.
-It also appears she had a father and mother, brothers
-and sisters, who, if they were not living in the same
-house with her, were dwelling in Jericho.</p>
-
-<p>Traders coming from Mesopotamia, or Egypt to Phœnicia,
-would frequently pass through Jericho, situated as it was
-near the fords of the Jordan, and, according to the customs
-of the times, these travelers would seek a public inn.</p>
-
-<p>These men, coming and going, would naturally enough
-carry the news of current events with them. Rahab therefore
-had opportunity to be well informed with regard to the
-events of the Exodus. As we learn from her own story, she
-had heard of the passage through the Red Sea, of the utter
-destruction of Sihon and Og, and of the irresistible progress
-of the Israelitish host. The effect upon her mind had been
-what one would not have expected in a person of her way of
-life. It led her to a firm faith in Jehovah as the true God,
-and to the conviction that He purposed to give Canaan to the
-Israelites. She may have thought long and deeply on these
-strange events, and, possibly, her better nature may have
-loathed the vices of her people, in which she herself had become
-involved, and longed for the pure worship of the wonder-working
-God of whom she had heard.</p>
-
-<p>When, therefore, the two spies sent out by Joshua, who
-must have been men of moral character and worthy of so
-important a commission, came to Jericho, no doubt they were
-divinely directed to her house, who alone, of the whole population,
-was friendly to their cause. Her heart, at all events,
-was prepared to receive the message with which they intrusted
-her, and she gave them the information they sought.
-And such faith had she in the purposes of God to give the
-land to the hosts of Joshua that she made a covenant with
-these representatives of his army, to save her and her family
-when the city fell into their hands.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>The coming of these spies, it seems, was quickly known,
-and the king of Jericho, having received information of it
-while at supper, according to Josephus, sent that very evening
-to require her to deliver them up. It is very likely that,
-her house being a public one, some one who resorted there
-may have seen and recognized the spies, and at once reported
-the matter to the authorities. But not without awakening
-Rahab’s suspicions, and she was courageous enough to hide
-them under the flax on the roof, and throw the officers off
-their suspicion, while she let the Hebrews down over the
-wall and hurried them away to the mountains, to stay till
-the hunt was given up and the guards had come back from
-the fords of the Jordan, thus allowing them to escape across
-the river to their camp.</p>
-
-<p>For her kindness to them she had asked that when the
-city should be taken, her life and the lives of all that belonged
-to her should be spared, and it was agreed that she
-should hang out her scarlet line at the window from which
-the spies had escaped.</p>
-
-<p>The event proved the wisdom of her precautions. The
-pursuers returned to Jericho after a fruitless search, and the
-spies reached the encampment of Israel in safety. The news
-they brought of the terror of the king and citizens of Jericho
-doubtless inspired the Israelitish host with fresh courage,
-and, within three days of their return, the passage of the
-Jordan was effected.</p>
-
-<p>No one could have been more interested than Rahab during
-those eventful days. Perhaps, from the window of her
-dwelling on the city wall, she saw the waters of the Jordan
-piled on each other, and stretching back over the plain as
-far as the eye could see—a sight she had never seen, and
-equal to the dividing of the Red Sea. Toward evening she
-saw the advance guards of Joshua’s host, and then the white-robed
-priests bearing the ark, followed by the army and
-people, and encamping at Gilgal, within two miles of Jericho,
-and in full view of the city.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>After having carefully reviewed her household to assure
-herself that her father and mother, brothers and sisters, were
-all there—for this was the covenant she had made with the
-spies—she probably seated herself at the window from which
-hung the scarlet cord, to watch the strange procession that
-marched around the city seven days. Each morning it came
-filing up from Gilgal in solemn silence, except as the white-robed
-priests blew their trumpet-blasts.</p>
-
-<p>No one can tell what risk Rahab took, or what indignities
-she suffered in convincing her relatives that they must be
-in the covenanted place when the city fell. On her part it
-was a beautiful faith. Perhaps she recounted to them the
-ten awful plagues that fell on the Egyptians, the deliverance
-of His people from the house of bondage, the disaster to
-Pharaoh and his army at the Red Sea, the opening of
-streams in the desert, the nightly dewfall of food, the lofty
-column of cloud that shaded and led by day, and the pillar
-of fire that kept them safe from night enemies, human and
-bestial. All this she told to the assembled household as the
-ground of her faith, with which she would inspire them. No
-doubt this woman of Jericho, sick at heart on account of her
-own past life, and the wickedness of her city, thirsted for a
-fuller knowledge of the true and holy God whose name she
-hardly dared to take on her sin-polluted lips, and yet, strange
-as it may seem, she had the strength and honesty to succeed
-in the preaching of righteousness to her friends.</p>
-
-<p>Day after day she watched the strange procession marching
-around the closely shut and guarded city. Joshua and
-the soldiers were at its head; then came the priests with
-their trumpets, and after them the Ark of the Covenant, hid
-from view with coverings, and carried reverently on men’s
-shoulders, while soldiers guarded it from real dangers.</p>
-
-<p>Jericho breathed a little more freely when it saw that the
-strange desert people marched around the city day after
-day without striking a blow; but Rahab’s faith held steady,
-and the scarlet cord swung from her window. That cord
-may have meant to her the blood of the Redeemer cleansing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-from sin. No doubt, like Moses, she knew the meaning of
-the “reproach of Christ.”</p>
-
-<p>The seventh day she was found early at her window, with
-a sense of completeness in her obedience and faith. Again
-the Hebrews filed forth from their camp and marched around
-the city; but this time they kept on till they had gone
-around the wall six times. The seventh round, the voice of
-the old captain at the head of the host rang along the line—“Shout!
-for Jehovah hath given you the city.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus095.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE FALL OF JERICHO.</p>
-
-<p>Before Rahab fully realized the meaning of this strange
-command, her ears were filled with the crash of falling walls.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
-In the dust and din, the cries, the shrieks, the terror, but
-little could be distinctly remembered, only that the desert
-soldiers who were taking the town were leading her and her
-kindred forth to a place of safety.</p>
-
-<p>The narrator adds, “and she dwelleth in Israel unto this
-day,” meaning, the family of which she was reckoned the
-head, continued to dwell among the Lord’s people. May
-not the three hundred and forty-five “children of Jericho,”
-mentioned in Ezra ii, 34, and “the men of Jericho” who
-assisted Nehemiah in rebuilding the walls of Jerusalem, have
-been the descendants of her kindred?</p>
-
-<p>As regards Rahab herself, we learn from Matt, i, 5, that
-she became the wife of Salmon the son of Naasson, and the
-mother of Boaz, the grandfather of Jesse. It has been conjectured
-that Salmon may have been one of the spies whose
-life she saved, and that gratitude for so great a benefit led
-to their marriage. But, however this may be, it is certain
-that Rahab became the mother of the line from which sprang
-David, and eventually Christ.</p>
-
-<p>Distasteful as it may be to goody-good people, the fact
-remains that Rahab believed God, and when He delivered
-her out of her heathen surroundings, she entered upon a
-pure life. Whom God pardons, He justifies. Whom he
-justifies, He brings to that relation with Himself that would
-have been held if the sin had never been committed. He
-does not doom man or woman to life-long penance for sins
-that have been washed away by the blood of the Lamb.</p>
-
-<p>It is not accidental that Matthew traces the Saviour’s
-genealogy through four women, namely Thamar, Rachab,
-Ruth, and Bathsheba, who were not of the Israelitish stock,
-three of whom were of doubtful morals, and one, Rachab, who
-carried a double disability. Christ came to save humanity,
-and that He might be an all-sufficient Saviour, He abased
-Himself—took us at our worst—that no human soul, however
-sunk in sin, might despair. And Rahab the harlot was
-transformed into Rahab the saint, cleansed and purified,
-and clothed in White Raiment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>From the thrilling incidents just related, the history of
-God’s chosen people runs on for a hundred years or more before
-Deborah comes to view on the stage of life. In the meantime
-Joshua had led the Israelitish hosts to victory, had
-subdued the several kings, and divided the land among the
-tribes. Then came years of rest and prosperity, and, strange
-to say, a turning away from the Author of all their blessings.
-These departures from their national faith brought down upon
-them the judgments of God.</p>
-
-<p>The Israelites were now ruled by judges, and at the time
-Deborah comes to our notice, Barak seems to have been the
-executive head of the nation.</p>
-
-<p>Deborah was probably a woman of the tribe of Ephraim.
-Her tent was spread under the palm-tree between Ramah
-and Bethel in Mount Ephraim, and she was a prophetess, in
-whom was combined both poetry and prophecy. Deborah
-stands before us in strong contrast with the customs and prejudices
-of her time. God’s people were being oppressed by
-the Canaanites. In the midst of this great national crisis
-she was called to stand at the head both of statesmanship and
-the terrible exigencies of war.</p>
-
-<p>Sisera, the general of Jabin’s army, with nine hundred
-iron war chariots, and a multitude had assembled in the
-western extremity of the great plain of Jezreel, near the
-brook Kishon that flows along the northern base of Mount
-Carmel. Barak, the executive head, was either so timid
-or apprehensive that the campaign would fail, and thus
-fasten the tyrant’s chain yet more strongly, that the people
-looked to Deborah for judgment. She tried to arouse
-Barak’s courage. She even appealed to the prejudices that
-were strong in those times, namely, that the victory would
-be given to a woman if he refused to go. But in vain. He
-would not move without her. She knew, far better than he,
-that the battle was not theirs, but God’s. The Lord alone
-could give victory. Faith was easier to her than to Barak,
-for she had the spiritual insight that knows the utter nothingness
-of human help.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>For twenty years God’s people had been oppressed by their
-enemies. At last they had repented of the sins that made
-necessary their captivity, and the Lord had inspired Deborah
-to rally them to resist their oppressors. Perhaps Barak
-hesitated, because, viewed from a human standpoint, he may
-have felt the utter inadequacy of the Hebrew army to cope
-with the Syrians and their nine hundred iron war chariots.
-But just there lies the secret of all success. Only when we
-are weak, are we strong. This is the victory, even our faith.
-We have not that faith till we get to the end of our own resources
-and trusts.</p>
-
-<p>But while Deborah put Barak at the head of the army, she
-bravely stood by him with her counsels, her prayers, her faith,
-and her wholesome reproof, for Deborah was a practical and
-sensible woman. Her name signifies “the bee,” and she was
-well provided with the sting as well as the honey, and knew
-how to stir up Barak by wholesome severity as well as encourage
-him by holy inspiration. He is a very foolish man
-who refuses to be helped by the shrewd intuitive wisdom of
-a true woman, for while her head may not be so large, its
-quality is generally of the best; and her conclusions, though
-not reasoned out so elaborately, generally reach the right
-end by intuitions which are seldom wrong. Woman’s place
-is to counsel, to encourage, to pray, to believe, and pre-eminently
-to help. This was what Deborah did.</p>
-
-<p>Barak, however, was not always weak. As soon as he had
-recovered himself from the surprise of the unexpected call to
-lead the little army of ten thousand against the myriads of
-Sisera, he consented on condition that the courageous Deborah
-go with him. By this timidity he lost not a little of the
-honor that he might have won, and his sharp and penetrating
-leader plainly told him that the victory should not be
-wholly to his credit, for God should deliver Sisera into the
-hands of a woman; and so there were really two women in
-this struggle for liberty, and Barak was sandwiched in between
-them. With Deborah in front, and Jael in the rear,
-and Barak in the midst, even poor, weak Barak became one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-of the heroes of faith who shine in the constellation of eternal
-stars, upon which the Holy Spirit has turned the telescope
-of the eleventh chapter of Hebrews.</p>
-
-<p>How the inspiring faith of Deborah must have nerved
-Barak for heroic action. Her message to him is all alive
-with the very spirit and innermost essence of the faith that
-counts the things that are not as though they were. “Up,”
-she cries, as she rouses him by a trumpet call from his timorous
-inactivity; “for this is the day,” she adds, as she
-shakes him out of his procrastination, “in which the Lord
-hath delivered Sisera into thine hand.” She goes on to say,
-as she reckons upon the victory as already won, “Is not the
-Lord gone out before thee?” She concludes, as she commits
-the whole matter into Jehovah’s hands, and bids him simply
-follow on and take the victory that is already given.</p>
-
-<p>Is it possible for faith to speak in plainer terms, or
-language to express with stronger emphasis the imperative
-mood or the present tense of that victorious faith, for which
-nothing is impossible?</p>
-
-<p>Again, we have here the lesson of mutual service. This
-victory was not all won by any single individual, but God
-linked together as He loves always to do, many co-operating
-instruments and agents in the accomplishment of His will.
-There was Deborah representing the spirit of faith and of
-prophecy. There was Barak representing obedience and
-executive energy. There were the people that willingly
-offered themselves; the volunteers of faith. There were the
-yet nobler hosts of Zebulun, and Naphtali, that jeoparded
-their lives unto the death, the martyrs who are the crowning
-glory of every great enterprise. And there was Jael, the
-poor heathen woman away out on the frontiers of Israel, who
-gave the finishing touch, and struck the last blow through
-the temples of the proud Sisera, while high above all were
-the forces of nature, and the unseen armies of God’s providence;
-for the stars in their courses fought against Sisera,
-and the flood of the Kishon rolled down in mountain torrents
-and swept the astonished foe away.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>Sisera’s iron chariots were broken and scattered; but his
-will and prowess would soon have another army in the field,
-more terrible than the first. To answer fully the faith that
-took hold of God’s strength, the Canaanitish general must
-die. But not by the hand of Barak. His wavering faith
-had forfeited that honor. That last act which should bring
-victory to the army of Israel would be performed through the
-courage of a woman. The woman who was to complete the
-deliverance was the wife of an Arab sheik, of a family
-descended from Jethro, Moses’ father-in-law.</p>
-
-<p>The tribe of Jael and of her husband, Heber, was
-encamped under the “Oak of the Wanderers.” These Arabs
-were on good terms with both Hebrews and Syrians; but
-Jael must have had the spiritual sense to see that the Lord
-had taken in hand the freeing of Israel, and she must use
-the opportunity to further His plans. So when Sisera left
-his unmanageable chariot and escaped from the battle on
-foot, he came to her tent worn out with the fatigue of the
-fight and flight, and she gave him the hospitality for which
-he begged; but while he was in the deep sleep of exhaustion,
-she drove a tent pin into his temple. His death made
-impossible the rallying of the host against God’s people.
-Better far that one man should die, than that thousands of
-both Hebrews and Syrians should fall on the battlefields of
-prolonged warfare.</p>
-
-<p>Jael has honorable mention in Deborah’s superb song of
-triumph. Stanley says of that pæan of victory: “In the
-song of Deborah we have the only prophetic utterance that
-breaks the silence between Moses and Samuel. Hers is the
-one voice of inspiration (in the full sense of the word) that
-breaks out in the Book of Judges.”</p>
-
-<p>Jael is the only woman mentioned in the Bible who ever
-took a human life. We confess that the exploit seems unwomanly,
-but we must not forget there is no sex in right or
-wrong-doing, though it may be long before we can rid ourselves
-of the habit of requiring a higher morality in a woman
-than in a man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>In this heroic effort on the part of Deborah to throw off
-the yoke of a cruel oppressor, we see the curse of neutrality,
-and the pitiful spectacle, which seems always to be present,
-of the unfaithful, ignoble and indifferent ones who quietly
-looked on while all this was happening, and not only missed
-their reward, but justly received the curse of God’s displeasure
-and judgment. And so, in the Song of Deborah,
-we hear of Reuben’s enthusiastic purposes, but does nothing.
-We see her fiery scorn for those who strayed among the
-bleatings of the sheepfolds, rather than the trumpet of the
-battle. We see her sarcasm strike the selfish men of Gilead
-who abode beyond Jordan; the careless Danites who remained
-in their ships, and men of Asher who, secure in their
-naval defences, stayed away up yonder on the seashore, and
-took refuge in their ports and inland rivers, while, above all
-the echoes of her denunciations, rings out the last awful
-curse against the inhabitants of Meroz, a little obscure city
-that probably had taken refuge in its insignificance, because
-its inhabitants had refused to come up to the help of the
-Lord against the mighty.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, this scene is a pattern page from God’s book of
-remembrance. Some day we shall read the other pages and
-find our names recorded either with the inhabitants of Meroz
-and Reuben, or with the victors of faith who stood with
-Deborah, and Barak, and Jehovah, in the battles of the
-Lord. Oh, shall we shine now like stars in the night, and
-then like the sun in the kingdom of our Father?</p>
-
-<p>Passing on in our narrative from the brave deeds of
-Deborah, we next come to one of the most heroic daughters
-in Israel, and her great act of utter abnegation to save a
-father’s vow is so beautiful that, like the good Samaritan in
-our Lord’s touching parable, uttered in answer to the question,
-Who is my neighbor? the name is lost in the fragrance
-of the deed. She is simply Jephthah’s daughter.</p>
-
-<p>It was during that stormy period in the history of Israel,
-when again and again they had fallen into the idolatrous
-practices of their heathen neighbors around them. These<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-unlawful acts had often called down the judgments of God
-upon them. In the time of Jephthah, the Israelites were
-smarting under the oppression of an Ammonitish king.
-The unsettled character of the age was such that the elders
-of the people sought in vain for a suitable leader, who could
-command the confidence of his countrymen.</p>
-
-<p>There was one man, however, a native of Gilead, who was
-a brave and successful leader. This was none other than
-Jephthah, but, because he had been born a child of misfortune,
-his brethren disowned him, and had cast him out. In
-most persons such treatment develops a spirit of misanthropy
-and bitterness which often find expression in revenge.</p>
-
-<p>But Jephthah seemed to have possessed a much sweeter
-disposition than his brethren. His faith seems to have been
-anchored to God, and, as is usually the case, when all else forsook
-him then the Lord took him up, and, trusting in Jehovah,
-he lived to have a glorious revenge upon his unkind people
-by bringing them a blessing instead of the curse that they
-had given him.</p>
-
-<p>We have a little touch of his character in the name he gave
-his new home. He called it the land of Tob. Tob means
-“good,” and this is but a little straw to tell how the wind
-blew in Jephthah’s life.</p>
-
-<p>And so the day came when Jephthah’s brothers were glad
-to send for him to be their deliverer, and Jephthah had the
-high honor of returning good for evil, and saving the people
-that once despised him. He consented to become their leader
-on the condition, which was solemnly ratified before the Lord
-in Mizpah, that in the event of his success against the Ammonitish
-king he should still remain as their acknowledged
-head. This is the way that God loves to vindicate us, to
-make us a blessing to those that hated us and wronged us.
-His promise is, “I will make them to come and worship before
-thy feet, and to know that I have loved thee.”</p>
-
-<p>When Jephthah responded to their appeal, and came for
-their help, we see in his very words and acts the spirit of
-godliness and a lofty faith. We are told explicitly that all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-his words to his own people were “before the Lord.” He
-spoke as in Jehovah’s presence. He also went against his
-adversaries in the name of Jehovah God. The battle was
-not his, but the Lord’s, and such faith never can be confounded.
-It was not long before Jephthah returned in triumph
-from the slaughter of his enemies. His country was
-delivered, his claims vindicated, and his enemies were
-destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>But now we come to the great trial in Jephthah’s life,
-which shows not only the loftiest faith, but the sublimest
-faithfulness. In the hour of peril he had vowed a vow unto
-Jehovah, pledging that when he returned in victory the first
-object that he met should be dedicated to the Lord, an offering
-to Him. As he came back amid the acclamations of
-universal triumph, the first who met him when he approached
-his home was his beautiful daughter, and as he realized all
-that his vow had meant, he was overwhelmed for a moment
-with the deepest emotion. But not for an instant did he
-hesitate in his firm and high purpose, nor once did that dear
-child shrink back from the sacrifice imposed upon her, but
-stood nobly with her father, demanding that he should fulfill
-his vow to the utmost.</p>
-
-<p>The scene is very graphically described: When “Jephthah
-came to Mizpah unto his house, behold, his daughter came
-out to meet him with timbrels and with dances; and she
-was his only child; beside her he had neither son nor
-daughter. And it came to pass, when he saw her, that he
-rent his clothes and said, Alas, my daughter! thou hast
-brought me very low, and thou art one of them that trouble
-me, for I have opened my mouth unto the Lord, and I can not
-go back.”</p>
-
-<p>This noble child of faith certainly was equal to her father’s
-trial, and lovingly replied, “My father, if thou hast opened
-thy mouth unto the Lord, do to me according to that which
-hath proceeded out of thy mouth.”</p>
-
-<p>There has been much discussion as to the real meaning of
-Jephthah’s vow, and the real fate of his lovely, obedient<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-daughter. That the daughter of Jephthah was really offered
-up to God in sacrifice, slain by the hand of her father and
-then burned, is a horrible conclusion, and contrary to all we
-know of his life, upon which we have dwelt at some length
-in order to bring out its characteristics. With such a sweet
-trust and confidence in God as is manifest in his every act,
-we can not believe that either Jephthah meant to make a
-human sacrifice, or that his daughter so understood it.
-There are several passages and constructions which can leave
-no doubt in the mind of the candid reader that such was not
-the literal intention, and that this fair child of faith and
-obedience was not to be slain upon the altar like the children
-of Ammon before their god of fire, but that her fresh life
-was given in all its purity as a living sacrifice of separation
-and life of service to Jehovah.</p>
-
-<p>In the eighteenth chapter of Deuteronomy we find the
-most solemn warnings given to Israel against imitating in
-the least degree the cruel and wicked rites of the Ammonites,
-especially in offering human sacrifices. Now these Ammonites
-were the very people against whom Jephthah had gone
-forth to war, and as godly follower of Jehovah he must have
-been familiar with the commandments of the book of Deuteronomy.
-For him, therefore, to directly disobey these
-solemn injunctions would have been to prove false to all his
-character and all the meaning of his victory in the name of
-Jehovah.</p>
-
-<p>Again, in the twelfth chapter of Exodus, it is clearly
-taught that the first-born of Israel were all to be recognized
-as the Lord’s, and liable, therefore, to death, like the
-Egyptian first-born. But, instead of their lives being literally
-required, they were redeemed by the blood of a lamb,
-and the Paschal lamb was offered instead of the life of the
-Hebrew, and that life was still regarded as wholly the
-Lord’s, given to Him in living consecration, of which the
-whole tribe of Levi was regarded as the type, and therefore
-it was separated unto the service of the Lord as a substitute
-for the lives of the first-born.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>In all this was clearly taught the lesson that what God required
-from His people was not a dead body, but a “living
-sacrifice.” It is much harder to live for God than to die for
-God. It takes much less spiritual and moral power to leap
-into the conflict and fling a life away in the excitement of
-the battle than it does to live through fifty years of misunderstanding,
-pain and temptation. It would have been
-easier for Jephthah’s daughter to have lain down amid the
-flowers of spring, the chants and songs of a religious ceremonial,
-the tears and songs of the people who loved her, and
-know that her name would be forever enshrined, than to go
-out from the bright circle of human society and all the charms
-of youth and beauty and domestic and social delight, and
-live as a recluse for God alone, giving up the dearest hope
-of every Hebrew woman, not only to be a mother, but to be
-the mother of the promised Christ; giving up also, along
-with her father, the fond desire of a son to share his honor
-and his sceptre, to prolong his name. All this it meant.
-This was the sacrifice she made. And so we read that she
-did not go aside to bewail her approaching death, but she
-went aside for two months to bewail her “virginity,” the
-loneliness of her own life, then gladly gave her life a living
-sacrifice to God.</p>
-
-<p>There are several other considerations that might be
-added if necessary to establish this construction of the passage.
-It is enough to briefly refer to the fact that the phrase
-in the eleventh chapter of Judges, verse thirty-nine, is in
-the future tense, and refers to her future virginity and not
-her past, and also that the translation of the fortieth verse
-in one of our versions, is that the daughters of Israel went
-yearly “to talk” with the daughter of Jephthah four times
-in a year. It is not necessary to pursue the argument further.
-Enough for our present purpose that we catch the
-inspired lesson. That lesson is supreme, unqualified, unquestioning
-fidelity to God.</p>
-
-<p>How tender and beautiful the lesson which this passage
-gives to the young as well as the old! Just as Isaac stands<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
-out in the older story in a light as glorious as Abraham in
-yonder sacrifice on Mount Moriah, so Jephthah’s daughter’s
-sacrifice must not be forgotten in the honor we pay her
-father. Sweet child of single-hearted consecration! God
-help her sisters and her followers to be as true. Oh, beloved,
-do not wait until desire shall fail and age chill the pulses of
-ardent youth, and the world fall away from you itself. But
-when the flowers are blooming, and the cup is brimming,
-and the heart beats high with earthly love and joy and
-hope, then it is so sweet, it is so wise, it is so rare, to pour
-all at His blessed feet, as Mary poured her ointment on His
-head, and some day to receive it back amid the bloom and
-peals of yonder land, where they that have forsaken friends
-and treasures, fond affections and brightest prospects for
-His dear sake, shall receive a hundredfold, and shall have
-the still richer joy of knowing that they have learned His
-spirit and understood His love.</p>
-
-<p>Following the story of Jephthah’s daughter and her heroic
-self-sacrifice, we next come to the touching scenes and incidents
-related in the life of Ruth and her mother-in-law,
-Naomi. This is, confessedly, one of the sweetest idyls ever
-written. As a singular example of virtue and piety in a
-rude age and among an idolatrous people; as one of the
-first fruits of the Gentile harvest gathered into the Church;
-as the heroine of a story of exquisite beauty and simplicity;
-as illustrating in her history the workings of Divine Providence,
-and the truth of the saying, “the eyes of the Lord
-are over the righteous;” for the many interesting revelations
-of ancient domestic and social customs which are associated
-with her story, Ruth has always held a foremost place
-among the Women in White Raiment.</p>
-
-<p>The story begins at Bethlehem, so dear to the Christian
-heart. A famine had occurred, and even the fertile plains
-of Bethlehem Ephratah (the fruitful) failed to give sufficient
-food to its inhabitants. On this account Elimelech, an
-Ephrathite, left his home with his wife and two sons and
-went to sojourn in the land of Moab, the hilly region south-east<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-of the Dead Sea, where the descendants of Lot dwelt.
-Here Elimelech died, and Naomi, his wife, was left a widow
-with her two sons, Mahlon and Chilin.</p>
-
-<p>The young men, when grown, took them wives of the
-women of Moab. Probably this was another severe trial to
-Naomi, for she had doubtless warned them that it was contrary
-to God’s law that they should marry daughters of the
-heathen. Other strokes came quickly upon her, for her two
-sons died also. Naomi, notwithstanding her nationality,
-had won the respect and warmest attachment of her sons’
-wives; and now, when death had desolated their homes and
-laid in the dust the strong men to whom they had clung,
-they only drew the closer to each other.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of ten years, and having heard that there was
-plenty again in Judah, Naomi resolved to return to Bethlehem.
-Orpah and Ruth also purposed to accompany her.
-We can imagine the sad farewell visit to the graves of the
-beloved dead, and then together set out on foot for the land
-which the Lord had blessed.</p>
-
-<p>After they had gone on their way for some distance,
-Naomi, with heartfelt acknowledgment of their fidelity to
-her, endeavored to persuade them to return to their own kindred.
-But they both declared that they would cleave to her.
-And so they trudged on until probably the borders of Moab
-were reached, when Naomi once more urged them to return
-to their people. Orpah this time yielded to Naomi’s urgent
-request, and giving her a kiss of farewell, returned to her
-people. Ruth, however, still clave to Naomi, with self-sacrificing
-love. Pointing to the form of Orpah, Naomi entreated
-Ruth to follow her sister’s example.</p>
-
-<p>This was the crisis in Ruth’s life, on which her future destiny
-was to turn. But the clinging nature of Ruth refused
-to be separated from the warm heart of Naomi, and no one
-can fail to be moved by the pathos of her reply, “Entreat me
-not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee; for
-whither thou goest I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will
-lodge; thy people shall be my people, and thy God, my God;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
-where thou diest, I will die, and there will I be buried: the
-Lord do so to me, and more also, if aught but death part
-thee and me.” This tender loyalty and undying love must
-have touched the strong, brave heart of Naomi, for Ruth’s
-noble plea covered every possible condition in life through
-which they might be called to pass, and refused to be separated
-even in death.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus108.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">RUTH THE FAITHFUL FRIEND.</p>
-
-<p>The decision was so firmly, so solemnly stated that there
-was nothing more to be said, and Naomi, doubtless glad in
-her loneliness to retain the treasure of such a true and loving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-heart, made no further effort to alter her purpose, and so the
-two journeyed on together towards Bethlehem.</p>
-
-<p>There were two things in conflict, one with the other, at
-this stage in the experience of these women. 1. Ruth had
-learned to know and to love the true God, and we must
-believe she loved him with the intensity of her nature. The
-opportunity was offered, and she determined to forsake her
-heathen idols, and to unite herself with the people of Jehovah,
-and to rest within the shadow of the wings of the God of
-Israel, regardless of trials or poverty that might await her in
-the future. 2. On the other hand, Naomi was brave to take
-Ruth with her, for she knew the law that excluded the Moabite,
-and it is marvelous that Ruth was received into the
-Hebrew nation, for her people were specially interdicted, and
-doubtless this was the reason why Naomi sought and urged
-Orpah and Ruth to turn back.</p>
-
-<p>At length, after days of travel, the two lone women, weary
-and footsore, arrived at Bethlehem, and all the city was
-moved about the event, and as they looked into the face of
-the elder woman and saw the deep lines of sorrow, they said,
-“Is not this Naomi?” Yes, it was Naomi (which means delightsome),
-in her youth, before her life became blasted with
-sorrow and want. In her destitution her name seems to her
-to be a mockery, and she exclaims, “Call me Mara!” that
-is, bitterness. She went out with her husband and sons full
-of hope, now she has returned with only the bitter recollection
-of three graves in the land of Moab, and herself in abject
-poverty.</p>
-
-<p>No one seemed to have helped Naomi in her sorrow and
-distress. But Ruth, true to her declaration, clung to Naomi,
-and bravely took it upon herself to provide for both. It was
-the time of the barley harvest, and the brave girl went out
-into the fields to glean after the reapers, a privilege that the
-law of Moses allowed to the poor of the land.</p>
-
-<p>“Her hap” was to enter the field of Boaz. It was a “hap”
-so far as Ruth was concerned, but back of it was the ordering
-of Him who is the husband of the widow and the Father<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-of the fatherless. Boaz came into the field, and after the
-good manners of those times, exchanged pious and kindly
-salutations with his reapers. Now Boaz was a near kinsman
-of Ruth’s deceased husband, and a man of wealth and consideration,
-but of course knew nothing about this Moabitess.
-However, having learned that she was the companion of
-Naomi, he generously permitted her to glean among the
-sheaves, and instructed his reapers to let drop a handful now
-and then on purpose for her.</p>
-
-<p>And so this loving heart gleaned through the hot hours of
-the day until evening, and then she beat the barley from the
-straw, and the result proved she had “about an ephah”
-(over a bushel) of barley.</p>
-
-<p>With the result of her day’s labor under her arm, she hastened
-home, and when Naomi saw it, she asked, “Where hast
-thou gleaned to-day?”</p>
-
-<p>Ruth replied that the name of the man in whose field she
-had gleaned was Boaz.</p>
-
-<p>Naomi loved her beautiful, widowed daughter-in-law; and
-she was eager for her to have a happy home, claiming in
-Israel the inheritance of the departed, and so she told Ruth
-of the relation in which Boaz stood to her, and instructed
-her to claim at the hands of Boaz that he should perform the
-part of her husband’s near kinsman, by purchasing the inheritance
-of Elimelech, and taking her to be his wife. But
-there was a nearer kinsman than Boaz, and it was necessary
-that he should have the option of redeeming the inheritance
-for himself. He, however, declined, fearing to mar his own
-inheritance. Upon which, with all due solemnity, Boaz took
-Ruth to be his wife, amidst the blessings and congratulations
-of their neighbors.</p>
-
-<p>The most sweetly primitive and poetic touch of all this
-story is the blessing of the women upon Naomi, when the
-babe that had been given Ruth after her marriage to Boaz
-was laid in the mother-in-law’s bosom: “Blessed be the
-Lord, which had not left thee this day without a kinsman,
-that his name may be famous in Israel. And he shall be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
-unto thee a restorer of thy life, and a nourisher of thine old
-age; for thy daughter-in-law, which loveth thee, which is
-better to thee than seven sons, hath borne him.”</p>
-
-<p>Ruth, by birth, was a heathen. As such, she was excluded
-from God’s covenanted people. But, in her case, love was
-mightier than law. In the fullness of time it was shown to
-be the fulfillment of law. Though her people were specially
-interdicted, she was admitted to the first rank and led by
-Providence into the line of the world’s nobility. Her life
-shows how God values beautiful, loving character even more
-than great deeds. As her name indicates, she was a “faithful
-friend.” It was what she was, rather than what she did,
-that brought her the high honor of being the mother of
-Obed, and the ancestress, not only of David and Solomon,
-the greatest Jewish kings, but of Christ Himself. To a
-believing people like the Hebrews, who lived for the future,
-that was the climax of Divine approval.</p>
-
-<p>What amazing results have been accomplished by women
-of faith. It will be well for us to study and emulate the
-sweet, obedient faith of this beautiful Moabitess. We must
-remember that it is not the quantity, but quality, of our
-service that pleases most our heavenly Father; not what we
-do, but what we are. We may never do great things, but,
-through grace, we can all be faithful. We may pass from
-the stage of action, but the splendid deeds wrought in faith
-will remain, shedding their influence across the bosom of a
-sinful world, like so many beacon lights guiding a guilty
-race back to a Father’s love, and the world’s final redemption.</p>
-
-<p>We now come to Hannah, the last woman in White
-Raiment under the Theocracy. The mother of the great and
-good Samuel will ever stand in history as among the purest
-of women. It often happens that the mother is lost sight of
-in the fame of her son. This is quite true in the life of
-Samuel. He stands out the great Reformer of his time, lifting
-his people out of the Dark Ages of the Old Testament
-and leading them into the Golden Age of David’s kingdom
-and Israel’s pre-eminence among the nations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>But while Samuel ranks with Joseph, and Joshua, and
-Daniel, in the blamelessness of his life, let us not forget that
-back of that great life was a woman’s broken heart, a
-woman’s tears, a woman’s life made bitter by disappointment
-and humiliation, made so by a polygamous system
-whose fruit must ever be jealousy and sorrow—ever a sign
-of a low condition of social morality.</p>
-
-<p>Poor, heart-broken Hannah was one of the two wives of
-Elkanah, an Ephrathite. However, the record does not
-show that she was unloved by her husband. Indeed, it
-appears that he tried to comfort her, gallantly asking her
-if he were not more to her than ten sons. But her sorrow
-that she had no children made her countenance sad, and
-took away her appetite for food. At length, however, out of
-her crushed heart came the believing prayer that brought
-her victory and consolation.</p>
-
-<p>It was the fixed habit of Elkanah to go with his family
-“yearly to worship and to sacrifice unto the Lord of Hosts
-in Shiloh.” On one of these yearly visits, Hannah poured
-out her prayer in great sobs and tears. She was very
-definite in her petition. She asked for a son, not that she
-might know the joy of motherhood, but that God might be
-glorified. She promised that she would “give him unto the
-Lord all the days of his life.” And so earnest was she in
-pressing her suit, that Eli the priest thought her drunk, and
-reproved her for her conduct. But she bravely told him her
-story. She said she was a “woman of a sorrowful spirit.”
-She had drunk neither wine nor strong drink, but had poured
-out her soul before the Lord.</p>
-
-<p>The spirit of prophecy came upon the good old man, and
-though he knew nothing of the nature of her prayer, he
-promised its fulfillment. “Go in peace: and the God of
-Israel grant thee thy petition that thou hast asked of Him.”
-Hannah believed, and she “went her way, and did eat, and
-her countenance was no more sad.”</p>
-
-<p>After her beautiful boy was born, and began to show his
-charming baby ways, she trembled under his dainty caresses,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
-and the kisses of his pure, sweet mouth, for she remembered
-her vow; but she was true and faithful.</p>
-
-<p>It is a brave, strong, submissive mother who can give up
-without a murmur the child that God takes to Himself; but
-to know that he is alive somewhere, and at that very hour
-may be grieving for lack of the love and care that only a
-mother can give, O how that ordeal must rend the heart!
-Just that was the test of Hannah’s loyalty. In just that
-severe balance of obedience and trust was she weighed, and
-she was not found wanting.</p>
-
-<p>When her child was old enough to be left without a
-mother’s watchful care she took him to the Tabernacle and
-gave him to Eli, to be brought up as a child of the sanctuary.
-“I have lent him to the Lord,” she said, “and as
-long as he lives he shall be lent unto the Lord.” Not for a
-few days or weeks did she give him up, but she gave him
-wholly and with a sacrifice that only a mother could understand,
-she consented that the little feet for whose pattering
-she had longed should be heard no more in her cottage, that
-the prattle for whose music her lonely heart had waited a
-lifetime should sound no more in her ears, but that she
-should live on till the end alone, glad to know that he was
-all the Lord’s, and was giving back to God the blessing
-which he had brought to her. This is love and this is the
-difference between the love of earth and the love of heaven.
-Earthly love loves for the pleasure it can find in loving.
-Heavenly love loves for the blessing it can give to the loved
-one. Hannah knew that her sacrifice was best for Samuel,
-and that in giving him to God she was getting more for him
-than a mother’s selfish fondness could ever have bestowed.</p>
-
-<p>And yet there was still the sweet thought behind it all
-that he was hers. She was not losing him but lending him,
-and God counted her sacrifice a real service, and some day
-would restore the loan with infinite and eternal additions.</p>
-
-<p>When Hannah had triumphed over her own heart, and her
-boy was safely under the care and instruction of Eli, to be
-used to the utmost in the Lord’s service, she sung her song of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-thanksgiving for the birth of her son. Her hymn is in the
-highest order of prophetic poetry. Its resemblance to that
-of the Virgin Mary has been noticed by Bible students, and
-is specially remarkable as containing the first designation of
-the Messiah under that name. Though written in the days
-of scant literary attainment, the song of Hannah is an exquisite
-piece of composition. It is full of keen insight and
-superb power. Besides what was written by Moses, men
-wrote but little poetry in that early time. The hymns of
-Miriam, Deborah and Hannah have rare beauty. It was the
-daughters rather than the sons who prophesied in song.</p>
-
-<p>But while the child Samuel, “girded with a linen ephod,”
-“ministered before the Lord,” in the Tabernacle, in Shiloh,
-the loving mother heart, in her home, was stitching her
-beautiful thoughts year after year into the little coat which
-she annually brought to him, “when she came up with her
-husband to offer the yearly sacrifice.” And we may well
-believe that Hannah’s loyalty and good sense made plain,
-serviceable garments, so that the mind of the young Samuel
-was not diverted from his Tabernacle duties to gay and
-bright colors in his tunics, and so his young heart was kept
-from the blight of pride. This was the lad’s high privilege.
-He was always a holy child. He never knew the defiling
-breath of wickedness. This may be the privilege of your
-child, Christian mother. God help you to protect your innocent
-babe from the foul breath of sin’s contamination and
-always to shelter that trusting life under the protecting
-wings of God. This may be your privilege, happy Christian
-child, who perchance may read these lines to-day. Oh,
-let God have your earliest years and may you never know
-the mystery of iniquity and the memories of sin and shame
-which, though they may be forgiven, yet come back to defile
-and distress the heart.</p>
-
-<p>But Samuel was not holy and good by natural birth or disposition.
-It was not because that he was good anyhow by
-temperament. The keynote of his life was, “Speak, Lord,
-for Thy servant heareth.” At first even he made some mistakes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
-and misunderstood the voice that spake to him so
-gently in his little chamber. Three times it called to him in
-vain, and he thought it was the old priest’s message, but
-even when he understood not he still responded and sprang
-to his feet, ready instantly to obey.</p>
-
-<p>The very peculiarities of Samuel’s call lingered in his later
-life in his messages to Saul, “Behold, to obey is better than
-sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams.” All his
-blessings had come to him by hearkening and obeying, and
-all Saul’s calamities had come to him because he willfully
-took his own way and refused to listen to God.</p>
-
-<p>From Hannah’s consecration of her child we may learn
-two excellent lessons, embodying the greatest principles that
-underlie the human side of the redemption of the race:
-First, the mother’s power; and second, the child’s ability to
-know God. She had so thoroughly lent Samuel to the Lord
-that he held true to God in the degeneracy of Eli’s judgeship
-and the slackness of the priesthood, as illustrated in the
-family of Eli. The social condition of the age was a shocking
-exhibition of low sensuality, licentiousness and cupidity
-that would disgrace even the grossest heathenism. Eli himself,
-while a just and holy man in his own private character,
-was weak and inefficient as a judge and a priest, and utterly
-failed to restrain his ungodly family or exercise any just administration
-of public affairs. The whole nation was, therefore,
-in a most pitiable condition, at the mercy of its foreign
-oppressors and so enfeebled that a few years later we find
-there was not a sword in Israel, and they had even to go to
-the grindstones of the Philistines in order to grind their
-plough coulters for the ordinary operations of husbandry. It
-was at such a time as this that God called Samuel to be at
-once the pattern and deliverer of his country.</p>
-
-<p>In the very outset, the Lord had some very unpleasant
-work for Samuel to do, which must have tested his obedience.
-While yet quite young he had a hard, sad message to deliver
-to his old friend and instructor, and it was no easy task to
-go to Eli and tell him all that God had spoken against his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
-house. It was the hard test which often came again in his
-later ministry as the messenger of God to sinful man. Again
-and again did he have to go to those he loved and say to
-them the thing which nearly broke his heart.</p>
-
-<p>When this child of promise finally passed from under the
-watchful care of the devoted Hannah, we are told, “the Lord
-was with Samuel,” and he “let none of his words fall to the
-ground, and all Israel knew that Samuel was established to
-be a prophet of the Lord.”</p>
-
-<p>The life of Samuel marks a transition period in the history
-of Israel from the time of the Judges to the kingdom of Saul
-and David. His was an epoch life like Abraham’s, Joshua’s
-and John the Baptist’s.</p>
-
-<p>He also enjoyed the distinguished honor of being the
-founder of the school of the prophets and the first in that
-glorious succession of holy men who spake as they were
-moved by the Holy Ghost, and who formed the only unbroken
-line of truth and righteousness in the history of God’s ancient
-people. From the days of Samuel the prophets formed a
-distinct class, and had a regular school of training, corresponding
-somewhat to our theological seminaries and training
-institutes, and Samuel had the pre-eminence of being the
-founder of these prophetic schools. Later in his life he went
-about the country as a pastor and overseer, visiting the
-towns and villages, holding conventions, from place to place
-and instructing the people in the law of God and the schools
-of the prophets in the principles of the kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>But, above all his public ministries and even his national
-influence, Samuel was himself a beautiful and spotless character.
-In an age of almost universal corruption he lived
-a life of blameless piety, and at a later period, when bidding
-farewell to the nation as their judge, he could truly call
-upon them to witness to his uprightness and integrity.
-“Behold,” he said, “I am old and gray-headed, and I have
-walked before you from my childhood unto this day. Behold,
-here I am; witness against me before the Lord and before
-His anointed. Whose ox have I taken? or whose ass have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-I taken? or whom have I defrauded? whom have I
-oppressed? or of whose hand have I received any bribe to
-blind mine eyes therewith? and I will restore it to you.”
-And they said, “Thou hast not defrauded us nor oppressed
-us, neither hast thou taken aught of any man’s hand.”</p>
-
-<p>Samuel stands forth as one of the blameless lives of sacred
-history; human no doubt in his infirmities, but no fault has
-been recorded against him, and his personal character is the
-most eloquent testimony of all his history.</p>
-
-<p>We have been permitted to trace this beautiful life to its
-source. Some characters, like Elijah’s suddenly burst upon
-our vision and we only know them in the public and closing
-chapters of their history. Some, however, are like a beautiful
-river that you can trace to its crystal fountain and follow
-all through its winding channel until, like our own Hudson,
-it pours its volume into the sea. Thus we have been permitted
-to stand by Samuel’s cradle and even to know something
-of his prophetic future before his very birth. We
-enter into the joys and sorrows and the believing prayers of
-Hannah, the devoted mother, who was the real fountain, not
-only of his natural life, but also of his piety and holy
-power. And we walk side by side with him through his
-childhood and his youth until, at last, we meet him in the
-busy activities of his manhood and follow him until he lays
-down his ministry and passes to his honored rest.</p>
-
-<p>What a touching story is the life of Hannah of motherly
-consecration of herself and her Samuel. If all who wear the
-crown of motherhood were as noble, as loyal, as self-giving
-and trustful as Hannah was, and brought up their children
-to know and obey the voice of the Lord, what a world this
-would be. O that our land were filled with Hannahs, then
-would we have more Samuels.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER V.<br />
-
-Womanhood During the Reign of the Kings.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Abigail—Churlish Nabal—Chivalrous Appreciation—David’s
-Messengers—Saul’s Daughters—His Treachery—Michal’s
-Stratagem—Rizpah—Her Heroic Endurance and Loving
-Fidelity—The Queen of Sheba—Her Visit to Jerusalem—The
-Glory and Wisdom of Solomon—The Half Not Told—The
-Queen’s Royal Gifts.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Passing</span> out from under the Theocracy, or rule of the
-Judges, the first woman in White Raiment that appears on
-the page of the Sacred Record is Abigail. She was the wife
-of Nabal, a wealthy owner of goats and sheep in Carmel, not
-the Mount Carmel of Central Palestine, between the maritime
-plain of Sharon on the south, and the great inland
-expanse known as the plain of Esdraelon on the north, but a
-town in the mountainous country of Judah, to the west of the
-lower end of the Dead Sea. She was a woman of good understanding
-and of a beautiful countenance—a fit combination.</p>
-
-<p>Her character had written its legend on her face. The
-two things do not always go together. There are many
-beautiful women wholly destitute of good understanding,
-just as birds of rarest plumage are commonly deficient in the
-power of song. But a good understanding, which is moral
-rather than intellectual, casts a glow of beauty over the
-plainest features.</p>
-
-<p>But Abigail’s husband was a churl. The great establishment
-over which she presided would be called, in our modern
-times, a sheep ranch, and, under the management of such a
-man as Nabal, the servants doubtless often echoed the ill-temper
-of their master, and her wits would be often sharpened
-to the utmost to keep all within the limits of safety and
-comfort.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>Evidently, at her birth, Abigail had been a welcomed child
-in a happy home, amid plenty and even luxury, such as the
-times in that rude age of the world could give. Her parents
-named her “Source of joy.” She had grown up in a glad,
-breezy confidence that made her equal to any emergency.
-Since God has floods of glory for the gloomiest souls, why
-will not parents keep their children in the clear, warm sunshine
-of joyful love? Many drudge early and late to provide
-culture and comfort; but they withhold a better, richer
-gift. They becloud hopelessly the dear young lives with
-their own disappointments, and foredoom them to despondency.</p>
-
-<p>This sprightly, happy, beautiful Abigail at length married
-the selfish, churlish Nabal. When we look over society
-to-day, it is remarkable how many Abigails get married to
-Nabals. God-fearing women, tender and gentle in their
-sensibilities, high-minded and noble in their ideals, become
-tied in an indissoluble union with men for whom they can
-have no true affinity, even if they have not an unconquerable
-repugnance. In Abigail’s case this relationship was, in all
-probability, not of her choosing, but the product of the
-Oriental custom which compelled a girl to take her father’s
-choice in the matter of marriage. As a mere child she may
-have come into Nabal’s home, and become bound to him by
-an apparently inevitable fate. In other ways which involve
-equally little personal choice, compelled by the pressure of
-inexorable circumstances, misled by the deceitful tongue of
-flattery, her instinctive hesitancy overcome by the urgency
-of friends, a woman may still find herself in Abigail’s pitiful
-plight. To such a one there is but one advice—you must
-stay where you are. The dissimilarity in taste and temperament
-does not constitute a sufficient reason for leaving
-your husband to drift. You must believe that God has permitted
-you to enter on this awful heritage, partly because
-this fiery ordeal was required by your character, and partly
-that you might act as a counteractive influence. It may be
-that some day your opportunity will come, as it came to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
-Abigail. In the meantime do not allow your purer nature
-to be bespotted or besmeared. You can always keep the
-soul clean and pure. Bide your time; and, amid the weltering
-waste of inky water, be like a pure fountain rising from
-the ocean depths.</p>
-
-<p>But if any young girl of good sense and earnest aspirations,
-who reads these lines, secretly knows that, if she had
-the chance, she would wed a carriage and pair, a good position,
-or broad acres, irrespective of character, let her remember
-that to enter the marriage bond with a man, deliberately
-and advisedly, for such a purpose, is a profanation of the
-Divine ideal, and can end only in one way. She will not
-raise him to her level, but she will sink to his.</p>
-
-<p>There came a time when Nabal had an opportunity to show
-kindness, to pay back, in part at least, his appreciation for
-the protection David and his men had given Nabal’s shepherds
-from Bedouin and other desert robbers. It was sheep-shearing
-time, a season of gladness and of feasting. David
-and his men were shut up in the wilderness of Engedi,
-driven thither by the persecutions of Saul. Doubtless they
-were in need of food, and David thought that the owner of
-three thousand sheep, and a thousand goats, in the very
-midst of the sheep-shearing festivities, could send him a
-token of remembrance in his hunger and need. So David
-sent ten of his young men with salutations of peace and prosperity,
-and a request for any favor he felt disposed to give.
-But Nabal answered the young men saying, “Who is David?
-and who is the son of Jesse? there be many servants nowadays
-that break away every man from his master. Shall I
-then take my bread, and my water, and my flesh that I
-have killed for my shearers, and give it unto men, whom I
-know not whence they be?”</p>
-
-<p>The young men returned to David with the message of
-Nabal, and, naturally enough, David felt insulted and outraged.
-Taking a band of four hundred men, he resolved to
-impress upon Nabal who the “son of Jesse” was, and to make
-him pay dearly for his foolhardy conduct.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>But, in the meantime, one of Nabal’s servants told
-Abigail how David’s young men had been treated. Evidently
-this thoughtful and prudent servant knew the excellency
-of his mistress, and could trust her to act wisely in the
-emergency which was upon them. So he told her all. Told
-how David and his men had been “a wall” unto the shepherds
-“both by night and by day,” and for all this kindness
-Nabal, his master, had “railed” upon David’s messengers.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus121.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE BEAUTIFUL ABIGAIL MEETING DAVID.</p>
-
-<p>Abigail immediately grasped the situation and at once
-despatched a small procession of provision-bearers along the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-way David would come. In this she did not even take Nabal
-into her counsel, and she prepared to pay bountifully for the
-conduct of her foolhardy husband.</p>
-
-<p>The band had scarcely started when she followed after,
-and, as she expected, met the avenging warriors by the covert
-of the mountain, and the interview was as creditable to
-her woman’s wit as to her grace of heart. The lowly obeisance
-of the beautiful woman at the young soldier’s feet; the
-frank confession of the wrong that had been done; the expression
-of thankfulness that so far he had been kept from
-blood-guiltiness and from avenging his own wrongs; the depreciation
-of the generous present she brought as only fit for
-his servants; the chivalrous appreciation of his desire to fight
-only the battles of the Lord and to keep an unblemished
-name; the sure anticipation of the time when his fortunes
-would be secured and his enemies silenced; the suggestion
-that in those coming days he would be glad to have no
-shadow on the sunlit hills of his life, no haunting memory—all
-this was as beautiful and wise and womanly as it could
-be, and brought David back to his better self. Frank and
-noble as he always was, he did not hesitate to acknowledge
-his deep indebtedness to this lovely woman, and to see in her
-intercession the gracious arrest of God. “And David said to
-Abigail, Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel, which sent
-thee this day to meet me; and blessed be thy wisdom, and
-blessed be thou, which has kept me this day from blood-guiltiness,
-and from avenging myself with my own hand.”</p>
-
-<p>What a revelation this is of the ministries with which God
-seeks to avert us from our evil ways! They are sometimes
-very subtle and slender, very small and still; sometimes a
-gentle woman’s hand laid on our wrist, the mother reminding
-us of her maternity, the wife of early vows, the child with its
-pitiful, beseeching look; sometimes a thought, holy, pleading,
-remonstrating. Ah, many a time we have been saved
-from actions which would have caused lasting regret. And
-above all these voices and influences there has been the gracious
-arresting influence of the Holy Spirit, striving with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
-passion and selfishness, calling us to a nobler, better life.
-Blessed Spirit, come down more often by the covert of the
-hill, and stay us in our mad career, and let us not press past
-thee to take our own wild way, and we shall have reason for
-ceaseless gratitude.</p>
-
-<p>Only ten days after Abigail’s womanly intercession Nabal
-died by the judgments of God.</p>
-
-<p>When David heard of Nabal’s death, he was very grateful
-indeed that he had been restrained by the prudent words of
-Abigail, and sent messengers to her at Carmel, asking her
-hand in marriage. And this is the touching reply she sent
-back to David, “Behold, let thine handmaid be a servant to
-wash the feet of the servants of my lord.”</p>
-
-<p>“And Abigail hasted, and arose, and rode upon an ass,
-with five damsels of hers that went after her; and she went
-after the messengers of David, and became his wife.” After
-her marriage, she accompanied David in all his fortunes;
-and no doubt her shrewd business sense was of great service
-to her husband. The words she told David while he was
-sinking under discouragement from Nabal’s ingratitude,
-that he would be “bound in the bundle of life with the Lord
-his God,” became prophetic of her own after life. She proved
-that—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“They who get the best are those</div>
-<div class="verse">Who leave the choice to Him.”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>We next come to Michal. As Abigail had saved the life
-of Nabal, so Michal had saved the life of David. She was
-the younger of the two daughters of Saul, the first king in
-Israel. David had been very successful in the slaughter of
-the Philistines, and on his return the women came out singing
-songs of welcome, in which they chanted, “Saul hath
-slain thousands, and David ten thousands.” Saul was highly
-displeased with this popular welcome to David and said,
-“What can he have more but the kingdom?”</p>
-
-<p>But, with a view of exposing the life of David, Saul
-promised his elder daughter, Merab, in marriage, if he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
-would fight his battles. However, in this Saul had missed
-his calculations, for the Philistines were not able to take the
-life of David. So, no doubt, in order that he might have one
-more opportunity of exposing David to the dangers of war,
-he gave Merab to Adriel, the Mehoathite, to wife. It was
-a treachery such as Saul frequently practiced upon David.
-So he offered Michal, the second daughter, in marriage, fixing
-the price for her hand at no less than the slaughter of a
-hundred Philistines. David, by a brilliant feat, doubled
-the tale of his victims, and Michal became his wife.</p>
-
-<p>Michal was not averse to the good luck of David, for she
-had so appreciated him that she had fallen violently in love
-with the young hero. It was not long, however, before the
-strength of her affections was put to the proof. After one of
-Saul’s attacks of frenzy, in which David had barely escaped
-being transfixed by the king’s spear, Michal learned that the
-house was being watched by Saul’s soldiers, and that it was
-intended on the next morning to attack her husband as he
-left his door. Michal seemed to have known too well the
-vacillating and ferocious disposition of her father when in
-these demoniacal moods, so, like a true soldier’s wife, she
-met stratagem by stratagem. She first provided for
-David’s safety by lowering him out of the window by
-means of a rope. To gain time for him to reach the residence
-of Samuel at Ramah, she dressed up the bed as if still
-occupied by him, by placing a teraphim in it, its head enveloped,
-like that of a sleeper, in the usual net used for protection
-from gnats—a sore pest in Palestine.</p>
-
-<p>It happened as Michal feared. Her father sent officers to
-take David. Michal made answer that her husband was ill
-and could not be disturbed. At last Saul would not be
-longer put off, and ordered his messengers to force their way
-into David’s apartment, when they discovered the deception
-which had been played so successfully, Saul’s rage knew
-no bounds, and his fury was such that Michal was obliged to
-resort to another deception by pretending that David attempted
-to kill her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>When Michal let David down by a rope through a window
-on that memorable night in which she saved his life, it was
-the last time she saw her husband for many years. When
-the rupture between Saul and David became open, Saul gave
-Michal in marriage to Phaltiel, of Gallim, a village not far
-from the royal residence at Gibeah.</p>
-
-<p>After the death of Saul, Michal and her new husband
-moved with the royal family to the east of Jordan.</p>
-
-<p>It was at least fourteen years since she had watched
-David’s disappearance down the rope into the darkness of
-the night and had imperilled her own life to save his. During
-all these years, it would seem, his love for his absent
-wife had undergone no change, for he was eager to reclaim
-her when the first opportunity presented itself. That opportunity
-came when Abner revolted from Ishbosheth. Important
-as it was to him to make an alliance with the court
-of Ishbosheth, established at Mahanaim, and much as he
-respected Abner, he would not listen for a moment to any
-overtures till his wife was restored. And David sent messengers
-to Ishbosheth saying, “Deliver me my wife Michal.”
-There seemed to be no alternative, and Michal was taken
-from Phaltiel. That she had equally won the love of Phaltiel
-is manifest from the sad scene when she was taken from
-him, and now under the joint escort of David’s messengers
-and Abner’s twenty men, <i>en route</i> from Mahanaim to Hebron,
-he followed behind, bewailing the wife thus torn from him,
-and would not turn back until commanded to do so by
-Abner.</p>
-
-<p>But when Michal was received into the royal home, then
-at Hebron, she was not the affectionate companion of David’s
-youth. And, doubtless, he was no longer to her what he was
-before she had bestowed her love upon another. They were
-no longer what they had been to each other. The alienation
-was probably mutual. On her side must have been the
-recollection of the long contest which had taken place in the
-interval between her father and David; the strong feeling in
-the palace at Hebron against the house of Saul, where every<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>
-word she heard must have contained some distasteful allusion,
-and where at every turn she must have encountered
-men like Abiather the priest, or Ismaiah the Gibeonite, who
-had lost the whole or the greater part of their relatives in
-some sudden burst of her father’s fury. And more than all,
-perhaps, the inevitable difference between the husband of
-her recollections and the matured and occupied warrior who
-now received her. The whole must have come upon her as a
-strong contrast to the affectionate Phaltiel, whose tears had
-followed her along the road over Olivet until commanded to
-return home.</p>
-
-<p>It also seems she did not enter into David’s religious
-sympathies. When he brought the Ark of Jehovah into
-Jerusalem, after the seat of government was transferred
-from Hebron to that city, Michal watched the procession
-approach from the window of the royal palace, and when
-she saw David in the triumphal march, “she despised him
-in her heart.” It would have been well if her contempt had
-rested there; but it was not in her nature to conceal it, and
-when the last burnt offering had been made, and the king
-entered his house to bless his family, he was received by his
-wife not with the congratulations which he had a right to
-expect and which would have been so grateful to him, but
-with a bitter taunt which showed how incapable she was of
-appreciating either her husband’s devotions, or the importance
-of the service in which he had been engaged. David’s
-answer showed that they were as wide apart religiously as
-he and her father had been politically. He said, “It was
-before the Lord, which chose me before thy father, and
-before all his house, to appoint me ruler over the people.”
-This reproof gathered up all the differences between them
-which made sympathy no longer possible.</p>
-
-<p>We must think of Michal what she was to David in her
-youth, and what she might have been had she not been
-given to another, perhaps against her own will. Thus
-David lost her womanly affection, which he so much needed,
-and Michal lost his brave, heroic but devout spirit, which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-would greatly have helped her to a correct knowledge of
-God, for, from the fact that she had a teraphim in her house,
-would indicate she was not wholly free from idolatry, and
-this doubtless accounts for her lack of sympathy with David
-in his religious nature, for his devotions to God were unquestioned.
-Her surroundings from childhood were bad every
-way, and her want of religious sympathy was not so much
-the want of faith as the lack of opportunity to know God.
-We give her a place here for what she was in her youth, in
-saving the life of David, and what she would have been
-could she have grown up under the religious influences of
-David.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the death of Saul, the first king in Israel, Rizpah, a
-secondary wife, and mother of his two sons Armoni and
-Mephibosheth, appears on the stage of action. After Saul
-was defeated and met with death on Mount Gilboa and the
-Philistines occupied the country west of the Jordan, the seat
-of government was transferred from Gibeah to Mahanaim
-for greater protection, and Rizpah accompanied the inmates
-of the royal household to their new residence.</p>
-
-<p>Ishbosheth, the youngest of Saul’s four legitimate sons,
-and his rightful heir to the throne, had been proclaimed
-king in place of his father. Abner, Saul’s uncle, however,
-had command of the army, and had much to do in administering
-the affairs of the kingdom; and, because of this
-relation, and for reasons not stated, he seemed to have had
-frequent consultations with Rizpah, and this excited
-Ishbosheth’s jealousy. Among those primitive people, to
-take the widow of a deceased king was to aspire to the
-throne. Ishbosheth accused Abner of that ambitious design,
-and the captain, in his resentment, replied, “Am I a dog’s
-head, which against Judah do shew kindness this day unto
-the house of Saul thy father, to his brethren, and to his
-friends, and have not delivered thee into the hands of
-David, that thou chargest me to-day with a fault concerning
-this woman?” Abner was so wroth that he left Ishbosheth
-and went over to David—a piece of spite which led first to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
-Abner’s death through Joab’s treachery, and ultimately to
-the murder of Ishbosheth himself.</p>
-
-<p>We hear nothing more of Rizpah till the three years’ famine
-made it necessary to settle an old score against the house
-of Saul for that king’s wicked dealings with the Gibeonites.
-According to the crude, rough justice of the times, they
-demanded the death of seven of Saul’s descendants. The
-two sons of Rizpah and five of Saul’s grandsons were handed
-over to them for crucifixion.</p>
-
-<p>Here Rizpah’s love, and endurance is brought to our notice.
-The seven crosses to which her two sons and her five relatives
-were fastened, were planted in the rock on the top of the
-sacred hill of Gibeah. The victims were sacrificed at the
-beginning of barley harvest—the sacred and festal time of
-the Passover—and in the full blaze of the summer sun they
-hung till the fall of the periodical rain in October. During
-the whole of that time Rizpah remained at the foot of the
-crosses on which the bodies of her sons were exposed. She
-had no tent to shelter her all those months from the scorching
-sun which beats on that open spot all day, or from the
-drenching dews of night, but she spread on the rock summit
-the thick mourning garment of black sackcloth, which, as a
-widow, she wore, and, crouching there, she kept off bird and
-beast till their bodies could have honorable burial.</p>
-
-<p>At length the heroic actions of Rizpah were brought to the
-notice of David, who, with his usual kindness, had the bodies
-of Saul and his friend Jonathan brought from Jabesh-Gilead,
-and the bodies taken from the crosses and sepulchred in
-the family tomb of Kish.</p>
-
-<p>Rizpah, by birth was a Hivite, and probably had not the
-sustaining grace which God alone can give. She had trained
-her sons for the splendors of a court. They were cut off in
-their prime, and her desolate heart had only its pride to sustain
-her during her superhuman anguish and endurance.
-Her loving, passionate nature was a bright light in a rude,
-dark age. With such a beautiful example before us, we
-need never say the circumstances of our life forbid the possibilities<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-of living for God. The blacker the cloud the
-brighter may be the rainbow. The harder our situation the
-more can our life become a protest against it. The lighthouse
-needs the midnight darkness and the storm-beaten shore
-to bring out its value and its purpose, and there is no situation
-so trying and difficult but God can sustain us in it, and when
-we have learned our lesson enable us to triumph over it.</p>
-
-<p>Rizpah’s loving fidelity has placed her in the front ranks
-of Bible women whose holy ministries have made them
-famous. She may very justly be characterized as the
-<i>Mater Dolorosa</i> of the old dispensation. Her fidelity to the
-memory of departed loved ones has no equal in the history
-of the world. And all this without the sustaining grace of
-God, for it must be remembered poor Rizpah was but a
-heathen woman, in a rude, dark age of the world. How
-glad we should be, that in a world where there is so much to
-sadden and depress, we have a Saviour to go to who knows
-all about our sorrow, and is touched with the feeling of our
-infirmities, and have blessed communion with Him in whom
-is the one true source and fountain of all true gladness and
-abiding joy! In a world where so much is ever seeking to
-unhallow our spirits, to render them common, how high the
-privilege of entering into the secret of His pavilion, and
-there, by consecration and prayer, receive strength for days
-to come. Such was not Rizpah’s privilege, hence her devotion
-is all the more remarkable.</p>
-
-<p>The history runs on. David had established his throne,
-and the visit of the Queen of Sheba marks the climax of the
-greatness of that kingdom, and the glory and wisdom of
-Solomon. It is a remarkable proof of the new spirit that had
-come upon the nation. Hitherto the people of Israel had
-been wholly agricultural. The great peculiarity of their
-country was its isolation, situated in the very midst of the
-nations of the earth, yet it was curiously shut in and shut
-out. A seaboard without a single navigable river, with a
-vast desert on the south, a lofty mountain range on the north,
-and that strange descent of the Jordan valley in the east<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-going down more than a thousand feet below the level of the
-sea. But Solomon changed all that. His enterprise did
-not exhaust itself in building the Temple and palace of
-Jerusalem. He actually crossed the great desert to the
-south and at the head of the gulf that runs up to the east of
-the Arabian peninsula he made a harbor and himself superintended
-the building of a fleet of ships, and sent them to
-traffic in the east, and brought home the sandalwood and
-many of the treasures of the Indies, with which he enriched
-the palace and the garden.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus130.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">SOLOMON’S MERCHANT SHIPS.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>Thus his merchants went away to strange lands, carrying
-with them wherever they went the tidings of their great
-king, of the Temple that he had built to Jehovah, the God
-of Israel; of the palace splendors; of his throne of state in
-the cedar Judgment Hall, a throne of ivory with golden lions
-on each step, and a footstool of gold.</p>
-
-<p>Now of the countries that they visited one was famous for
-its gold and frankincense and precious stones. It was the
-land of Sheba to the south. Thither came the captains and
-crews of Solomon’s ships, and the queen heard of the
-strangers who had come to trade with them in their vessels
-from afar, men of a strange language. She sent for them to
-the court to hear from their own lips the wonderful things
-they had to tell of their great king, and of their God, and of
-Jerusalem.</p>
-
-<p>The mere pageantry of the visit to Jerusalem has hidden
-from us the true queenliness and spirit of this woman. It
-was no idle curiosity that prompted a journey involving so
-much risk and difficulty. Her very throne itself was imperilled
-by her departure and long absence. It is a proof
-of how firmly she was set in the affections of her people that
-she could venture to leave the land; a proof of her courage
-that she should dare set out on such a journey. Hearing of
-the wisdom of Solomon, hearing of the great things he had
-done for his people, hearing above all that he had brought
-such prosperity to the land that every man could sit safely
-under his own vine and fig-tree, she formed her purpose to
-go. If she could learn to do so much for her own people it
-were worth everything.</p>
-
-<p>When the merchants had gone we can see her turn to her
-statesmen, every inch a queen, and full already of her lofty
-purpose, address them thus, “If I could but secure such well-being
-for this nation of mine, I should count it cheaply earned
-if I went to the ends of the earth to get it.”</p>
-
-<p>It is also worthy of observation that this queen of the
-south was not content with hearing about Solomon. She did
-not listen to the tale these merchants told, and straightway<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-forgot it all, as if it were of no further concern. She made
-up her mind, there and then, that if such a one lived she
-would go to him and ask such questions as he, and only he,
-could answer, that would give her peace and be a blessing
-to her people.</p>
-
-<p>So important was this matter that she did not send an
-ambassador to the king. To her they were so real and
-sacred she must go herself, and go she did.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, the misery of it is that such hosts among us are content
-with hearing about these blessings of God. Alas, there
-are thousands of people who think all this is only to be
-preached about, never to be sought after; only to be heard
-about, never really found.</p>
-
-<p>She had a long way to go. We read, she came from the
-uttermost parts of the earth. Distances were immense in
-those days. It was a journey for camels, by no means a
-comfortable method of traveling. Soldiers must guard her,
-for there were many robbers; servants must go to wait upon
-her, for her state must be in keeping with the greatness of
-the foreign court. She must take with her a load of the
-most splendid gifts. Then there were long stretches of
-hot, wind-swept deserts to be crossed, in which many had
-perished in the sand storms. But she was not daunted, she
-was not to be turned aside. She had made up her mind,
-and bravely faced all the dangers.</p>
-
-<p>And then, also, we must not overlook the fact she had no
-invitation. She did not know how he might receive her.
-These great kings were jealous of strangers. Upon some
-pretence that she came to spy out the land, he might have
-her seized as a prisoner, and held her and her servants to
-be ransomed at some enormous cost of money. Such things
-were common enough; and, if he received her, was it not
-likely that he would look with contempt upon her? Even
-civilized people like the Greeks were accustomed to regard
-those as barbarians whose language and ways were foreign
-to themselves. But this brave woman will risk it all, and
-with a splendid courage, the courage of a woman, she comes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>So the Queen of Sheba came to see King Solomon, and the
-scene of her coming was one of the utmost splendor. It was
-a tribute indeed to the far-reaching fame of Israel, which
-king and people alike may well have sought to turn to the
-fullest account.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus133.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE QUEEN OF SHEBA.</p>
-
-<p>At the city gate Solomon came forth to meet the queen in
-all his glory, with flashing crown of pure gold, and royal
-robes of costliest magnificence. About him are the great officers
-of state in their gorgeous apparel, the old wise counselors,
-the chief captains of his army. Everywhere are the vast
-crowds of citizens, thronging every house roof and city wall,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
-and clustering on every point of vantage. The music of his
-singing men and singing women fills the air with glad
-welcome.</p>
-
-<p>And now, seated at his side, in the chariot of cedar with
-its tapestried curtains, and drawn by the horses of Egypt
-all richly caparisoned, they go on their way. Solomon points
-out to her the Temple which he was seven years in building,
-and which Josephus likened to a “mountain of snow, covered
-with plates of gold, whose brightness made those that looked
-upon it turn away their eyes.” He told her there were used
-“talents” of gold, of silver, and of brass in its construction
-valued at the enormous sum of $34,399,110,000. The worth
-of the jewels placed at figures equally as high. The vessels
-of gold, according to Josephus, were valued at 140,000 talents,
-which reduced to money, was equal to $2,821,481,015.
-The vessels of silver were still more valuable, being set down
-at $3,231,720,000. Priests’ vestments, and robes of singers,
-at $10,050,000. He told her ten thousand men hewed cedars,
-seventy thousand bore burdens, and eighty thousand hewed
-stones, and it required three thousand three hundred overseers.
-Surely it was the wonder of the world. Then he
-pointed out to her the Judgment Hall, the house of the forest
-of Lebanon, and many other stately edifices.</p>
-
-<p>And now they reach the palace, with its luxurious gardens
-filled with treasures from all lands. And, seated at the
-great banquet which the king had spread in her honor, she
-sees his wealth, the vastness of his possessions, the hosts of
-his servants, the cupbearers at his side, the banqueting hall,
-itself a marvel of splendor, the “ascent by which he went up
-unto the house of the Lord.” As she saw all this, we read,
-“there was no more spirit in her.” She was overwhelmed by
-the sight of such boundless wealth and the vision of such
-glory.</p>
-
-<p>The Queen of the South communed with Solomon, we are
-told, of all that was in her heart. Simply and earnestly she
-told of her longings for her people and of the difficulties that
-beset her. She communed with him of the mystery of life,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
-how to reach the highest and best. She asked him of many
-a matter that perplexed her. Graciously the king listened,
-and wisely he answered her. We can easily imagine the
-words which showed his skill in answering her questions.
-There may have been and doubtless was the keen wit, the
-brilliant saying, the flashes of wisdom, the glow of poetry,
-the genius like that which settled the dispute between the
-two mothers. Never did she dream of wisdom like that, and
-she exclaimed, “Behold, the half was not told me!” What
-she saw and heard excited her wonder to such a degree that
-it seemed to her directly imparted by the God of Solomon,
-whom he adored, and for whom she became filled with reverence.
-The light of heaven seemed to break on her soul when
-she exclaimed, “Blessed be the Lord thy God, which delighted
-in thee, to set thee on the throne of Israel.”</p>
-
-<p>She gladly acknowledged the truth of all that she had
-heard. “It was a true report that I heard in my own land
-of thy acts and of thy wisdom.” It was not mere learning,
-the answering of hard questions, the solution of metaphysical
-problems, but his works, appointments, the sitting of his
-servants, and the attendance of his ministers, the civil officers
-who sat at the royal table, convinced the queen of his great
-wisdom, in which she recognized the working of a peculiar
-power and grace imparted by God. It was also a practical
-or life-wisdom, such as Solomon himself describes, “a tree of
-life to them that lay hold upon her, length of days is in her
-right hand, and in her left hand riches and honor.” Such
-wisdom, which rests upon the foundation of the knowledge
-and love of God, “is more precious than rubies, and all the
-things thou canst desire are not to be compared unto her.”</p>
-
-<p>But the queen was not content with the words of praise
-and thanks. She makes proof of her gratitude by means of
-great and royal gifts. “She gave the king an hundred and
-twenty talents of gold, and of spices very great store, and
-precious stones.” The presents which she made consisted of
-those articles in which her land most abounded, and for
-which it was most famous. The spices were principally the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-celebrated Arabian balm, which was largely exported, and
-the shrub of which is said to have been introduced into
-Palestine by the Queen of Sheba.</p>
-
-<p>How high the significance which has always been attached
-to this visit of the Queen of Sheba to Solomon is shown by
-the fact that the remembrance of it has been preserved outside
-of Palestine for thousands of years, and that two ancient
-peoples, the Arabians and Abyssinians, regard her as the
-mother of their line of kings. And when the Lord, from out
-the treasure of the Old Testament history, chooses this narrative,
-and presents it for the shaming of the Pharisees and
-Scribes, this presupposes that it was known to and specially
-esteemed by all other nations. Sheba was reckoned to be
-the richest, most highly favored and glorious land in the
-ancient world, and therefore was given the unique name of
-“The Happy.” Now when the queen came with a splendid
-retinue to visit this distant land, and from no political
-design, but merely to see and hear the famous king; and
-when she, the sovereign of the most fortunate country in the
-world, declared that what she had seen and heard exceeded
-all her expectations; this surely was the greatest homage
-Solomon could have obtained. The visit of the Queen of
-Sheba marks, therefore, the splendor and climax of the Old
-Testament Kingdom, and marks an essential moment in the
-history of the covenant as well as of Solomon, and when our
-Lord said, “The Queen of the South shall rise up in the
-judgment with this generation and shall condemn it; for
-she came from the uttermost part of the earth to hear the
-wisdom of Solomon, and behold a greater than Solomon is
-here,” He recognized the prophetical and typical meaning
-of our narrative. It is said in the prophetical descriptions
-of the peaceful Kingdom of Messiah, “The Kings of Sheba
-and Seba (Meroe) shall offer gifts; yea, all kings shall fall
-down before him; all nations shall serve him.” The Queen
-of Sheba, who came from afar, is a type of the kings who,
-with their people, shall come from afar to the everlasting
-Prince of Peace, the King of kings, and shall do Him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
-homage. Her visit is an historical prophecy of the true
-and eternal Kingdom of peace.</p>
-
-<p>The Queen of Sheba had everything that pertains to temporal
-prosperity, high rank, honor and wealth. But all
-these satisfied not her soul. She spared no expense or hardships,
-in order to satisfy the longing of her heart for the
-Word of Life. She said not, “I am rich, and have an abundance,
-and need nothing,” but she felt she still needed the
-highest and the best. How superior is this heathen woman
-to so many in Christian lands, who hunger and thirst after
-all possible things, but never after a knowledge of truth and
-wisdom, after the Word of Life. And then we do not need
-to journey on camels through burning deserts to Jerusalem
-to find Him who is greater than Solomon, for He has promised,
-“I am with you forever, until the end of the world,”
-and can be found by “whosoever” will seek after Him.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI.<br />
-
-Womanhood in the Time of the Prophets and During
-the Captivity.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><span class="smcap">The Wicked Jezebel—The Widow of Sarepta—The Tishbite at
-the City Gate—His Strange Request—The Widow’s Unfaltering
-Obedience—An Appeal to Elisha—A Pot of Oil—The
-Widow’s Wonderful Faith—The Rich Woman of Shunem—Her
-Modest Life—Barley Harvest—A Ride to Carmel in
-the Glare of the Sun—Esther—Her Beautiful Traits of
-Character—Crowned as Queen—Pleading for the Life of
-Her People—Found Favor with the King.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> glory of the united kingdom of Israel, described in
-the last chapter, in a few years departed as a dream of the
-night. It was rent in twain, and Ahab, the wicked king,
-was on the throne of the northern kingdom, with the seat of
-government in Samaria. He had married Jezebel, the
-daughter of Ethbaal, King of Sidon, and she had introduced
-into the kingdom of Israel the heathen abominations of the
-Sidonians. She had even torn down God’s altars, and persecuted
-his prophets to the death. And it seems that too
-many of the Israelites raised little or no protests against
-these wicked acts of Jezebel. Indeed, one of the reasons
-why the kingdom, after the death of Solomon, was wrenched
-from Rehoboam, his son, was the people worshipped Ashtoreth,
-the goddess of the Sidonians.</p>
-
-<p>So grievous had these abominations of the Sidonians
-become, that God was about to visit the nation with judgment.
-But, as He always sends warnings, and gives a
-season to repent, so he sent Elijah, the Tishbite, from the hill
-country of Gilead down to Ahab in Samaria, with this message,
-“As the Lord God of Israel liveth, before whom I
-stand, there shall not be dew nor rain these years, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
-according to my word.” And James tells us, “it rained not
-upon the earth for the space of three years and six months.”</p>
-
-<p>During these years of famine, the Lord directed Elijah to
-a widow in Sarepta, after the waters of the brook of Cherith
-had dried up. Sarepta (or Zarephath) was a city of Phœnicia.
-But the distress of the famine in Israel was felt even
-here, for Israel was the great grain field for Phœnicia. And
-this explains why Elijah, when he came to the city gate of
-Sarepta, found a poor woman, a widow, gathering a few
-sticks, that she might bake the last morsel of bread and share
-it with her child, after which there was nothing more to
-hope for. The famine was doing its awful work among the
-cities of the coast. The hills back of Sarepta were scorched,
-and the beautiful valleys on either side of the city were
-cracked in great fissures. In her distress this widow, in her
-person had wasted to a skeleton, faltering, trembling, as she
-staggered out to gather a few sticks to bake her last cake for
-self and child, and then to die. Her cheeks were sunken,
-her eyes hollow, and her nerves seem never to have known
-what rest meant. As she walked she staggered; when
-she stood she reeled. She was leaning against her gate, the
-sticks in her arms when the Tishbite saluted her with the
-request, “Fetch me, I pray thee, a drink of water.”</p>
-
-<p>In a moment she was going toward her water pot.
-“Bring me, I pray thee, a morsel of bread in thy hand,” the
-prophet called after her while on the way to get the water.</p>
-
-<p>“Bread!” Distressed and sorely tried, the poor woman
-breaks down, and discloses the sad condition of her home in
-the ever-memorable words, “As the Lord thy God liveth, I
-have not a cake, but a handful of meal in a barrel and a
-little oil in a cruse, and behold, I am gathering two sticks
-that I may go and dress it for me and my son, that we may
-eat it and die.”</p>
-
-<p>She may or she may not have been an Israelite. She
-may have been one of the seven thousand who had not
-bowed unto Baal, and possibly knew who it was who
-addressed her. At all events she must have heard of this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
-“lighted fire-brand, fallen out of the clouds, and hurled by
-the hand of Jehovah” at the wicked Ahab. She may even
-have heard that in the midst of the drought Ahab had
-divided the country between himself and Obadiah, to seek
-if possible, amidst its former fountains and brooks a little
-“grass to save his horses and mules alive,” though it did not
-matter to this hardened wretch of a king if his subjects died
-by the thousands. So this demand of Elijah must have
-been a real trial to her faith. Nor did her distressed condition
-change the demand of the Tishbite. “Do as thou hast
-said,” he commanded, “but bake me a little cake first!”
-What, serve this stranger from Gilead before her starving
-child? Surely how could she, with her mother heart, obey
-such an order? But, noble woman, staggering under the
-request, she placed the gathered sticks on the fire, went to
-the barrel and took out the last handful of meal, and poured
-the last drop of oil from the cruse, and baked for God’s
-prophet the cake, and served him <i>first</i>! Was there ever such
-unselfish self-surrender? But for her poverty and her appearance,
-she might have passed for an angel who had
-strayed away from heaven, got caught in the famine and
-could not find her way back. If God had not been behind
-this exorbitant demand of the prophet it had been simply
-heartless. But, along with the demand were the words,
-“for the Lord God of Israel hath said it.” If God said it,
-that was the end of all questionings, this angel in human
-form, reduced in her poverty, staggered off to meet the demand.
-There may have been no small stir in heaven when
-it became known that she had gone to bake her last cake for
-the man of God, and then to die without tasting it herself.
-If the jasper walls had that moment let down around her,
-and all the glorified had gathered about that oven, she
-would have felt perfectly at home without a change of raiment.
-But that “last cake” was never baked. As the
-trembling widow stood by the heated oven, in sublime
-obedience to God’s requirement, even as Abraham once stood
-by his altar fires on Moriah, with the bound Isaac upon it,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-there came the gracious “<i>Fear not!</i>” She had gone to a
-point in her faith where God always breaks down. He saw
-it all, and out of divine compassion He answered, “The barrel
-of meal shall not waste, neither shall the cruse of oil fail,
-until the day that the Lord sendeth rain upon the earth.”
-And the record goes on to say that she, and the prophet, and
-her house, had enough through the years of the famine.
-There was so much meal and oil that even the widow’s poor
-and starving relations came to partake thereof. That is the
-way God blesses—it always overflows upon others.</p>
-
-<p>How this incident at Sarepta glorifies God, whom the
-Scripture teaches us to know in His unapproachable greatness
-and in His affable mercy and condescension! As we
-sat by the little brook in Sarepta, amid the noontide glow
-of an Oriental sun, and read afresh this charming story, and
-then raised our eyes to look on the little chapel which the
-crusaders had erected on the reputed site of the widow’s
-home, the thought of such a God flooded us with His precious
-nearness, for, in our human needs, we love to feel His
-comforting presence in our hearts. The Jehovah, the
-Almighty God, the maker of worlds, the ruler of systems
-beyond human vision, whose perfect will is done in heaven
-by angels, who holdeth the dew of heaven, the rain in the
-clouds, the waters of the oceans in His hands, who gives and
-withholds the needed bread and water, He is our Father,
-and exercises a father’s care, so that the individual is not
-forgotten of Him. He holds not only the whole, but the
-single parts; He looks not only into the palace of kings, but
-into the cottages of poverty. The need and misery of a poor
-widow are not too insignificant for Him; He observes her
-sighs and tears, and her silent, desolate cottage is for
-Him a place worthy of the revelation of His glory and
-goodness.</p>
-
-<p>Matchless widow of Sarepta! As long as the name of
-Elijah lives, with its imperishable renown, so long shall thine
-be found side by side with it in the unfading annals of the
-church of God!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>But our story runs on. The wicked Ahab had died, and
-Jehoram, his son, reigned in his stead. The great hero,
-prophet of the kingdom of the ten tribes, had also passed
-over the Jordan, and somewhere among the valleys, overshadowed
-by the lofty dome of Nebo, the “chariot of fire
-and horses of fire” came down and translated the first and
-greatest of the prophets. His mantle, however, fell upon
-Elisha, the son of Shaphat. Elisha had scarcely returned
-from the land of Moab, whither he had gone to
-relieve the armies of Jehoshaphat, king of Judah, out of the
-horrors of a water famine, when there met him a certain
-widow of the wives of the sons of the prophets, and cried
-unto him in her distress. Of what particular prophet she
-was the widow the record does not state, nor is her name
-given. Josephus and the rabbis will have it that she was
-the widow of Obadiah, who, they think, had exhausted his
-fortune in the provision for the persecuted prophets in the
-time of the drought, in the reign of Ahab, when, faithful to
-God, amidst the splendors of Ahab’s corrupt court, he hid
-such of the prophets as escaped out of the hands of Jezebel,
-the wicked queen, hid them in caves, feeding them on bread
-and water through the sore distress of the three years’
-famine, and so had fallen into debt, basing their claim upon
-the woman’s statement that her husband “feared the Lord,”
-which is also stated in respect to Obadiah. But whether she
-was the widow of Obadiah or not, she was greatly in need,
-and, in her distress, appealed to Elisha, who was the
-acknowledged head of the prophetic school.</p>
-
-<p>But what a calamity had come into her widowhood! Her
-husband had not only been taken from her by death, but
-now, after bravely struggling to provide for her family, the
-creditors had come to take her two sons to be bondsmen. If
-that will not touch a mother’s heart we do not know what
-will. And so she hastens away to relieve her burdened
-heart in the ears of the sympathizing prophet. He listened
-to her story, and then asked, “What hast thou in the
-house?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>What a question to ask a mother whose sons were about to
-be sold into slavery for debts! What could she have of value
-she would not gladly dispose of to save her children?</p>
-
-<p>She answered, “Thine handmaid hath not anything in the
-house!” Not anything? Oh yes, there is “a pot of oil.”
-She was in a more deplorable condition than the widow of
-Sarepta, for she, aside from the cruse of oil, had a “handful
-of meal.” But this one was entirely destitute, even of the
-oil so essential in the preparation of food—she had only a
-little pot for anointing purposes. But even this was enough
-for God and faith to work on.</p>
-
-<p>“Go,” said Elisha, “borrow thee vessels abroad of all thy
-neighbors, even empty vessels; borrow not a few.” Comforted
-in her heart, she went home and told her anxious sons what
-the prophet had said. “It is vessels you want, is it mother?”
-“Yes,” she answered, the prophet said, “borrow not a few!”</p>
-
-<p>So all that morning, and far into the afternoon, the widow’s
-sons were calling on their neighbors for empty vessels,
-crocks, great waterpots, casks, firkins, in short, anything
-that would hold oil. As the boys were going empty-handed
-down the streets and returning loaded with vessels, the people
-began to wonder what that poor widow of the prophet
-should want of so many vessels, especially as it was known
-that she had nothing in her house. But the boys kept at
-their work until every neighbor was borrowed empty, and
-her house looked more like a depot for freight, than a poor
-woman’s cottage. All the rooms were filled, the open court
-was filled, and all the approaches were filled. The widow’s
-sons, if their industry in borrowing and carrying home vessels
-would save them from being sold into slavery, they certainly
-would escape out of the hands of their mother’s creditor,
-for was there ever such a sight of empty vessels! And
-not until there were no more to be borrowed did they cease
-from their work.</p>
-
-<p>And now the supreme moment came. The prophet had
-told her, after the vessels were all in, she should shut the door
-upon herself and upon her sons. Only her boys should be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>
-witnesses to the mighty deliverances of God. The locking
-of the door had no other object than to keep aloof every interruption
-from without. The action in question was not an
-ordinary, simply external, operation, but an act which was to
-be performed by the command of the man of God, and with
-the heart directed towards God, that is, in faith, so that it
-was to be completed, not in the noise and distraction of everyday
-life, but in quietness and solitude. And we may also
-well believe she first asked God’s blessing upon her undertaking,
-so far carried on in faith, for though her house was
-full of vessels, they were all as yet empty.</p>
-
-<p>The prayer ended, she took down her ointment jar—and
-Oh, it was such a very little pot! Holding it in her hand,
-she told her oldest son to bring one of the smallest jars, for
-how could the little vessel in her hand fill even the smallest
-of the borrowed utensils? As she tipped the little pot, the
-golden stream began to flow, and it kept on flowing until the
-vessel was filled to the brim, to the utter astonishment of
-herself and sons. This one filled, another was quickly
-brought. And as the oil flowed, the poor woman’s faith
-grew, and the sweat was now rolling down the faces of her
-sons as they brought up the empty vessels, and removed the
-full ones. Her face fairly shone as she filled the last vessel,
-and in her excitement cried out, “Bring me yet a vessel!”
-“Why, mother,” both the sons speaking at once, “there is
-not a vessel more!” So when the last was filled to the brim,
-“the oil stayed.”</p>
-
-<p>As she looked over the sea of vessels all filled to the brim
-with golden oil, out of the gladness of her heart she hastened
-to tell Elisha what had happened at her house. She had oil
-in her vessels and thanksgiving in her heart, and she must
-tell it out, and who was better prepared to share her joy than
-the prophet who had listened to the story of her distress.</p>
-
-<p>And he said, “Go, sell the oil, and pay thy debt.” The
-religion that comes from heaven looks well after its creditors.
-The debt was paid, her sons were spared to her, and a surplus
-was left for them to live upon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>What a beautiful lesson of faith! We suppose if any of
-her neighbors had known that all these empty borrowed vessels
-were for the purpose of experimenting with a little pot
-of anointing oil, it would have created a sensation. Some,
-doubtless, would have said, the creditor, in threatening to
-take her sons, has driven that poor widow out of her mind.
-Why, such a thing as filling these pots, and firkins, and great
-casks of ten and fifteen gallon capacity, with a little pot of
-oil has never been heard of in Israel, and we can’t understand
-who could have put such an absurd idea into the poor
-woman’s head. Indeed, there was good reason for shutting
-the world out, for, if they had seen her take down the little
-pot of oil and attempted to pour into the vessels, they would
-have laughed her to scorn. But then, we Christian people
-should know that the things which are impossible with men,
-are perfectly possible with God. Yea, He loves to multiply the
-impossibilities of men, that no flesh may glory in His presence.</p>
-
-<p>Then also the number of vessels borrowed speak well for
-the faith of this woman. Our Lord tells us, over and over,
-according to our faith shall it be done unto us. If her faith
-had been small, and she had been content with a few vessels,
-the oil would have ceased to flow when the last vessel
-was filled. If our heavenly Father is ever pleased with the
-action of His earthly children, it must be over the audacious
-faith of a poor woman who, in her poverty and distress, borrows
-of her neighbors empty vessels for Him to fill out
-of His gracious benevolence.</p>
-
-<p>But not all women, in the time of the prophets, were
-widows and poor, but even the rich needed the consolations
-God only can give in times of trouble. And so our story
-runs on from the widow of Sarepta and the widow who, in her
-extremity, appealed to Elisha, to the rich woman of Shunem.</p>
-
-<p>Over against Jezreel, under the base of <i>Jebel Duhy</i> (the
-so-called “Little Hermon”) amid luxuriant gardens of lemon,
-orange and fig trees, which cast their refreshing shades over
-the hot and sultry bridle-path, is the village of <i>Sulem</i>, in
-which we recognize the ancient Shunem, rendered so dear to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>
-every lover of the Bible by the beautiful, sweet story of the
-rich Shunammite woman who prepared a prophet’s chamber
-in her house, where Elisha often found a shelter from the
-oppressive heat of the noontide sun as he passed that way.</p>
-
-<p>The little city, in the division of the land, under Joshua,
-was allotted to the tribe of Issachar, and is three miles north
-of Jezreel, five miles from Mount Gilboa, about four miles
-from Nain, where our Lord raised the widow’s son, and is in
-full view of the sacred spot on Mount Carmel. In the southern
-section of the village, at the base of the hill Moreh, flows out
-a transparent stream of sparkling water, which renders the
-fields green and beautiful, said to be the finest in the world.</p>
-
-<p>Amid these enchanting and picturesque scenes lived the
-Shunammite. The Bible gives her no name. She needs
-none. She is simply “a great woman.” Standing in her
-doorway, in three directions, she could look out over the
-fields of grain, and see the slow movements of the heavily
-loaded camels drudge up from the seaport of Acre, or down
-through the great plain of Esdraelon from the mountains of
-Naphtali or the hill country of Gilead, beyond the Jordan.
-If Elisha came from Carmel, he would approach Shunem by
-the Acre road. Accompanied by Gehazi, one of the sons of
-the prophets, she could see them trudging along the dusty
-camel path at a great distance, and she said to her husband,
-“Behold now, I perceive that this is an holy man of God.”
-So much for the personal appearance of Elisha. He carried
-a good face, which commended itself even to this discerning
-woman. Prompted by the manly bearing of the prophet, he
-had scarcely reached the gate when she stood before him, and
-pointing to her home, “she constrained him to eat bread.”</p>
-
-<p>It appears that Elisha passed frequently through Shunem.
-No doubt Carmel, which lay in the middle of the northern
-part of the kingdom, was the place where the faithful worshippers
-of Jehovah, who lived in the north, came together
-from time to time, and were strengthened in their faith, and
-instructed by the prophet. This would call Elisha to pass
-up from Carmel to Shunem and the north. “And so it was,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>
-that as oft as he passed by, he turned in thither to eat
-bread.” Happy household! Most gracious hospitality!
-That sweet home, amid the olive groves of Shunem, ever
-afterwards became the resting place of the good Elisha.</p>
-
-<p>The pious, but keen-sighted woman, who at the first recognized
-in Elisha “an holy man of God,” was not deceived or
-disappointed when she became more fully acquainted with
-him in his frequent stops. Indeed, she must have been very
-favorably impressed with his bearing, for she proposed to
-enlarge her hospitality. She said to her husband, “Let us
-make a little chamber, I pray thee, on the wall,” that is, upon
-the flat roof of the house, with walls which would be a protection
-against storms, “and let us set for him there a bed,
-and a table, and a stool and a candlestick.” Beautiful and
-thoughtful provision. In such a room Elisha would be protected
-from every interruption, such as it was hardly possible
-to avoid entirely in the house, and there he might pass his
-time in quietness.</p>
-
-<p>Elisha wished to make some return to his hostess, who had
-received and entertained him so liberally and so often, but he
-did not know what would be acceptable to her a woman of
-wealth. In order to learn this, he does not address himself
-directly to her, but directs his servant to ask the necessary
-questions, that she may express herself with less embarrassment
-and less reserve. He asks, “What is to be done for
-thee? Wouldest thou be spoken for to the king, or to the
-captain of the host?” This question presupposes that Elisha
-at that time stood in favor and respect at court. The king,
-in this instance may have referred to Jehu, whom Elisha
-caused to be anointed. The commander of the army is
-named in connection with the king as the most powerful and
-most influential man at court.</p>
-
-<p>This excellent woman sent a most beautiful reply to
-the prophet. “And she answered, I dwell among my own
-people.” She asks no recompense for the good she had done.
-She wishes to have nothing to do with the court of the king,
-and the great ones of the world. She had no favors to ask,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
-and desired no political honors. Hers was a contented life.
-Perhaps, in this reply, she wished to show, at the same time,
-that she had not entertained the prophet for the sake of any
-return, but for his own sake, and for the sake of God. She
-had received him in the name of a prophet, and not for the
-sake of a reward, or any temporal gain. She loved God, and
-therefore loved His servant, and she showed him kindness,
-because this was the law God had written upon her heart.
-Although she lacked that which was essential to the honor
-and happiness of an Israelitish wife, namely, a son, yet she
-was contented, and no word of complaint passed her lips—a
-sign of great humility and modesty.</p>
-
-<p>But the noble-hearted Elisha could not endure the thought
-of receiving all these favors without making some return,
-and he felt all the more bound to do something for her. To
-be barren, in those days, was regarded as a disgrace, so the
-prophet summoned her into his presence. But out of modesty
-and respect she only came to the door. Elisha announced
-to her that her home is to be blessed in the birth of
-a son. There were the disabilities of nature, and the woman
-regarded the announcement as improbable of realization,
-and, in true Oriental language, replied, “Nay, my lord,
-thou man of God, do not lie unto thine handmaid,” that is,
-do not deceive me, by exciting vain hopes in me. The Lord,
-however, according to His grace and truth, remembers even
-the desires which we cherish in silence, as no doubt this
-woman had done, but did not express, and He often gives to
-those who yield to His holy will without murmurs or complaints
-just that which they no longer dared to hope for. It
-makes a great difference whether we doubt of the divine
-promises from unbelief, or from humility or want of confidence
-in ourselves, because we consider the promises too
-great and glorious, and ourselves unworthy of them.</p>
-
-<p>But God remembered this noble woman of Shunem, who
-had shown such kindness to His servant, and, according to
-the promise, a son was born into the great woman’s home.
-A ray of sunshine had indeed broken through the parted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-clouds and entered that home—sunshine such as had never
-been there before, and such as outshone all her estates.</p>
-
-<p>Below the village, stretching away towards the south and
-east, were the wheatfields, and the child, as children sometimes
-will, slipped out from under the mothers watchful care,
-into the field where the reapers were at work. Absorbed in
-the work of the reapers, neither the father nor the son realized
-the intense heat pouring down out of a clear sky upon
-the field at the hottest season of the year. Presently, this
-child of promise, which had gladdened the hearts of his
-parents and brought such joy and sunshine to their home,
-came up to his father and said, “My head, my head.”</p>
-
-<p>It was scarcely barley harvest when we crossed this plain
-with the glare of the sun out of a clear sky shining in our
-face, and with blood heated and thirsty withal, and the
-danger of a sun-stroke, we thought of the words of the child,
-and ever since they have had a new meaning. At once the
-father directed a lad to carry the child “to his mother,” and
-when the lad had brought him “he sat on her knees till
-noon, and then died.” All the mother’s hope turned to
-ashes, and her joy into grief, made all the more bitter because
-it was her only child. As she sat in her house with
-the dead child folded to her bosom, her soul cried out:
-“What is life?” Though passing fair, it is but as</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">A flower just opened in the sun,</div>
-<div class="verse">And wilted, withered, ere the day is done;</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">A vapor swiftly floating in the sky,</div>
-<div class="verse">That vanished as it caught our eye;</div>
-<div class="verse">A fragrant perfume borne upon the gale,</div>
-<div class="verse">That’s gone before we could its sweets inhale.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">A bright pinioned warbler but just flitting by</div>
-<div class="verse">Is lost, while we gaze in the depths of the sky;</div>
-<div class="verse">A bud just bursting when the cruel frost</div>
-<div class="verse">Steals all its beauty and its fragrance is lost.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Strains of sweet music floating on the air,</div>
-<div class="verse">Soon turned to moans and wailings of despair;</div>
-<div class="verse">A glowing smile while flashing o’er the face,</div>
-<div class="verse">Suddenly to glistening tears give place.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>The grief-smitten mother carried the body of her precious
-child into the upper chamber and tenderly laid it on the
-“bed of the man of God, and shut the door upon it.”
-Doubtless, for the present, she intended to keep the death of
-the child from the husband and father. Evidently she
-cherished the secret hope that the prophet, who had promised
-her a son in the name of Jehovah, and had not deceived her,
-could help to restore him. At all events she acted promptly.
-She called her husband to send a young man out of the
-field to make ready with all haste to go to Mount Carmel,
-and when ready she said to the servant, “Drive, and go
-forward; slack not thy riding for me, except I bid
-thee.”</p>
-
-<p>Elisha, from his outlook on mount Carmel, saw a cloud of
-dust in the plain of Esdraelon, and he called the attention
-of Gehazi to the flying figures at the head of it. On swept
-the riders over the plain. Elisha once more put his hand up
-to shade his eyes from the glare of the sun, and said, “Behold,
-it is the Shunammite; run now,” and ask, “Is it well
-with thee? is it well with thy husband? is it well with the
-child?” By sending his servant to meet her, Elisha showed
-how highly he esteemed this woman. However, to the salutation
-of Gehazi, she returned only the short, indefinite
-answer, “It is well,” in order, doubtless, not to be detained
-by further explanations. She would at once hasten to the
-prophet himself. When she came near him, overcome by
-grief, which she had repressed until then, she threw herself
-at his feet, in the manner of Orientals, and sobbed out her
-great sorrow, at the same time imploring his assistance.
-Gehazi could not understand it. He thought her conduct in
-clasping his master’s feet an offence against his dignity, and
-“came near to thrust her away.” But Elisha said, “Let
-her alone.” Give the poor grief-stricken woman a chance to
-compose herself and to tell her trouble.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, the stricken mother called the prophet’s attention
-to his own promise, meaning to say thereby, I did not
-complain of my childlessness, and did not demand a son;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>
-now, however, I am grief-smitten, for it is better never to
-have a child than to have one and lose it.</p>
-
-<p>The grief and the lamentation of the woman moved the
-compassionate heart of the prophet so much that he desired
-to bring her relief as soon as possible. He therefore said to
-Gehazi, “Gird up thy loins, and take my staff in thine hand
-and go thy way; if thou meet any man, salute him not.”
-This shows that he was to go as quickly as possible. He
-was even to refrain from saluting any one. It is well known
-that salutations are far more ceremonious in the Orient than
-with us, and inferiors always remain standing until persons
-of higher rank pass by, and thus annoying delay was often
-occasioned. This command to hasten would draw off the
-attention of the mother from her excessive grief, and, possibly,
-Elisha may have hoped that life had not yet entirely
-left the child, and that utter decease might yet be prevented
-by swift interference. But the importunity of the woman,
-that Elisha himself should come, proceeded from the conviction
-that the child was already completely dead, and that
-now not Gehazi, but only the prophet himself, who had
-promised her the son, could help. To this deep confidence
-he promptly responded.</p>
-
-<p>Gehazi carried out his commission by hastening on to
-Shunem, and placing the prophet’s staff upon the face of the
-child, and, by means of the divine power, of which the staff
-was the symbol, he was to execute a prophetical act in
-awakening the child out of the death-sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Before Elisha, with the sorrowing mother, arrived at
-Shunem, Gehazi had discharged his commission, although in
-vain, and was on his way back again, when he met the
-prophet, and said, “The child is not awaked.” Though he
-had the external symbol of the prophet’s power, yet it lacked
-the spirit of Jehovah, which was the special gift of God, and
-which even Elisha might not delegate, according to his own
-will and pleasure, to his servant.</p>
-
-<p>The want of success of Gehazi’s commission spurred on the
-prophet all the more to do what he could in order to restore<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
-the child to life. Having reached the house of sorrow, and
-the little chamber where the loving hands of the mother had
-laid the body of her child, Elisha shut the door, and “prayed
-unto the Lord.” In that awful hour of a mother’s heart-crushing
-suspense, God heard His servant’s cry, and gave
-back the precious child to life again.</p>
-
-<p>The closing scene is very beautiful indeed. The mother
-having been called, when she reached the chamber, Elisha
-said, “Take up thy son!” We are not told whether the
-mother heart first leaped to embrace the child, or, out of
-modest gratitude, she first fell at the prophet’s feet in a
-flood of grateful thanksgiving. The bread of kindness she
-had been casting upon the waters, in honoring God’s servant,
-now all returned to her. She certainly was reaping with
-tears of joy, and, had she lived in this gospel age, she could
-have heard the Lord of life saying, “Inasmuch as ye did it
-to one of these My servants, ye did it unto Me.” Marvels
-of marvels, that prophets’ homes do not dot our land in this
-day of gospel light.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">As Elisha broke asunder</div>
-<div class="indent">Death’s cold hands and said, “Arise,”</div>
-<div class="verse">Give the child back to his mother—</div>
-<div class="indent">So Thy power doth still suffice.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Immortal woman of Shunem! Home-builder for the prophets
-of the Lord; the saints in glory salute thee to-day, and
-the saints on earth are thrilled with thy worthy example.
-There is scarcely a story in the Old Testament which is more
-beautiful than the one related of this “great woman” in White
-Raiment, who built a prophet’s chamber in her own house at
-Shunem, where the servant of the Lord might turn in out of
-the glare of the noontide sun and find rest.</p>
-
-<p>From the incidents connected with the beautiful life of the
-rich woman of Shunem, to the time of Queen Esther, there is
-a period of about four hundred years, and they are years of
-turbulance on the part of the people and admonitions on the
-part of God, until finally He suffered them to be led away
-into captivity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>The scene of our next woman in White Raiment is in the
-reign of Ahasuerus, son of Xerxes, who lived <span class="allsmcap">B. C.</span> 462. After
-several severe conflicts he was settled in peaceable possession
-of the Persian Empire, and, in honor of his victory, appointed
-a feast in the city of Shushan, which continued for one hundred
-and eighty days, after which he gave a great feast to
-all the princes and people who were in Shushan for seven
-days.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus153.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">HADASSAH IN THE PERSIAN COURT.</p>
-
-<p>Queen Vashti, at the same time, made a like feast, in her
-apartment for the women.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>On the seventh day of the feast, Ahasuerus commanded the
-seven chamberlains to bring Queen Vashti before him, with
-the crown royal on her head, that he might show to the
-princes and people her beauty.</p>
-
-<p>This she refused, for the act would be contrary to the usage
-of Persia, very indecent and unbecoming a lady, as well as
-the dignity of her station. Whereupon the king was incensed,
-and fearing the influence among the people of the
-realm in encouraging women to disobey their husbands,
-called a council of seven, to determine what should be done.
-The council advised putting away the queen, and she was
-removed from her high position as queen, and a collection of
-virgins was ordered throughout the realm for the selection of
-a successor.</p>
-
-<p>There lived at this time in Shushan a Jew named Mordecai,
-a descendant of Babylonish captives and who was a
-porter at the royal palace. Mordecai, not having children,
-brought up Hadassah, his uncle’s daughter. Her life opened
-like a cactus flower on the thorny stem of the captivity, but
-nevertheless is an exquisite jewel with a royally superb setting,
-and gleams and sparkles in Hebrew history.</p>
-
-<p>Her mother named her Hadassah, for the myrtle tree,
-which was not only beautiful, with its glossy, dark-green
-leaves and luxuriant clusters of white bloom, but was useful
-for perfumery and spice. It was the emblem of justice, and
-bearing it may have added strength to her character. Her
-Persian name was Esther, for the planet Venus. Orientals
-held the myrtle sacred to the goddess of Love.</p>
-
-<p>Esther, being fair and beautiful, was made choice of
-among other maidens in this collection of virgins which had
-been ordered, and was carried to the king’s palace and there
-committed to the care of Hegai, and was assigned to the
-best apartments.</p>
-
-<p>This captive young woman was discreet. Those who have
-great beauty do not always have discretion. Depending
-upon the power of their personal charms, they neglect to cultivate
-the mind and soul. Physical beauty, like fruit, begins<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>
-to decline as soon as it reaches its best. Mental and spiritual
-beauty grow with the years as long as the hygienic laws of
-grace are obeyed. But she was not only discreet, but also
-amiable. Amiability costs only self-control and unselfish
-love, and it is the best possible investment. Genuine amiability
-is God’s gift to those who trust Him to cleanse them
-from all that is contrary to love.</p>
-
-<p>Then also this Hebrew maiden must have known severe
-discipline. She showed its effect in the gentle deportment
-that won the favor of the officers that guarded the king’s
-harem. She submitted her taste in dress and ornament to
-the one who had the responsibility of preparing her for the
-royal presence, and in the docility with which she heeded
-the advice of Mordecai.</p>
-
-<p>These graces of mind and heart commended her to the
-king’s favor and she was advanced to higher honor, and subsequently,
-when Queen Vashti was deposed, Esther was
-crowned in her stead. Thus she was raised at once to the
-highest place that the world could give a woman at that day—as
-the queen and favorite of the mightiest monarch of his time.</p>
-
-<p>This event was celebrated by a great feast which the king
-made to all his princes, called Esther’s feast, and which was
-attended with high honor, and by the presentation of gifts,
-“according to the state of the king.”</p>
-
-<p>About this time Haman, the chief minister or vizier of
-King Ahasuerus, was promoted, so that his seat was “above
-all the princes.” The Targum and Josephus interpret the
-description of Haman, the Agagite, as signifying that he was
-of Amalekitish descent, the sworn enemies of the Israelites
-in their march through the desert, and the sparing of whom
-cost Saul, the first king of Israel, his crown. This Haman
-was the king’s favorite, and all the under officers and servants
-were required to pay reverence unto him.</p>
-
-<p>But there was one man who would not bow. This was
-Mordecai, the porter at the royal palace. He would not
-salute Haman, the idolatrous descendent of the old enemies
-of his people. This greatly displeased Haman, but he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>
-scorned to lay hands on Mordecai, and knowing him to be a
-Jew, resolved to destroy him and his people. He took council
-and determined by lot on the day for the accomplishment
-of his purpose.</p>
-
-<p>To do this successfully he must deceive the king and entrap
-him to do a wicked act. So he said to Ahasuerus, “There
-is a certain people scattered abroad and dispersed among
-the people in all the provinces of thy kingdom; and their
-laws are diverse from all people; neither keep they the king’s
-laws; therefore it is not for the king’s profit to suffer them.
-If it please the king, let it be written that they be destroyed;
-and I will pay ten thousand talents of silver to the hands of
-those that have the charge of the business, to bring it into
-the king’s treasuries.” And so this hateful Amalekite, by
-offering to pay into the king’s treasury more than $10,000,000,
-obtained the royal decree to put all the Israelites in the hundred
-and twenty-seven provinces of Ahasuerus, extending
-from India to Ethiopia, to death.</p>
-
-<p>When Mordecai heard of the decree, he and the Hebrews
-made great lamentation, and he made Queen Esther
-acquainted with the plot to destroy her people, and entreated
-her to go in unto the king and make supplication
-for their rescue. At first she excused herself, but being led
-to understand that she, too, was included in the decree, she
-put her life on the hazard for the safety of her countrymen.
-It was no light matter for the beautiful young queen to risk
-her life to save her people. Surrounded as she was by the
-luxury and elegance of that magnificent Persian court,
-keenly alive to the charm of all lovely things, it meant much
-for her to go down to the grave in the brilliant morning of
-her youth.</p>
-
-<p>But when Mordecai turned to her for help, he reminded
-her that she had come to the kingdom for such a time as
-that. His faith asserted that God would deliver His people;
-and, if she failed to do her part, she and her father’s house
-would perish. She said she would make the attempt. “If
-I perish, I perish,” was her wail of submission.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>However, in her great undertaking, she displayed a
-humble dependence upon the God of Israel; she also showed
-great prudence and wisdom. She asked her people to fast
-and pray three days; and all her maidens—who were
-selected, no doubt, on account of their sympathy with her
-faith—would also fast and pray. When the books are
-opened it may appear that the Hebrews were led, through
-the deliverance that she wrought for them, to the penitence
-that made it possible for God to take them back to the
-fatherland.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus157.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">ESTHER PLEADING FOR HER PEOPLE.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>At the end of the fast she put on her royal apparel and
-went unto the king while he was seated upon his throne.
-The first gleam of hope lighted up her distressed heart when
-Ahasuerus held out his golden sceptre.</p>
-
-<p>It has been said that men’s hearts are reached through
-their stomachs. Whether this was true of Ahasuerus, or
-whether Esther knew of this avenue or not, she certainly
-showed great tact when she desired to make a banquet for
-the king and his favorite prince, Haman, which the beautiful
-queen would prepare, where he could then hear her request.</p>
-
-<p>It would have been a most natural thing to do, after
-Esther had risked her life by going uncalled into the presence
-of the king, and when she found him graciously disposed
-to partake of her feast, to throw herself at once upon
-his mercy, and beg for her life and the lives of her people.
-But no. She must have great power over him to get him to
-undertake the difficult task of setting aside one of his own
-decrees. Probably her faith in God was not yet strong
-enough for her to make a sure move. She saw that she was
-not yet sure of her ground, nor firm in her faith; so, when
-he made the great offer even of dividing his kingdom with
-her, she simply asked that he and Haman should honor her
-with their presence at another banquet.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless, as she sat at the second banquet with the perfect
-self-control that they have who rely only on God, having
-used every device to fortify her position in the good
-graces of the capricious despot, her keen Hebrew insight
-weighed every light expression from his lips, although she
-knew a sword of doom hung over her jewel-crowned head,
-and yet she was calm and self-contained, as if she had no
-thought but to please him. Thus she led the king on until
-her power over him was at its height, and when he again
-offered her half the kingdom, she asked only for her life and
-the lives of her people.</p>
-
-<p>It must be that, although Haman was present at this
-banquet, he did not hear the request of Queen Esther, for
-he went forth from the feast “that day joyful and with a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-glad heart.” But when he saw Mordecai, in the king’s
-gate, and that he still refused to bow to him, “he was full
-of indignation.”</p>
-
-<p>So when he reached his own residence, he called his
-friends, and took counsel with them, and they advised him
-to cause a gallows to be built, eighty feet high, and to ask
-the next morning to have the king order Mordecai to be
-hanged thereon.</p>
-
-<p>But matters had taken a different turn at the palace.
-The king could not sleep that night. To pass the long,
-wakeful hours, he called for the reading of the records of the
-kingdom. As they were reading before the king, it was
-found written in the chronicles of the conspiracy of Bigthan
-and Terish, and that Mordecai had discovered the plot, and
-that nothing had been done for him as a reward.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime the morning drew on, and Haman had
-entered the court of the palace to confer with the king about
-the hanging of Mordecai. We can well believe the mind of
-Ahasuerus was in a bad frame to talk about hanging the
-man who had saved his life by discovering the plot of the
-king’s chamberlains. But the king did not know what dark
-deeds were in the heart of Haman as he ordered him to be
-called. When Haman came into the presence of Ahasuerus,
-the king asked what should be done with the man whom he
-wanted to honor.</p>
-
-<p>The king’s favorite, who had just shared two private banquets
-with the king, was so inflated with himself that he did
-not think there was another man in the Persian empire in
-whom Ahasuerus would be so delighted to honor as himself,
-so he advised that the royal apparel be brought forth and the
-king’s horse and his crown, and given to one of the noble
-princes to array the man whom the king delighted to honor,
-and take him through the city on horseback with a proclamation,
-“This is the man whom the king delighteth to honor.”</p>
-
-<p>The command was given to Haman to thus honor Mordecai,
-which he did, with not very good grace, for, when he
-had finished his task, he “hasted to his house mourning,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
-and having his head covered,” and related his mortification
-to his wife and friends.</p>
-
-<p>After all, for the moment at least, it must have seemed to
-Haman and his friends as a strange act on the part of the
-king, for while they were yet talking over the humiliation,
-the king’s chamberlains came, requesting Haman to hasten
-and come to the banquet Esther had prepared. It must
-have seemed to Haman that Esther had really gone into the
-banqueting business, so frequently had he been honored of
-late.</p>
-
-<p>When the king and Haman sat down to the banquet the
-king again asked Esther what was her petition. Whereupon
-she humbly prayed the king that her life might be given
-her and her people, for a design was laid for the destruction
-of her and her kindred. At which the king asked with
-much anger who it was that durst do this thing. She told
-him that Haman, then present, was the author of the
-wicked plot, and she laid the whole scheme open to the king.
-Who can tell how much her own chance of salvation depended
-on her courage, self-control and tact? A look, even the
-droop of an eye-lid, might have betrayed her into the hands
-of the most cringing and unscrupulous of royal favorites, and
-sent her and her whole race to their death. But God held
-her steady in nerve and growing in faith, as He does all who
-put their whole trust in Him.</p>
-
-<p>The king rose up with much wrath from the banquet and
-walked out into the garden.</p>
-
-<p>Haman saw his opportunity. Quickly he stood up to plead
-for his life. Perceiving that there was evil determined
-against him by the king, he prostrated himself before the
-queen upon the couch on which she was sitting to supplicate
-for his life; in which position the king found him on his
-return.</p>
-
-<p>The motive for Haman’s unhappy attitude before the
-queen was misunderstood by the king, and he spoke in great
-passion, “What, will he force the queen before me in the
-house!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>At which words the servants present immediately covered
-Haman’s face, as was the usage to condemned persons, and
-the chamberlain, who had called Haman to the banquet,
-acquainted the king with the gallows he saw in his house
-there prepared for Mordecai, who had saved the king’s life.</p>
-
-<p>The king ordered Haman should be forthwith hanged
-thereon, which was accordingly done. A feast was then consecrated
-in commemoration of the deliverance of the Jews,
-called the feast of Purim.</p>
-
-<p>This story of Esther, which has in it the real romance of
-life, has also a consummate blending of works and faith.
-Preparing a banquet of every luxury that could please a dangerous
-tyrant, and at the same time fasting and praying in
-heart-humbling agony for Divine deliverance.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII.<br />
-
-Womanhood in the Time of the Saviour’s Nativity.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><span class="smcap">An Angel by the Altar of Incense—His Message—An Israelitish
-Home—In the Spirit of Elijah—The Desert Teacher—The
-Annunciation—The Visit of Mary to Elizabeth—Mary’s
-Magnificat—Journey to Bethlehem—The Nativity—Home
-Life in Nazareth—After Scenes in Mary’s Life—Her
-Residence and Death at Ephesus—The Prophetess
-Anna—Her Waiting for Redemption in Jerusalem—The
-Lesson of Her Pure and Beautiful Life.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Isaiah</span>, looking adown the ages to the coming of Christ’s
-Kingdom, likened it to waters breaking out in the wilderness
-and streams in the desert. For centuries there was no
-voice of prophet in Israel or revelation from God to His
-chosen people, when suddenly the long silence was broken.
-It was in the days of Herod the Great, when sin and misery
-had reached their climax, and when the yearning for Messiah’s
-appearance was more intensely felt than ever. The
-Temple, so often the scene of the manifestation of the glory
-of God, became again the centre, whence the first rays of
-light secretly break through the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>One of the priests, named Zacharias, while performing his
-duty in the service of the sanctuary, burning incense before
-the Lord, had a vision, in which he was assured that his
-prayer was heard, and great distinction conferred upon him
-in a twofold answer: First, the Messiah shall indeed appear
-in his days; and, secondly, that he shall himself be the
-father of the forerunner, who is to prepare His way—an
-honor he could not have ventured to anticipate. What
-human tongue could have foretold it to him, or how could he
-have ventured to hearken to the voice of his own heart,
-without direct revelation? Zacharias sought first the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>
-Kingdom of God, and His righteousness, and all other things
-were added to him.</p>
-
-<p>In the service of the sanctuary the burning of incense before
-the Lord was considered exceedingly important and
-honorable. The people were accustomed to unite in the outer
-court in silent supplication, while the priest in the sanctuary
-offered the incense, which was ever regarded as the symbol
-of acceptable prayer.</p>
-
-<p>Remaining longer in the sanctuary than was strictly necessary,
-the people, who were waiting in the outer court of
-the Temple, feared that some misfortune, or sign of the divine
-displeasure, had befallen him, for they “marveled that he
-tarried so long.” And when he finally appeared “he could
-not speak.” While standing before the altar, awaiting the
-signal to sift the precious incense, a heavenly messenger appeared
-unto him. When Zacharias saw the angel he was
-troubled, and fear fell upon him. The heavenly messenger
-quickly answered, “Fear not, Zacharias, for thy prayer is
-heard; and thy wife Elizabeth shall bear thee a son, and
-thou shalt call his name John.”</p>
-
-<p>Both Zacharias and Elizabeth were of the priestly race,
-and he himself was a priest of the course of Abia, and she
-was of the daughters of Aaron. Both, too, were devout persons,
-walking in the commandments of God, and waiting for
-the fulfillment of His promise to Israel. But in the midst of
-the glorious revelations the angel had made, strange to say,
-Zacharias had asked for some sign or confirmation of the
-glad tidings. The angel answered, “I am Gabriel” (the
-Might of God) “and, behold, thou shalt be dumb.” As faith
-is to be the chief condition of the new covenant, it was needful
-that the first manifestation of unbelief should be emphatically
-punished, but the wound inflicted becomes a healing
-medicine to the soul. The aged priest was constrained to
-much silent reflection, and, according to the counsel of God,
-the secret was still kept for a time.</p>
-
-<p>There is here a remarkable coincidence between Zacharias
-and Abraham on the one side, and Elizabeth and Sarah on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>
-the other; not only in the fact of their lack of an heir during
-so many years, but also in the frame of mind in which they
-at length received the heavenly message. In these parallel
-histories, the man of the olden times is strong in the faith,
-the woman weak; while under the new covenant it is the
-man whose faith falters. On the very threshold of the new
-dispensation woman, in the person of Elizabeth, takes her
-place in the foreground by the heroism of a living faith. It
-is also quite in keeping with Divine wisdom that in this case
-unbelief in view of the rising sun of the gospel salvation is
-much more severely punished than under the old dispensation.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus164.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE ANGEL’S MESSAGE.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>The sight of Zacharias struck dumb awakened among the
-people an expectation of some great and heavenly event;
-soon will “the things” done in the priest’s house be “noised
-abroad throughout all the hill country of Judea,” and the
-voice of “him that crieth” shall soon resound over hill and valley.</p>
-
-<p>The sacred duties performed, retirement was next in order.
-As a priest, in the “course of Abia,” the twenty-four courses
-in the services of the temple relieved each other weekly, each
-course ministering during a whole week. So Zacharias and
-Elizabeth leave Jerusalem for their home among the picturesque
-hills of Judea, south-west of Bethlehem. How beautiful
-are the pictures of these Israelitish homes into which the
-Bible bids us so often to look. The familiar vine and fig-tree;
-the flower-planted courts; the waterpots filled for
-quenching thirst; the basin and towel and servant to bathe
-the heated, often dust-covered, feet; the domestic scene
-morning and evening in the grinding of the food in the
-familiar hand-mill, the work always performed by the
-women; the delightful views from the housetops in the cool
-of the evening; the maidens busy in filling the waterpots;
-the halting of visitors in the outer court, waiting for some
-damsel to open the door; the thousand little touches of real
-life which are always so charming to the observer. In addition
-to these outward signs, the good manners and propriety,
-the atmosphere of true courtesy; the youth rising up before
-the hoary head; the child learning at his mother’s knee, or
-inquiring of father or elder; a joyousness, such as a mind at
-peace with God only can exert, are all manifest in these
-Bible pictures which ages can not dim. Yet most striking
-are the proofs that in every household children were desired,
-and gladly welcomed.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding a barren wife in an Israelitish home was
-often a cause for divorce, Zacharias was pre-eminently a man
-of hope. As a pious husband and lover, he had faithfully
-and tenderly clung to his beloved Elizabeth through the
-long years of youth and middle age, and even after hope
-had died out of their longing hearts. Both had learned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
-“the patience of unanswered prayer”—a lesson not easily
-mastered by the bravest of us. But now the hope was to be
-realized, the “reproach among men” was to be taken away.
-In that home among the hills of Judea was to be a child in
-the arms of its mother. The name of the child, and he a
-son, was to be John (Jehovah shows grace). Many homes
-would rejoice in his birth, and he would be God’s man, eating
-nothing to inflame carnal passions, and filled with the
-Holy Spirit, he would become prophet and reformer. The
-grossly literal hope of the people for Elijah’s appearance in
-the flesh would be spiritually fulfilled, for Elizabeth’s son was
-to have the spirit and the power of the Tishbite; and thus gifted
-of the Almighty, was to be the forerunner of the Christ. All
-that was spoken of the Messiah’s messenger by Isaiah, as “the
-voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of
-the Lord, make His paths straight,” and by Malachi, “Behold,
-I will send my messenger, and he shall prepare the
-way before me,” were fulfilled in this son of many prayers.</p>
-
-<p>In due time he was born, and on the eighth day, in conformity
-with the law of Moses, was brought to the priest for
-circumcision, and, as the performance of this rite was the
-accustomed time for naming a child, the friends of the family
-proposed to call him Zacharias after the name of his father.
-The mother, however, required that he should be called
-John—a decision which Zacharias, still speechless, confirmed
-by writing on a tablet, “his name is John.” The
-judgment on his want of faith was then withdrawn, and the
-first use which he made of his recovered speech, was to
-praise Jehovah for his faithfulness and mercy, a proof that
-the cure had taken place in his soul also.</p>
-
-<p>A single verse contains all that we know of Elizabeth’s
-child of promise for the space of thirty years—the whole
-period which elapsed between his birth and the commencement
-of his public ministry. The record is, “The child
-grew and waxed strong in the spirit, and was in the desert
-till the day of his showing unto Israel.” But we must not
-forget that through his childhood and youth he was under<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
-the care of a wise, loving mother. Elizabeth’s unfaltering
-faith and prudent counsel, we must believe, exerted a lasting
-influence over this child of the desert.</p>
-
-<p>The child thus supernaturally born, was surely a sign that
-God was again visiting His people. His providence, so long
-hidden, seemed once more about to manifest itself in the
-person of Elizabeth’s son, who, doubtless must be commissioned
-to perform some important part in the history of the
-chosen people. Could it be the Messiah? Could it be
-Elijah? Was the era of their old prophets about to be
-restored? With such grave thoughts were the minds of the
-people occupied, as they mused on the events which had been
-passing under their eyes, and said one to another, “What
-manner of child shall this be?”</p>
-
-<p>So when John passed out from under the wise training of
-Elizabeth, his reputation for extraordinary sanctity, and the
-generally prevailing expectation that some great one was
-about to appear, were sufficient to attract to him a great
-multitude from “every quarter.” Brief and startling was
-his first exhortation to them, “Repent ye, for the kingdom
-of heaven is at hand.” His preaching of repentance, however,
-meant more than a mere legal ablution or expiation, it
-meant a change of heart and life. While such was his solemn
-admonition to the multitude at large, he adopted towards
-the leading sects of the Jews a severer tone, denouncing
-Pharisees and Sadducees alike as “a generation of vipers,”
-and warning them of the folly of trusting to external privileges
-as descendants of Abraham. He plainly told them,
-“the axe was laid to the root of the tree,” that formal
-righteousness would be no longer tolerated. Such alarming
-declarations produced their effect, and many of every
-class pressed forward to confess their sins and to accept
-John’s ministry.</p>
-
-<p>This son of Elizabeth is one of the most striking characters
-in the Bible. Destined from before his birth to be a
-prophet, his life was worthy of his high office. Pure, unsullied,
-earnest, fearless, humble, he much resembled his great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>
-predecessor, Elijah. Like him, he was an ascetic, and like
-him, he had his time of fearless outspeaking and of reproval
-of kings, and hypocrites; and like him, also, a time of
-depression, as when he sent to Christ to ask, “Art thou He
-that should come, or shall we look for another?”</p>
-
-<p>A noble example of the fearless manner in which he proclaimed
-the truth is illustrated in the denunciation of the
-unlawful marriage of Herod Antipas, the Tetrarch. He had
-married a daughter of Aretas, King of Petra, but seeing
-Herodias, the wife of his half brother, Philip, he became
-infatuated with her, divorced his own wife and married
-Herodias, who abandoned Philip to marry him. Herodias
-was a grand-daughter of Herod the Great. This unprincipled
-woman wrought the ruin of Herod Antipas. Aretas,
-angry at the treatment of his daughter, made war upon
-Herod. John reproved Herod for all this, and he evidently
-had not minced words. Neither had he spoken in such low
-whispers that he might seem to others to disapprove the
-crime, but still escape the notice of the king. He thundered
-out his denunciations in a way to make even the royal couple
-alarmed, and caused them to shut John up in prison, lest his
-growing popularity should undermine the security of Herod’s
-throne. And then Herodias secured the execution of John,
-which angered the Jews, for they counted John as a prophet
-and held the subsequent defeat of Herod by Aretas as a
-judgment upon him for this wicked deed.</p>
-
-<p>Such, in brief was the son of the most highly and signally
-honored Woman in White Raiment in sacred history, Mary,
-the mother of Jesus, only excepted. The strong faith of the
-pious Elizabeth, as developed in her noble son, has been a
-blessing to the whole race of man. The clear shining faith
-to grasp the promises of God are most beautifully exemplified
-in the pure, self-sacrificing, and devoted life of Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>Closely related to the events in the life of Elizabeth, as
-just narrated, is the birth of our blessed Lord.</p>
-
-<p>There is no person in sacred or in profane literature
-around whom so many legends have been grouped as around<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
-the Virgin Mary, and there are few whose authentic history
-is more concise. Doubtless the very simplicity of the sacred
-narrative has been one cause of the abundance of the
-legendary matter of which she forms the central figure.
-According to the genealogy given by Luke, which is that of
-Mary, her father’s name was Heli. She was, like Joseph,
-her husband, of the tribe of Judah, and of the house and
-lineage of David. We are informed that at the time of the
-angel’s visitation she was betrothed to Joseph and was
-therefore regarded by the Jewish law and custom as
-his wife, though he had not yet a husband’s rights
-over her.</p>
-
-<p>The angel Gabriel, who had appeared to Zacharias in the
-Temple, appeared to her and announced that she was to be
-the mother of the long-expected Messiah; that in Him the
-prophecies relative to David’s throne and kingdom should
-be accomplished; and that his name was to be called Jesus.
-He further informed her, perhaps as a sign by which she
-might convince herself that his prediction with regard to
-herself would come true, that her relative Elizabeth was
-about to be blessed in the birth of a child.</p>
-
-<p>It appears that Mary at once set off to visit Elizabeth in
-her home in the hill country of Judea. When she had
-reached her destination, and immediately on her entrance
-into the house, she was saluted by Elizabeth as the mother
-of our Lord, and had evidence of the truth of the angel’s saying
-with regard to her cousin Elizabeth, Mary then embodied
-her feelings of exultation and thankfulness in the
-hymn known under the name of the <i>Magnificat</i>. The hymn
-is founded on Hannah’s song of thankfulness (1 Sam. ii,
-1-10), and exhibits an intimate knowledge of the Psalms,
-prophetical writings and books of Moses, from which sources
-almost every expression in it is drawn.</p>
-
-<p>In approaching this exquisite bit of Hebrew poetry uttered
-by Mary we may profitably consider, first, its beauty of
-expression; and second, its nobility and grandeur of sentiment.
-The hymn consists of four stanzas of four lines each,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
-and its literary character is best brought out by a translation
-which so arranges it. The first stanza reads:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">My soul doth magnify the Lord,</div>
-<div class="verse">And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour,</div>
-<div class="verse">Because He hath looked upon the humility of His bondmaiden;</div>
-<div class="verse">For behold, from henceforth all generations shall pronounce me blessed.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>In this stanza three points of parallelism appear in the first
-two lines. In the first occurs the word “soul,” and in the
-second the word “spirit,” which we understand to be but
-different designations of the same elements of our natures.
-Whatever difference in the use of these terms in other places
-it is evident that here according to the ordinary requirements
-of Hebrew poetry, the two words are chosen because of their
-similarity in meaning. The other synonymous terms are the
-words “magnify” and “rejoice;” “the Lord” and “God
-my Saviour.” Thus is introduced the so-called Magnificat.
-The characteristic of Hebrew poetry is not that it is arranged
-in rhyme and measured feet, but in the grander rhythm belonging
-to parallelisms of thought. Such a rhythm has far
-more freedom and force than that which consists of mere
-similarity of measure and sound. Hence it is that the poetry
-of the Bible is so readily translated into other languages,
-and loses so little of its force in the process; whereas poetry
-which depends upon the peculiarities of any given language
-is incapable of translation. The essential thing in Hebrew
-poetry is sublimity of thought and diction, accompanied by
-a substantial repetition of the sentiment in terms that are
-nearly synonymous. The thoughts are thus held before the
-mind till it can fully see their grandeur and beauty, and receive
-those shades of impression which come from repeated
-efforts at statement.</p>
-
-<p>In the second couplet of the above stanza Mary gives the
-reason for her rejoicing. She was of humble origin, and, before
-her neighbors and friends, was to be humbled still
-further. But, as is so often the case, what was Mary’s extremity
-was God’s opportunity, and He was to glorify Himself
-by making the weak things of the earth confound the
-mighty. As He brought Moses from the wilderness and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
-David from the sheepfold, so was He to bring Mary from the
-seclusion of Nazareth and the humiliation in the stable at
-Bethlehem to a position of honor attained by no other woman,
-and all generations were henceforth to call her blessed.</p>
-
-<p>The second stanza reads:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">For the Mighty One hath done great things for me;</div>
-<div class="verse">And Holy is His name.</div>
-<div class="verse">And His mercy is unto generations and generations</div>
-<div class="verse">Of them that fear Him.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Here the great things spoken of as done to Mary (in the
-first line) correspond, or rather constitute, the mercy (of the
-third line) which flows forth from the gospel from age to
-age; and the holiness of His name mentioned in the second
-is that characteristic of God which evokes the fear mentioned
-in the fourth line.</p>
-
-<p>The third stanza may be literally rendered as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">He hath exercised the strength which is in His arm;</div>
-<div class="verse">He hath scattered abroad those who were proud by reason of the thoughts of their hearts;</div>
-<div class="verse">He hath cast princes down from their thrones, and exalted the lowly,</div>
-<div class="verse">The hungry hath He filled with good things, and the rich hath He sent empty away.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>In this, as all through the hymn, we have the flavor of
-Hebraistic forms of speech. In their poetical conceptions
-they did not think of God as an abstract being, but as having
-a mighty arm with which He swayed the nations and dashed
-their foolish plans in pieces, as one might break a potter’s
-vessel with a rod of iron. How little do men know the flimsiness
-of the schemes which they organize against the Lord
-and His anointed! The third and fourth lines of this stanza
-contain a double parallelism and a twofold antithesis. He
-casts down the kings and lifts up the lowly people; He fills
-to fullness the hungry, and sends the rich away empty.</p>
-
-<p>In the fourth stanza we read:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="verse">He hath taken hold to help with Israel His servant,</div>
-<div class="verse">In order that He might call to mind the mercy characteristic of His nature</div>
-<div class="verse">(According as He hath spoken unto our fathers)</div>
-<div class="verse">To Abraham and his seed for ever.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>What a glorious conception this is of Israel, the hero of
-God, and who was not a servant, but a son, for that is the
-true meaning of the word rendered “servant.” The word is
-also one of endearment. And so we are reminded, in the
-second line, of His tender mercy. The only mercy of which
-He could have spoken to our fathers was His own, expressing
-itself in the whole scheme of salvation as revealed in the
-Bible. It was a peculiar plan of mercy revealed to Abraham
-and his spiritual descendants.</p>
-
-<p>Such, in brief, are the noble conceptions and the lofty
-figures of speech of this exquisite hymn of Mary. And we
-ask involuntarily, Whence comes it that so humble a maiden
-should thus in the beauty of her diction and the sublimity of
-her conceptions have rivaled, if not eclipsed, all the poets
-both of ancient and modern times?</p>
-
-<p>It might seem a short answer to this question to say that
-Mary was inspired. But such an answer does not satisfy
-the reasoning mind. God in His wisdom does not ordinarily
-see fit to disregard the secondary causes which He has
-created. We are led to look, therefore, to the character and
-condition of Mary herself as a partial explanation of the
-character of this piece of literature. And, upon examining
-the hymn, we find that it is largely composed of sentences
-from the Old Testament, embodying the Messianic expectations
-of the Jewish people. It sounds like an echo, not only
-of David’s and Hannah’s, but also of Miriam’s, and of Deborah’s
-harps; yet independently reproduced in the mind of
-a woman, who had laid up and kept in her heart what she
-had read in Holy Scripture. Out from the large body of
-sacred literature which was the rare heritage of her people,
-she had extracted that which was best and noblest and most
-appropriate. We do not, however, deny the direct inspiration
-of this hymn; but we would emphasize the broader conceptions
-of Providence, how the Holy Spirit can use a mind
-well stored with the deep things of God, as evidently was
-the mind of Mary, for, from beginning to end, this hymn
-assumes a sympathizing acquaintance with the history of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>
-Jewish people, and of all the noble conceptions of the Deity
-with which the history of that people has made the world
-familiar.</p>
-
-<p>The unity of God is assumed without question. It is the
-Lord Jehovah that her soul magnifies. It is the only true
-God her Saviour in which her spirit rejoices. Nor is it a God
-of mere power, but a God of love and tenderness, whom she
-adores. It is one who has regard not for men alone and the
-great ones of the earth, but for the humble woman who
-occupies the most contracted sphere that falls to the lot of
-any. And in this the power of the God she adores appears
-pre-eminent, for he is able to make great things out of small.
-It was He who took Israel as a little vine and made him a
-great nation. It was He that multiplied the widow’s cruse
-of oil and handful of meal till she had a superabundance.
-It was He who lifted Rahab out of her wicked and heathen
-surroundings and placed her in the line of royal women in
-whom all the families of earth were to be blessed. It is He
-that notes the sparrow’s fall, that numbers the hairs of our
-heads, that hears the prayers we offer in secret when the
-door is shut, and that rewards us openly. It is He that can
-exalt the humblest life and make it gleam with the sunshine
-of His own glory. “Not many mighty, not many noble, are
-called ... but ... God hath chosen the weak things of
-the world to confound the things which are mighty ...
-yea, and things which are not, to bring to nought the things
-that are.”</p>
-
-<p>Only such a God could lift on high so humble a maiden,
-and turn upon her the gaze of all the nations of the earth.
-But the God of Israel well might do it, for He is the Mighty
-One, and able to do great things, and His mercy is upon
-them that fear Him from generation to generation. In
-Israel’s deliverance from Egypt and in all their subsequent
-history, He had shown the strength of His arm. The
-wrecks of the nations that opposed Him strew the whole
-pathway of history. And as He raised Joseph from prison
-and exalted Daniel from the lion’s den, so should He ever<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>
-lift up the meek, and help His servant Israel, and remember
-His promises to Abraham and His seed forever. Only one
-who is familiar with such a history could write such a hymn.
-Surely it is a great thing to be educated into such thoughts
-as these. To breathe in such sentiments in the very atmosphere
-of one’s home and in the social circles in which one
-daily moves is the highest of earthly privileges. It is only
-in such a hymn as this of Mary that we get a proper conception
-of the grandeur and nobleness of the thoughts
-underlying Hebrew history. In her Magnificat, Mary
-breathed the thoughts of those that surrounded her. From
-the days of pious Hannah down to those of Elizabeth, the
-women of Israel had been moved by such longings and animated
-by such hopes as have never been possible to any
-other people. They had the promise made in Eden that the
-seed of the woman should bruise the head of the serpent who
-led the world astray. And now to her, to this humble virgin
-of Israel, had the fulfillment of this promise come, and truly
-blessed was she among women. For here was the performance
-of those things which had been told her from the Lord.
-The great crisis of the world’s history had arrived, and she
-was the chosen channel through which the hope of the
-nations was come.</p>
-
-<p>O, blessed Woman in White Raiment, may thy hymn of
-praise, divinely inspired, be often upon our lips, and the
-sweetness of its precious truths continually in our hearts!</p>
-
-<p>The words of the angel in respect to Elizabeth having
-been confirmed by this personal visit of Mary to her home in
-the hill country of Judea, she returned to Nazareth.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after this the decree of Augustus, the Roman emperor,
-that all the world should be taxed, was promulgated,
-and Joseph and Mary traveled to Bethlehem to have their
-names enrolled in the registers of their tribe. It would
-seem that the Israelites still clung to their genealogies and
-tribal relations, and, though the undertaking was a severe
-strain upon Mary, and notwithstanding, according to the
-Roman custom, her name could have been enrolled without<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
-her personal presence, this woman, who was to be the most
-blessed of women, greatly preferred to accompany her husband
-on this journey of over seventy miles, much of the way
-up and down steep, rocky hills. Traveling in the East,
-under its most favorable conditions, is a slow, tiresome affair,
-especially for women. But Mary drudged along the mountain
-path, in company with her husband, all the way from
-Nazareth to Bethlehem. Her love for the city of David
-seems to have overcome all difficulties. Possibly a contemplative
-mind like hers may have perceived that this decree
-of Cæsar Augustus was but an instrument, in the hand
-of Providence, to fulfill ancient prophecy with respect to the
-birthplace of the Messiah, for Micah had declared that out
-of Bethlehem Ephratah, though little among the thousands
-of Judah, “yet out of thee shall He come forth unto Me that
-is to be ruler in Israel; whose goings forth have been from
-of old, from everlasting.” So, while it would seem that an
-arbitrary decree decided where Christ is to be born, God
-had manifested His wisdom in the choice of the time, place
-and circumstances, and was faithful in the fulfillment of the
-word of prophecy, ever carrying out His plans through the
-free acts of men. In this instance the great Roman Cæsar,
-even without his knowledge, became an official agent in the
-kingdom of God.</p>
-
-<p>So it came to pass, in the fullness of time, and in the beloved
-city of David, Bethlehem Ephratah, Mary brought
-forth the Saviour of the world, and humbly laid Him in a
-manger. Here, amid these humble surroundings, in the
-stall of an inn, among the beasts, was the advent of the Son
-of God, the Saviour of the world. And, behold, the Life
-which was to lift “empires off their hinges” and turn the
-“stream of centuries out of its course”—a life which was to
-revolutionize the world and transform humanity—had
-begun.</p>
-
-<p>The place where the inn stood is now occupied by an
-enormous pile of buildings, known as the “Church of the
-Nativity.” Down in the crypt of this church, reached by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>
-fifteen stone steps, and in the eastern wall of it, is a silver
-star, around which are the words: “<i>Hic de Virgine Maria
-Jesus Christus natus est</i>”—“Here Jesus Christ was born of
-the Virgin Mary.” One can not with indifference behold
-such a spot as this. To us it was a sacred and hallowed
-place, and we felt subdued and reverent while beholding the
-place where began the greatest life earth has ever contained.
-To the Christian, Bethlehem stands first among the holiest
-places on the face of the globe, and we were hushed into
-reverence by its sacred associations and charmed by its
-natural beauty.</p>
-
-<p>The “inn,” the scene of the nativity, stood on the crest of
-a hill that rapidly falls away to a valley seven hundred feet
-below. At its base is the “well” for the waters of which
-David so greatly longed. On the opposite side is a hill still
-more precipitous than the one on which Bethlehem stands.
-The little valley between the hills gradually opens out eastward,
-where once stood the wheatfields of Boaz, in which
-Ruth gleaned after the reapers. Just beyond this, scarcely
-a mile from the “city of David,” is the field where the shepherds
-were “keeping watch over their flock by night, when
-lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them,” with this glad
-proclamation, “Behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy,
-which shall be to all people.” Then suddenly night was
-turned into day by the radiant brightness of a multitude of
-the heavenly host, filling earth and sky with their song:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“Glory to God in the highest,</div>
-<div class="verse">Peace on earth, good-will to men.”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The visit of the shepherds to the inn, the circumcision and
-presentation in the Temple, the visit and adoration of the wise
-men who saw His star in far off Persia, the cruel massacre
-of the children of Bethlehem by Herod, and the flight into
-Egypt, are rather scenes in the life of Christ than that of his
-mother, and are fully described in “<span class="smcap">The Christ Lifted Up</span>.”</p>
-
-<p>However, in passing, it may be well to pause long enough
-to observe how the presentation in the Temple brings the
-limited circumstances of Joseph and Mary to our notice.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>
-The custom of ceremonial purification by a Jewish mother in
-the sanctuary with a sacrifice is fully stated in Lev. xii.
-Two offerings were required, a burnt and a sin offering.
-When Mary presented herself with her babe in the court of
-the women, in the Temple, the proper offering was a lamb
-for a burnt offering, and a young pigeon or a turtle-dove for
-a sin offering; but with that beautiful tenderness which is
-so marked a characteristic of the Mosaic law, those who
-were too poor for so comparatively costly an offering were
-allowed to bring instead two turtle-doves or two young
-pigeons. Mary, instead of the lamb and dove, brought the
-offering of the poor—two doves. With this offering in her
-hand, she presented herself to the priest.</p>
-
-<p>One incident more occurs in the presentation in the Temple.
-At the moment when Mary had completed her consecration,
-an old man came tottering through the throng. It was the
-aged Simeon, “just and devout, waiting for the consolation
-of Israel.” Taking from Mary’s arms her precious infant,
-and, as with face aglow and eyes kindled with heavenly fire,
-in speaking his holy rapture, one passage is specially directed
-to her, “Yea, a sword shall pierce through thine own soul
-also.” This “sword,” we must believe, entered her heart as
-later she saw her Son on the cross.</p>
-
-<p>In the return from Egypt after the death of Herod the
-Great, it appears to have been the intention of Joseph to
-have settled at Bethlehem at this time, as his home at Nazareth
-had now been broken up for a year or more, intending
-there to rear the infant King, at his own royal city, until
-the time should come when he would sit upon David’s throne
-and restore the fallen kingdom to its ancient splendor. But
-“when he heard that Archelaus did reign in Judea,” he
-turned aside into Nazareth, as well he might, if he knew
-the life and character of the new prince, thinking, no doubt,
-the child’s life would be safer in the tetrarchy of Antipas
-than in that of Archelaus.</p>
-
-<p>Henceforward, until the beginning of our Lord’s ministry,
-so far as is known, Mary lived in Nazareth, in a humble<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>
-sphere of life, the wife of Joseph the carpenter, pondering
-over the sayings of the angels, of the shepherds, of Simeon,
-and those of her Son, as the latter “increased in wisdom and
-stature and in favor with God and man.” Two circumstances
-alone, so far as we know, broke in on the otherwise even
-flow of her life. One of these was the loss of Jesus out of
-the company of the homeward journey, when he remained
-behind at Jerusalem upon the occasion of His first visit to
-the Temple. His mother is the first to speak. “Son,” she
-said, “why hast thou thus dealt with us?” His reply gave the
-keynote of His life, “Wist ye not that I must be about my
-Fathers business?” The other was the death of Joseph.
-The exact date of this last event we can not determine. But
-it was probably not long after the other.</p>
-
-<p>From this time on Mary is withdrawn almost wholly from
-sight. Four times only is the veil removed, which is thrown
-over her, and surely not without reason.</p>
-
-<p>1. The first is at the marriage of Cana. It is thought
-from the interest Mary took in it that the bride or bridegroom,
-were friends, if not relatives of the family. “And
-Jesus was called, and His disciples.” The disciples were
-invited out of respect for their Lord. This unexpected
-addition to the company may have been the cause of Mary’s
-evident embarrassment, and she appeals to her Son by saying,
-“They have no wine.” It is impossible to know all that
-was in her heart. Possibly from the Jordan had come
-wonderful news concerning her Son which had inspired her
-with the hope that now at least, after so long waiting, the
-time of His manifestation was at hand. What if He should
-use the present opportunity to show His power! Might she
-not at least mention it to Him? But, mark His answer,
-“Woman, what have I to do with thee?” While His reply,
-in the original, does not have in it the severity it has in the
-plain English, yet He would have her understand that in
-His divine character He could not acknowledge her, nor be
-influenced by her suggestions. Henceforth there must be
-room between her and Him for His Father. And so He told<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>
-her with all the tenderness that words and looks could
-convey that the matter she hinted at was a matter between
-Him and His Father. Mary quickly acceded to this. By
-woman’s enlightened intuition she perceived His meaning,
-and so she said to the servants, “Whatsoever He saith unto
-you do it.” In confident expectation, she believed He would
-supply the need. Her beautiful faith in Him was unshaken.</p>
-
-<p>2. The second time Mary comes to view is in the attempt
-which she and others made to speak with Jesus in the midst
-of His conflict with the Scribes and Pharisees at Capernaum,
-when they sought to destroy His good name and influence
-by applying that most horrible and loathsome epithet, “He
-had Beelzebub.” We can hardly realize what satanic forces
-were massed against Jesus at that time. And Mary, who
-probably, with some friends, stood on the outside of the
-crowd, became alarmed, and would rescue Him from the
-malice of His enemies. So she sent a message, which
-probably was handed on from one person to another, begging
-Him to allow His friends to speak to Him. Again He
-refuses to admit any privilege on account of their relationship.
-“Who is my mother, and who are my brethren?”
-He loved His mother, but infinite wisdom saw best that she
-must in no way influence His divine work, which He could
-not share with another and be the Saviour of the world.
-He must tread the winepress of men’s malice alone.</p>
-
-<p>3. The third time Mary comes to our notice is at the foot
-of the cross. She was standing there with Mary Magdalene,
-Salome, and other women, having no doubt followed her Son
-as she was able throughout that terrible morning of our
-Lord’s several trials. It was now three o’clock in the afternoon,
-and He was about to expire. Standing near the company
-of the women was John, and, with almost His last
-words, Christ commended His mother to the care of this disciple.
-And from that hour, John assures us, he took her to
-his home. If, by “that hour,” John means immediately
-after the words were spoken, Mary was not present at the
-last scene of all. The sword had sufficiently pierced her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>
-soul, and she was spared the hearing of the last loud cries
-and the sight of the bowed head. However we might have
-understood His relation to Mary, while the great scheme of
-human redemption was being wrought out, He now turns in
-beautiful and touching tenderness to her, who tenderly loved
-Him, even when she could not fully understand His work.</p>
-
-<p>4. The fourth and last time Mary is brought to our view is
-in the company of the one hundred and twenty believers,
-assembled at Jerusalem, waiting for the descent of the Holy
-Spirit. This is the last view we have of her. The Word of
-God leaves her engaged in prayer in the “upper room,” with
-the women, and with His brethren. From this point forward
-we know nothing of her. It is very probable the rest of her
-life was spent in the home of John, cherished with the tenderness
-which her sensitive soul would have specially needed,
-and which she undoubtedly found in him who had borne the
-distinction of “that disciple whom Jesus loved.”</p>
-
-<p>When the disciples “were scattered abroad” after the
-martyrdom of Stephen, and the apostles assumed the charge
-of important centres, we read of John being minister of the
-church at Ephesus. No doubt Mary removed with John to
-Ephesus, where, tradition says, she died, and where she was
-buried. Probably she died before John was banished to
-Patmos. While at Ephesus, we visited her sepulchre. It is
-on the north side of Mt. Prion, half way up the mountain
-side. The tomb is cut out of the solid rock, and in full view
-of the church, which doubtless she loved so well.</p>
-
-<p>We have already dwelt at considerable length upon the
-beautiful character of Mary in connection with her song of
-rejoicing in the house of Elizabeth and known as the Magnificat.
-So far as Mary is portrayed to us in the Scripture,
-she is, as we should have expected, the most tender, the most
-faithful, humble, patient and loving of women, but a woman
-still, and how she herself regarded her relation to her divine
-Son is best expressed in her own words:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“My soul doth magnify the Lord,</div>
-<div class="verse">And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour.”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus181.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE MINISTRY AT EPHESUS.</p>
-
-<p>No doubt she was a comfort in the home of John. The
-dark shadows of the cross were dissipated when she saw
-Jesus alive after His resurrection, and communed with Him,
-and, doubtless, saw Him ascend to heaven in a cloud, and
-had heard the angels assure His disciples, as they had seen
-Him depart, in like manner He would come again. She
-was comforted in the wonderful scene at Pentecost, when
-three thousand acknowledged Jesus as their Saviour as well
-as her Saviour. She lived to see the Gospel spread through
-Judea and Samaria, and the great centres in Asia Minor.
-She had nobly done her work at Jerusalem and at Ephesus—had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>
-told, as none could tell it, the sweet story of the infant
-Jesus and her glorified Saviour. On account of her presence
-there was a strange interest about the services of the great
-church at Ephesus, because the mother of Jesus was among
-the worshippers. Even the life and ministry of the
-beloved John was made richer because of her helpful
-presence.</p>
-
-<p>But now she is growing old. Her earthly mission is drawing
-to a close. She can not stay longer to bless the people
-who had learned to love her. Indeed, her affections had
-already stolen away and preceded her upward. The glad
-day has come for her to go. Her weary feet will soon stand
-within thy gates, O Jerusalem. The low murmur of voices
-and the subdued sobbing of loved ones around her she heeds
-not, as a strange light breaks upon her, and she hears celestial
-symphonies from the glory shore. White-winged messengers—jasper
-walls—pearly gates—golden streets—life’s
-river—and she is with Him in the land where swords
-can never enter stricken hearts!</p>
-
-<p>We can not close this chapter without making mention of
-Anna the Prophetess. It would seem that at the coming of
-the Saviour into the world, earth and sky clapped their
-hands for joy, and the mountains and hills broke forth into
-singing. Not only did Zacharias prophesy, saying “Blessed
-be the Lord the God of Israel;” and Mary sing her hymn of
-praise, in which she exclaimed, “My soul doth magnify the
-Lord;” and the angels who sang, “Glory to God in the highest;”
-and the aged Simeon, who, coming into the Temple, and
-taking the child in his arms, burst forth in doxology, “Lord,
-now lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace, according to
-Thy word, for mine eyes have seen Thy salvation,” but also
-Anna the Prophetess. Scarcely had the sweet strains of the
-aged Simeon ceased, when the prophetess, coming into the
-court of the women, in the Temple, and seeing Mary presenting
-herself with her babe, caught the meaning of the scene
-and added her voice of praise, “and spake of Him to all
-them that looked for redemption in Jerusalem.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>It was very fitting that women should have such a prominent
-part in these human and angelic songs over the nativity
-of Him who, in after years, proved women’s best friend.
-Who alone, of all earth’s great teachers, wept with and over
-woman’s broken heart; who alone pitied woman taken in sin;
-who alone stood up in defence of woman against cruel criticism;
-who alone placed in contrast a poor penitent woman
-over against a well-washed, and we had almost said, “white-washed,”
-Pharisee; who, on the way to the cross, had
-words of comfort for womanhood, in the ever-memorable
-exclamation, “Daughters of Jerusalem, weep not for
-Me!” And why should not these daughters weep for
-one who had elevated them to their true position?
-Surely, they might well weep, for they had never had such
-a friend.</p>
-
-<p>Anna was a daughter of Phanuel, of the tribe of Asher,
-and of very great age—eighty-four years. Her age is
-specially mentioned, to show that, though she had passed
-but few years in the married state, she had reached this
-advanced age as a widow; a fact redounding to her honor in
-a moral sense, and ranking her among the comparatively
-small number of “widows indeed,” whom Paul especially
-commends. It is somewhat remarkable that the name of
-Anna’s father should be mentioned, and not that of her husband.
-Perhaps her father survived her husband, and may
-also have been known as one who waited for the consolation
-of Israel. The pious words Anna uttered in the presence of
-Mary and her child in the court of the women can not be the
-only reason of her being called a prophetess. Such an appellation
-must have been caused by some earlier and frequent
-utterances, dictated by the Spirit of prophecy, by reason of
-which she ranked among the list of holy women who, both
-in earlier and later times, were chosen instruments of the
-Holy Spirit. If the spirit of prophecy had departed from
-Israel since the time of Malachi, according to the opinion of
-the Jews, the return of this Spirit might be looked upon as
-one of the tokens of Messiah’s advent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>In Simeon and Anna we see incarnate types of the expectation
-of salvation under the Old Testament, as in the child
-Jesus the salvation itself is manifested. At the extreme
-limits of life, they stand in striking contrast to the infant
-Saviour, exemplifying the Old Covenant decaying and waxing
-old before the New, which is to grow and remain. Old
-age grows youthful, both in Simeon and Anna, at the sight
-of the Saviour; while the youthful Mary grows inwardly
-older and riper, as Simeon lifts up before her eyes the veil
-hanging upon the future. Joseph and Mary marveled at
-the revelations, not because they learned from Simeon’s
-prophecy anything they had not heard before, but they were
-struck and charmed by the new aspect under which this
-salvation was presented.</p>
-
-<p>There is something very beautiful in this aged Anna, the
-prophetess, who “departed not from the Temple, but served
-God with fastings and prayers night and day.” And the
-reason given for this consecrated devotion is, she “looked
-for redemption in Jerusalem.” This aged saint, into whose
-obscure but loyal keeping the spirit of true religion has
-always retired in times of a degenerate and formal faith,
-under the Divine Spirit, refused to depart from the courts of
-the sanctuary day nor night. Many a long and weary year
-she had waited for redemption in Jerusalem, and had watched
-with eager eyes the long procession of fathers and mothers
-as they presented, according to custom, their first-born at
-the altar steps. But the Child for whose coming she had
-waited with such spiritual patience had not come.</p>
-
-<p>At length the supreme day of her life had dawned, and
-with an unusual expectancy she goes early to her accustomed
-vigil. As the humble Joseph and Mary draw near, unheralded
-of men and with no sign of lineage or worth beyond
-the rank and file of common people, the clear vision of the
-aged prophetess discovers the King, and with a joy that
-blossomed into song, she unites with the devout Simeon, who
-like herself, was also “waiting for the consolation of Israel,”
-the praises that redemption had at last come to Jerusalem.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>
-There was providential coincidence in her coming in just at
-“that instant,” when Simeon was prophesying and when the
-babe was in the Temple, for a divine propriety, so to speak,
-seemed to require that the new-born Saviour should first
-receive the homage of the elect of Israel.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus185.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">ANNA, THE PROPHETESS.</p>
-
-<p>With this temple scene, the aged Anna comes into and
-goes out of history, but in its light certain great facts are
-made luminous forever, namely, that Jesus the Christ comes
-into our common humanity along no royal road, but through
-the great common gateway of common people. Jesus touches
-life at its majority points, meeting our needs and our weakened
-nature with a brotherhood that loves us and lifts us up.
-Christ’s first welcome into the world was not through Herod,
-nor the famous Council of the Seventy, nor through the wise<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
-Scribes, or great Pharisees, but through the trembling arms
-of an aged man and woman.</p>
-
-<p>To pause upon the romantic fitness of this temple scene were
-easy, when the heart of the old and the new, the beginning
-and the end of life throb together, but rather we turn to the
-mission of Christ to old age as embodied in this incident of
-Simeon and Anna. Age is to a well-spent life what the fruit
-is to the vine, the garnered and best part of it. That ripeness
-of experience, of mind, of judgment, which comes alone
-from long and patient drudging on until the mile-posts are
-many, that calm which comes at the sunset—these are the
-crowns that come to the soul as it stands on the delectable
-mountains with the Celestial City in full view. Youth is
-clear-visioned and hopeful, early life is busied with palpable
-ambitions, and later on is occupied with the harvesting of
-ventures and the fruitage of success. But age has nothing
-but a memory and a hunger, therefore it was a fitness and a
-providence that Simeon and Anna should reach out their
-trembling hands in initial welcome to the Son of God.</p>
-
-<p>Again, Anna stands as the type of the spiritually-minded,
-to whom in old age are vouchsafed the revelations of God.
-Her attitude was very significant. She “departed not from
-the Temple,” that is, she was watchful. She served God
-“with fastings and prayers,” peculiarly expressive of Old
-Testament piety, with its minute attention to precept and
-ceremony. That to this woman it was permitted, under the
-Spirit’s guidance, that morning to come into the court of the
-women at the “instant,” indicates a perpetual spiritual condition,
-rather than a sudden impulse or illumination—the
-habit of one who walked and talked with God “night and
-day.” These reveal the spiritual qualities of the prophetess
-of Jehovah, where an obedient will and loving heart are
-linked to far-sighted spiritual vision in the discernment of
-the providence and truth of God. To such elect souls revelations
-are always coming, because of spiritual affinities and
-the unerring insights of love. Therefore it was no accident,
-this coming into the courts of the Temple at the “instant,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-but in accord with a world-wide and unbroken law of spiritual
-discernment, for spiritual truths are spiritually discerned.</p>
-
-<p>She that desires this spiritual sense must do as Anna did,
-wait upon God in prayer. She “served God.” She was
-spiritually-minded. An intense desire always precedes
-possession. Our Lord said, “Blessed are they which do
-hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be
-filled.” Do we hunger after righteousness, with a hunger
-that joins a great longing with a strong will? Then shall
-we possess it, for these powers of the mind and heart wait
-with sure benediction upon the prayers of earnest souls.
-This desire lies at the threshold of spiritual-mindedness. It
-is synonymous with love. Do I love God? Is my eye single
-and my heart pure? If so, I shall see Him. If not in the
-court of the women, as Anna did, in the inner courts of an
-unending eternity.</p>
-
-<p>The other factor that enters into this spiritual life is
-abiding. Anna “departed not from the Temple.” She
-waited patiently. Go back to that night in Shiloh, ere the
-lamps of God had gone out, and note how Samuel the child
-became Samuel the prophet by waiting on God in a listening
-attitude and prompt obedience. Follow Paul from the vision
-on Anti-Lebanon to the prisons of Nero, and the roadway of
-his Christian life is literally paved with waiting and prompt
-obedience, and both the seer and the apostle give us the rule
-of spiritual expansion, and set the step for all the regiments
-of the heavenly-minded. An eminent divine has said,
-“Every duty we omit obscures some truth we should have
-known,” and a greater than this divine has said, “He that
-doeth truth cometh to the light.” The secret of all soul
-degeneracy, of a seared conscience and a blunted moral
-sense, alas! we all know too well, is disobedience to the
-heavenly visions. Like Eli, our eyes are grown dim, and
-like Paul’s fellow-travelers to Damascus, we hear a sound,
-but no articulate voice of call. “To obey,” said the great
-and good Samuel to the disobedient Saul, “is better than
-sacrifice.” It is because of disobedience to the clear visions<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>
-of duty there is so much of moral “near-sightedness” in the
-modern Christian life. The options of spiritual life or death
-are always with us, to see or not to see, to know or not to
-know. Here is the power and the peril of the Church our
-Saviour purchased at the price of His own blood; here is her
-strength and her weakness; for the dominant danger in the
-Church of our time, with its wealth, its average moralities
-and its social compromises, is unspirituality, when the
-lines of division between a refined worldliness and a perfunctory
-Christianity are so vague that both seem so near
-alike to many professed followers of Jesus as not to know
-where worldliness ends and the Christian rule commences.
-An unspiritual life is the real apostacy which clogs the
-chariot wheels of God and dims the eye to the King in His
-excellent glory.</p>
-
-<p>Do you wonder at the high honor heaven conferred upon
-this aged prophetess, who “departed not night nor day from
-the Temple,” lest she should miss the opportunity of a lifetime,
-of making her the first woman to witness for Christ?
-It was in perfect keeping with God’s eternal plan of exalting
-the humble of this world who have loyal hearts. Rebekah,
-with cheerful alacrity, watered the ten camels of Eliezer, the
-servant of Abraham, when he called her to be the bride of
-Isaac; Rachel was driving her father’s sheep to the well in
-Haran when she won the heart of Jacob, the heir of promise;
-Miriam watched the little craft among the rushes of the
-Nile, before she led the women in triumphal song at the Red
-Sea; Ruth gleaned in the fields of Bethlehem to relieve her
-own and Naomi’s necessities, when she attracted the attention
-of Boaz; Esther lived a modest, retired life in the house
-of Mordecai, the porter at the royal palace, when she was
-called to be queen over the Persians. Poverty and homely
-toil are no hindrance to holy zeal in Christian service; nor
-are they hindrance to high communion with the Eternal.</p>
-
-<p>These are truths attested by revelation and by history.
-We are sometimes tempted to question humility as a stepping-stone
-to exaltation, and to complain of our lot; tempted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>
-to think ourselves hemmed in and circumscribed, thus to
-lack all opportunity for large service or large vision, or large
-attainments of any kind. Nothing is more common among
-those whose life is crowded with what is termed coarse and
-common toil, who are loaded down with many cares, and
-confined in what seem to them narrow bounds, to count
-others vastly more highly favored than themselves, and to
-regard themselves as out of range of all spiritual visions or
-special divine communications! Let her who is left to think
-such thoughts, or to place such estimate on her lot in life,
-remember that no eye of Scribe or Pharisee, of priest or king,
-saw or recognized the Son of God that day when Mary presented
-Jesus in the Temple. Such vision was reserved for the
-aged prophetess, who was looking for redemption in Jerusalem.</p>
-
-<p>What is the lesson? This, that the waiting and the morally
-qualified are the chosen channels of divine communication;
-that to such the revelations of God unfold wonderful
-visions. Heaven and earth meet where the truly devout are
-found watching “night and day” by the altars of prayer.
-If doxologies of the soul are to be rendered in the ear of
-mortals, they shall hear them whose hearts are open towards
-the throne of grace, and whose longings are for “redemption
-in Jerusalem!” and who are “waiting for the consolation of
-Israel.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII.<br />
-
-Womanhood During our Lord’s Galilean Ministry.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><span class="smcap">Christ and Womanhood—Noontide at Jacob’s Well—The Lord’s
-Wonderful Tact—Fields White to the Harvest—An Uninvited
-Guest at Simon’s Feast—Cold Hospitality—A Concise
-Parable—Forgiving Sin—A Street Scene—Humble Confession—Most
-Gracious Words—Coast of Tyre and Sidon—Syro-Phœnician
-Woman—Strangely Tested—Her Humility—Went
-Away Blessed.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> now come to the beautiful ministries of womanhood
-during our Lord’s earthly mission. No teacher had ever
-lived who sought to elevate women as did the Saviour. The
-most casual reader of our Lord’s acts of mercy as He moved
-among the people, must have noticed how often He wrought
-some of His most wondrous works among women. He talked
-with a woman of questionable character by the wayside, He
-stretched out his hands over one whose very touch was considered
-unclean, and tenderly said, “Thy sins are forgiven!”
-He called another, whose shrinking fear, after she was
-healed, caused her to sob out her confession, “Daughter, be
-of good comfort; thy faith hath made thee whole.” What a
-sweet picture that is of the mothers who bring their little
-children to Him that “He should touch them,” and their
-faith was rewarded not by a mere “touch,” but He took the
-mothers’ darlings in His arms and blessed them. With a
-yearning of divine pity He brings back to life three persons
-that motherhood and sisterhood might be comforted. Surely
-womanhood must have been precious in His sight, and there
-is a peculiar force in the word <i>precious</i> as of God’s own choosing.
-When He speaks of precious things, or permits in His
-inspired servants such ardent language, we may be assured
-there is a deep meaning in the expression, and that whatever
-is spoken of, is of great value, costly and rare. “I know the
-thoughts that I think toward you,” says the dear Lord,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>
-“thoughts of peace and not of evil.” And they are so continuous!
-“How great is the sum of them? If I should
-count them they are more in number than the sand!” We
-have walked the wide beach, as it stretches on for miles and
-miles in one unbroken line of white sand. Could we count a
-single rod of it? Yet these thoughts of our Lord outnumber
-the sand on the shore of the sea. And how precious they
-are, because begotten of pure love; and royal with kindness;
-and tender with compassion; and fragrant with blessings;
-exquisite with sweetness; infinite, incessant, immeasurable.</p>
-
-<p>In our love, we mainly dwell upon the thought of what
-God is to us, and so are apt to forget what we are to Him.
-“He has chosen Israel for His peculiar treasure.” “The
-Lord’s portion is His people.” Does He so esteem us?
-Does He hold us close to His heart, and say, I love thee
-“since thou wast precious in My sight!” The mother thinks
-of her child, the wife of her husband, the lover of his beloved.
-And how sweet are these thoughts of our dear ones. Unbidden
-they crowd upon the soul; comforting, tenderly cherished
-and precious are the thoughts of the absent for one
-another! Memories of form and feature, look and smile,
-word and deed, affection and purpose, are ever present.
-Does God, the Infinite, thus think of us! Oh, wondrous
-alchemy of grace that can turn such poor unworthy souls
-into gems so beautiful, so priceless, so dear to the Infinite
-heart of God; so highly esteemed that if even the least were
-lost, it would be a loss to Him. Then, also, the trial of our
-faith is “much more precious than of gold that perisheth,
-though it be tried with fire.” If we bear this in mind, we
-shall better understand the Saviour’s acts as we read the
-story of His love for womanhood. Oh, ye tired, troubled ones,
-put into God’s crucible, did you ever feel that you were forgotten,
-overlooked, too long or too severely tested? God is
-watching with an eye that never slumbers. The trial going
-on is precious to Him. He tempers the heat when too strong,
-and adds fuel when too light. He creates the smith to blow
-the coals; and here, be sure, He makes no mistake. You<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>
-would not have chosen as He has; and yet the process must
-go on, for it is a precious one; so much so that our Beloved
-can not trust it to other hands than His own. He will not let
-you be harmed. “Many shall be purified and made white
-and tried.” Are you not glad He has chosen you among
-these? The trial is painful to you, but precious to Him, and
-“will be found unto praise and honor, and glory,” walking
-with Him in White Raiment, as those who “are worthy.”</p>
-
-<p>Through human personality is God best made known.
-There is a revelation in nature; the movements of planets, the
-return of seasons, the regularity and uniformity of natural
-laws, reveal a fixed order in the universe; the balanced
-relationship, the correspondences and adaptations in nature
-reveal mind as the centre of activities; wisdom speaks out
-in the organizations, kingdoms and beneficent purposes of
-nature, while beauty shines from the splendor of the world.
-All this is very good, but it is not conclusive. It is written
-of the Son of God, that He endured the cross for the joy
-that was set before Him. He recognized the sore need of
-humanity, and the Father’s plan to meet that need, and
-gave Himself a willing offering. Christ is the living manifestation
-of God’s love. To be “able to save to the uttermost
-all who come unto God by Him,” was the joy set before Him
-for which He endured the cross and now ever liveth to make
-intercession for us. Surely His thoughts of us must have
-been most precious, and, in view of the great price He paid
-for our redemption, let us never minify our lives however
-humble our lot:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“A commonplace life,” we say and we sigh,</div>
-<div class="indent2">But why should we sigh as we say?</div>
-<div class="verse">The commonplace sun in the commonplace sky</div>
-<div class="indent2">Makes up the commonplace day.</div>
-<div class="verse">The moon and the stars are commonplace things,</div>
-<div class="verse">And the flower that blooms, and the bird that sings.</div>
-<div class="verse">But dark were the world, and sad our lot,</div>
-<div class="verse">If the flowers should fail and the sun shine not—</div>
-<div class="verse">And God, who studies each separate soul,</div>
-<div class="verse">Out of the commonplace lives makes His beautiful whole.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>If we partake of the Divine nature, we will want to share
-in His work of saving, and thus enter into the joy of our
-Lord. To be able to touch life hopefully, and to see it
-expand and grow day by day into the similitude of the All-perfect,
-is to experience a joy not of earth. Womanhood has
-come into her kingdom in the sense of having reached a
-place of large opportunity, in the use of her God-given
-power. Our Saviour has honored woman by giving her a
-place in his heart and work, and most loyally does she “lay
-her hands to the distaff and with her hands hold the spindle”
-in the making of the great fabric of human destiny.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus193.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">CHRIST AND WOMANHOOD.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>How womanhood, in the days of the Saviour’s incarnation,
-manifested her appreciation, will be amplified in this and
-the next chapter, and her loving ministry does credit to her
-head and heart, for we read, as He journeyed with his disciples
-from place to place, “Certain women, which had been
-healed of infirmities, Mary Magdalene, Joanna, Susanna, and
-many others, ministered unto Him of their substance.” How
-beautiful is all this. Women actually following Jesus, as
-disciples, and out of their means ministering to His physical
-necessities. Heathenism has no place, socially for women,
-as we have shown in our introductory. Christ sought to bless
-and elevate womanhood.</p>
-
-<p>The skill of our Lord’s wayside teaching is beautifully
-brought out in the scene at Jacob’s well. In one of His
-tours through Samaria our Lord reached Jacob’s well, in the
-neighborhood of Sychar, about noon, and being weary, sat
-down upon the stone seat in the little alcove erected over the
-well. It offered a shelter from the glare of the noontide sun.
-John, in his gospel, tells us that Jesus, “being wearied with
-His journey, sat thus on the well.” The words in the original
-imply that He was quite tired out with His journey, and
-doubtless overcome with the extreme heat. In His exhaustion,
-He seems to be quite anxious, if possible, to obtain a
-little rest, while the disciples had left Him, to procure in the
-nearby city, the necessary bread.</p>
-
-<p>The disciples had scarcely departed, when a lone woman,
-with face veiled, and on her head a great stone waterpot,
-came to the well to draw water. It was an unseasonable
-hour, for morning and evening only would the well be
-thronged by women, whose duty it is to carry the water for
-household use. For some reason, possibly because she was
-in no good repute, this woman avoided the throng at the well
-in the morning or evening hours, and availed herself of this
-unseasonable time to come for water.</p>
-
-<p>The scene before us is pathetically picturesque. The Son
-of God resting in the refreshing shade of the little alcove,
-and a woman of doubtful character coming in out of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>
-noontide glare and heat of the sun to draw water. We almost
-wonder if our Lord, in His exhausted and fevered condition,
-had not been casting around in His mind how He
-might obtain a cup of refreshing water from the depth of the
-well. And now is His opportunity. With the nicest tact
-and politeness He asks, “Give me to drink!” To ask for a
-drink of water in the East is a proffer of good-will. Under
-no circumstances would an Oriental ask or receive water or
-bread of one with whom he was unwilling to be on good
-terms. So when Jesus said to the woman, “Give me to
-drink,” it was as if He had said, “I wish you well; I feel
-kindly towards you and yours.”</p>
-
-<p>We are somewhat surprised at the conduct of the woman
-after such kindly salutation. Instead of quickly offering
-Him a drink, she proceeds to ask, “How is it that thou being
-a Jew askest drink of me, which am a woman of Samaria?”
-She would recognize the nationality of Jesus by His dress.
-The color of the fringes on the Jewish garments was white,
-while those of the Samaritans were blue. Possibly His appearance
-and accent in His speech would also identify Him.
-However, in explanation of her conduct, she goes on to say,
-“the Jews have no dealings with Samaritans.” So that
-while this non-intercourse between the two people was not
-absolute, a request of such a nature might surprise a Samaritan.
-And yet we must confess she is more ready to conduct
-a religious discussion with the Son of God Himself than to
-offer cups of cold water.</p>
-
-<p>But with what wonderful tact Jesus drew the mind of this
-woman away from the religious differences between Jews
-and Samaritans. He was not to be drawn off from the main
-point at issue. He had asked for water, for He was really
-thirsty. She had come to the well for water, for it supplied
-a need. When she came to the well her aspirations reached
-no farther than a pitcher of water. So, with water for a text,
-Jesus proceeds to tell this Samaritan that good as the well
-was, and great as Jacob was, all who drank of that water
-would thirst again. The best the world had to offer could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>
-never satisfy her thirst. She could not help but see the
-truth of these words. They were but the echo of her daily
-experience.</p>
-
-<p>Now the divine Teacher proceeds to uncover another well
-to this woman. “Whosoever,” Jesus proceeded to say, and
-the whosoever included all Samaritans and the world as
-well, “drinketh of the water that I shall give him, shall
-never thirst; for the Holy Spirit that I shall put in him shall
-be a well of water springing up into everlasting life—it
-shall satisfy his thirst and he shall be continually refreshed.”</p>
-
-<p>How deftly Jesus turned this conversation into a spiritual
-channel! It was done so easily that the woman was not
-conscious of the change. She thought he was talking about
-literal water, though the seriousness in his tones had awakened
-her utmost attention. She knew what it was to thirst,
-and the labor of coming to the well to carry away pitchers
-full on her head, only to repeat the labor with each returning
-day. He had awakened in her a desire, though that
-desire was no higher than water, and she said, “Sir, give me
-this water, that I thirst not, neither come hither to draw.”
-Though the woman did not understand His words, she was
-really, in her mind, struggling with the great problem of not
-thirsting any more, and of doing away with the necessity of
-daily coming to Jacob’s well. How the Lord delights to lead
-inquiring minds to the higher things of life! He saw, doubtless,
-by supernatural intuition, the sinful blemishes in her
-life, as well as the deeper aspirations of her soul which His
-words had awakened. How shall He get at the plague-spot
-which corrupted the fountain of her life?</p>
-
-<p>In a tender, pathetic tone he said to the woman, “Go, call
-thy husband!” It was a painful request to make of this
-poor woman, but He could not trifle. He must be faithful.
-The request had its desired effect. It drew off the woman’s
-attention from her desire for fountains of water, to see the
-wretched condition of her life.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, with a frankness that showed an honest soul, she
-replied, “I have no husband!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>Ah! that was the point this wisest of Teachers was bringing
-her to. He did not want to see her husband, but He
-wanted her to see herself. His words probed to the plague-spot
-in her soul. She admitted her guilt, but could not
-quite bring her will to give up her manner of life.</p>
-
-<p>When Jesus told her that she was living with the fifth
-man, and he not her husband, she perceived that He was a
-prophet, and was ready with another batch of theological
-questions. “I know I am not what I ought to be,” she said
-in effect, “but then there are some things I don’t understand,
-and now, since you are a prophet, perhaps you can
-inform me. We Samaritans claim that our way is right, and
-you Jews claim that your way is right. Both can’t be right;
-tell us what we are to do?” Referring to her Samaritan
-ancestors, she continued, “Our fathers worshipped in this
-mountain,” pointing to Mt. Gerizim, under the shadow of
-which they almost stood, and which had a special sacredness
-as the mount of blessing. It was also claimed by the
-Samaritans that their worship was earlier, and, therefore,
-older than that at Jerusalem. However, it is not clear that
-she meant to urge this as one of the reasons in favor of Mt.
-Gerizim, on the summit of which the Samaritan Temple stood.
-In the Scriptures which the Samaritans possessed (the
-Pentateuch) the name of Gerizim had been inserted in the
-place of the holy city of the Jews. On the other hand, the
-claim of the Jews was exclusive. Men must worship in
-Jerusalem. If the woman regarded the supremacy of
-Gerizim or Jerusalem an open question, it showed her candor
-and a willingness to accept the revelation of the truth, whatever
-it might be.</p>
-
-<p>But see how our Lord sweeps the idol of locality from this
-inquirer’s mind, “Believe me,” he said, “the hour cometh
-when ye shall neither in this mountain, nor yet at Jerusalem,
-worship the Father.” Men have ever looked upon their
-places of worship as sacred. Islamism has its Mecca, the
-heathenism of India its Baneras and Ganges, the idolaters
-of China their sacred mountains, the apostates of modern<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>
-times their holy shrines. Jesus abolishes local limitations,
-and announces that what one worships is of more importance
-than where; that God is a Spirit, and that true worship is
-unlimited by time, place or form.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus198.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE NOONTIDE HOUR AT JACOB’S WELL.</p>
-
-<p>Such wonderful words had never fallen upon the ears or
-entered the heart of this woman. No priest or scribe had
-ever uttered such sublime conceptions of our relations to
-God. She had thought him a “prophet,” but such utterances
-are almost divine. She thinks of the Messiah, and
-answers, “I know that when Messias cometh, which is called
-Christ; when He is come, He will tell us all things.” This
-was in accordance with the Samaritan view of Christ.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>
-While showing a desire for a fuller knowledge she thinks of
-a higher authority of the expected Messiah. In this He did
-not rebuke her. He lets her question, yet is never turned
-from His purpose. Step by step His love lifted this inquiring
-mind, until at last she was ready for such an avowal of
-His nature and office as He had never given to Scribe or
-Pharisee or disciple, “I that speak unto thee am He!”</p>
-
-<p>Wonderful news! Filled with surprise and joy, she “left
-her waterpot” on the well, and ran into the city, forgetting
-all about her own need, as well as the request of the Saviour
-for a drink of water. Her haste shows how absorbed she
-had become in the wonderful words from the lips of Him
-who declared Himself the long-expected Son of God. And
-He, the blessed Lord, was so intent on saving a soul that
-He had forgotten all about His thirst and His weariness.</p>
-
-<p>Just as she had left the well, the disciples came, having
-made the necessary purchase of food, and “marveled that
-He talked with the woman,” yet were mysteriously restrained
-from asking Him why He did so. Presently they spread
-their noonday meal, but observing that Jesus did not share
-with them their meal, they urged Him, saying, “Master,
-eat.” But great was their surprise when He answered, “I
-have meat to eat that ye know not of.” They could not
-understand that the chance to help an inquiring soul was
-more to Him than food or drink, and said to one another,
-“Hath any man brought Him ought to eat?” He astonished
-His inquiring disciples yet more, when knowing the thoughts
-uppermost in their minds, said, “My meat is to do the will
-of Him that sent Me,” and to carry out the mission for which
-I am in the world.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime the flying feet of the woman had reached
-the city, and she hastened from street to street delivering her
-message, “Come, see a Man who told me all that ever I did.
-Is not this the Christ?”</p>
-
-<p>The theological questions over which Jews and Samaritans
-contended, whether Jerusalem or Gerizim was the place
-where “men ought to worship,” had dropped entirely out of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
-her mind. But she proved an excellent evangelist, for presently
-the people came flocking out of the city in the direction
-of Jacob’s well, pouring out of every gate, and led over the
-fruitful plain by the woman.</p>
-
-<p>It must have been a grand sight, and showed that Jesus
-was not mistaken when, looking into the face of the woman,
-He saw a pearl of great beauty and worth beneath the rough
-exterior of this semi-heathenish, yet quick-witted, sprightly
-and susceptible Samaritan.</p>
-
-<p>As the Saviour lifted up His eyes over the plain and saw
-the approaching multitude, He was evidently well satisfied
-in withgoing His weariness and thirst while talking to this
-Samaritan Magdalene as she came with her water-pitcher
-to the well, and not only was He satisfied with the results of
-His labors, but He seems also to have been pleased, for, as
-the host filled the plain, He called the attention of his disciples
-to the beautiful sight, and exclaimed, “Say not ye,
-there are yet four months, and then cometh harvest!”
-Doubtless this was true in the physical world, but spiritual
-conditions do not have to depend upon the slow processes of
-the natural world, and the well-sown seed amid the glare of
-the noontide, was already ripening unto the harvest. Behold
-the thronging people! said our Lord. “Lift up your eyes,
-and look on the fields; for they are white already to the
-harvest.”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">“Laborers wanted!” The ripened grain</div>
-<div class="indent">Waits to welcome the reaper’s cry;</div>
-<div class="verse">The Lord of the harvest calls again;</div>
-<div class="indent">Who among us shall first reply,</div>
-<div class="indent">“Who is wanted, Lord? Is it I?”</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">The Master calls, but the servants wait;</div>
-<div class="indent">Fields gleam white ’neath a cloudless sky.</div>
-<div class="verse">Will none seize the sickle before too late,</div>
-<div class="indent">Ere the winter’s winds come sweeping by?</div>
-<div class="indent">Who is delaying? Is it I?</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>As the people thronged the well to hear and see the Man
-who had revealed the hidden life of the woman, He must
-have taught this people with wise, loving words, for they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>
-forgot all about their prejudices and hate and begged Him,
-though of a race with whom the Samaritans had no dealings,
-to stay among them. And He graciously complied with their
-request, and it took Him two whole days to harvest that
-whitened field. And the record is, “Many of the Samaritans
-of that city believed on Him for the saying of the
-woman.”</p>
-
-<p>But what a testimony is all this to that Samaritan woman.
-What, if her previous life had not been of good repute?
-What though she was a social outcast? One thing she discovered
-that noonday, as she came out to draw water from
-Jacob’s ancient well, that the Man who laid open her inner
-life in such modest words and patient forbearance, was none
-other than the long-expected Messiah, and she was altogether
-too generous-minded to lock up the glad tidings in her heart,
-but at once, without commission or priestly authority, witnessed
-for Christ, published the glad tidings of salvation
-through the streets of Sychar, and brought her whole city to
-a knowledge of her Saviour. And so this woman became
-the first gospel preacher in Samaria. That was before church
-councils had decided women may not speak for Jesus.</p>
-
-<p>Jacob’s well is no longer used, and the grain fields, which
-“Stood dressed in living green” before the Saviour’s eyes,
-have long been trodden under foot of Islam’s hordes, yet the
-living spring of water which our Lord opened there to the
-poor, sinful, yet penitent woman, is as deep and fresh as
-ever, and has flowed on and out over the earth to remotest
-nations, and will quench the thirst of souls to the end of
-time.</p>
-
-<p>We see also in this beautiful scene at Jacob’s well that
-Christ’s intercourse with women was marked by freedom
-from Oriental contempt of womanhood, and a marvelous
-union of purity and frankness, dignity and tenderness. He
-approached this woman as a friend who wished her well, and
-yet as her Lord and Saviour. And, to the good sense of
-womanhood be it said, when the light of truth broke over
-her inquiring mind, she believed! And behold how she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>
-loved Him! Forgetting her errand to the well, yea, even
-leaving her pitcher, she hastened to publish the glad news.
-Surely the Saviour “must needs go through Samaria,” on
-His way from Judea to Galilee, and His resting in the little
-alcove of Jacob’s well, for the moment sheltered from the
-glare of an Oriental midday sun, was more than a geographical
-“<i>must</i>.” It was the necessity of love laid upon His heart
-to meet and to help that woman who came with an empty
-stone pitcher to the well at the same hour of the day, but
-went away with a heart filled with “living water ...
-springing up into everlasting life.”</p>
-
-<p>Some time after this, on one of those days while Jesus was
-teaching in lower Galilee, a Pharisee, by the very common
-name of Simon, invited our Lord to a feast. Why he invited
-Him is not stated. Possibly he may have been impressed
-with the character and teaching of Christ, and disposed, in
-a social way, and at his own table, to give Him a further
-hearing, thinking, perhaps, by coming in personal contact
-with our Lord, aside from the throngs which attended upon
-His ministry, he could the better satisfy himself as to the
-merits of this new Teacher in Israel, and so invited Jesus to
-dine with him. Our Lord had not yet broken with the
-Pharisees, and was still anxious, if possible, to conciliate
-them, if by any means He might win them, and withal,
-willing to show his good-will, accepted the invitation.</p>
-
-<p>However gracious the invitation may have been given, it
-is quite clear that the hospitality was meant to be qualified.
-These Pharisees who loved the uppermost seats at feasts,
-knew how to entertain. But in this feast, all the ordinary
-attentions which were usually paid to honored guests
-were strangely omitted. There was no servant with
-basin of water and towel for the weary and dust-covered
-feet, no anointing of the head, no kiss of welcome upon the
-cheek, nothing but a somewhat ungracious admission to a
-vacant place at the table, and the most distant courtesies of
-ordinary intercourse, so managed that this Guest from among
-the common people might feel that he was receiving honors<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>
-in the house of a rich and influential Pharisee. Many a
-poor man’s head has been turned by such feigned and mock
-courtesies. It would have been a thousand times better to
-the head and heart of Simon if he had never invited the
-Lord, than to assume in His presence what he was not at
-heart.</p>
-
-<p>Our Lord must have keenly felt these omissions. But,
-since he had been invited, He made the best of this empty
-show at hospitality, only we may be quite sure He was
-clothed in His usual gentleness and modest dignity. We
-may well believe our Lord showed no signs of being piqued
-at the slights put upon Him, nor embarrassed in the presence
-of His host and the distinguished guests present.
-While Jesus cared little for show or etiquette, yet it was but
-natural that He should have keenly felt these omissions so
-gracefully shown to the others at this feast.</p>
-
-<p>But before us rises another scene. “Behold, a woman in
-the city, which was a sinner, when she knew that Jesus sat
-at meat in the Pharisee’s house, brought an alabaster box of
-ointment.” How thoughtful these women are! This one
-was not satisfied with merely following the throng, but
-she takes with her the most costly gift at her command.
-What a contrast between her and Simon, who haughtily
-thought within himself that anything was good enough for
-this lowly Prophet of Nazareth.</p>
-
-<p>When this woman, whose character seemed to have been
-well known, too well indeed for her own comfort, reached
-Simon’s house, she found the door thronged by a crowd of
-people who had doubtless followed Jesus, and now stood,
-and looked, and listened—for privacy seems a thing impossible
-in the free and easy life of Orientals. For a moment
-she lingered amidst the throng. While there, men, as they
-passed in to the feast, gathered their robes as they passed
-her, lest by a passing touch she should defile them. As she
-sees the scanty preparations, the cold reception, her woman’s
-heart is made indignant. “Would that I were worthy to
-ask Him beneath my roof, or would that I could bid Him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>
-come and sit at meat with me; all that I have were His to
-minister in any way to His comfort. But I, alas, am so far
-down and He so holy—there is no chance for me.” So she
-thinks.</p>
-
-<p>Then lo, that face is lifted, the eyes meet hers. He, all
-pitiful, reading her heart looks an invitation that she can
-not resist. And then in the presence of the Pharisees, as
-they start with horror, every man shrinking from this
-infamous intruder, every face filled with scorn, she hurries
-across to the side of the Lord Jesus and falls at His feet.
-She pours forth her penitence in a flood of tears; then,
-startled that she should thus have bathed His feet, she
-loosens her hair and wipes them with reverent hands, and
-tenderly kissing His feet, she draws from the folds of her
-dress a pot of unguent, and pours its fragrance upon them.</p>
-
-<p>Who she was or how she had come to know Jesus, or when
-she had been moved by his preaching and converted by the
-grace of His words we do not know. It is quite likely,
-having been attracted like others to be one of His auditors
-somewhere, she had heard His gracious words of love and
-pity, and had gladly on her part accepted their healing
-influences.</p>
-
-<p>But when the Pharisee saw the marked attention of this
-woman of the street to his Guest, he commenced talking to
-himself in his heart, “This man, if He were a prophet,” he
-muttered to himself, “would know who and what manner
-of woman this is that is thus lavishing her love upon His
-feet, for she is a sinner, whose very touch is pollution.” No
-doubt Simon was shocked beyond measure, especially when
-he saw Jesus allowed it, and was glad at that moment that
-his cold caution at the commencement of the feast had prevented
-him from giving Jesus too cordial a welcome. “I
-am glad now I did not compromise my honor or forfeit the
-good opinion of those of my set; that I wasted none of my
-perfume upon His head; that I gave Him no kiss of welcome;
-yea, even that I did not bid a servant wash His feet.
-Such acts of hospitality would, in a measure at least, have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>
-committed me, in the eyes of the people, to Him as a friend,
-and would have exposed me to the criticisms of my brethren.
-I fear I have already gone too far, but will get out of it as
-quickly as possible, and when I extend another invitation
-He’ll know it. In my opinion, He is not only no prophet,
-but is altogether too free with the common people to make
-Him desirable among my fellow Pharisees.”</p>
-
-<p>To be sure, Simon did not utter these thoughts aloud, but
-his frigid demeanor, and the contemptuous expression of
-countenance, which he did not take the trouble to disguise,
-showed all that was passing in his heart. He little realized
-that Jesus had read his thoughts as unerringly as if he had
-written them upon the walls of his dining-room, and at once
-proceeded to lay open the heart of His host to himself in a
-manner he had never thought it possible, and He did it by
-first relating a little parable, and thus addressed the Pharisee:</p>
-
-<p>“Simon, I have somewhat to say to thee!”</p>
-
-<p>“Master, say on,” was the somewhat constrained reply.</p>
-
-<p>“There was a certain creditor who had two debtors. The
-one owed five hundred pence, and the other fifty; and when
-they had nothing to pay he freely forgave both. Tell me,
-then, which of them will love him most?”</p>
-
-<p>The construction of this parable is marvelous for its conciseness,
-naturalness and simplicity. In its application
-Jesus makes Simon condemn himself for his uncharitable
-judgment. He is compelled to admit the whole force of the
-great scheme of salvation by pardoning grace. It doubtless
-never entered Simon’s poor, proud, but sinful heart that he,
-too, was a debtor and needed to be as freely forgiven as the
-woman whose touch he considered pollution, and yet this is
-one of the lessons taught by the comparison here drawn between
-the abandoned woman and the proud Pharisee. It
-is pitiable to see the bitterness of the world towards a lost
-woman. And yet why should not her companion in sin suffer
-as much as she? But he never does. Let us be fair.
-Cast her out, if you feel called on to be her judge, but at
-least do the same by him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>The fact remains that this poor woman knew she was an
-outcast. No one would forgive her. Never could she regain
-her social standing. But Simon? Ah! Simon was really
-quite a model man. As the world judges worth, she stood
-at one extreme and he at the other. Simon was eminently
-respectable. As a Pharisee he belonged to one of the first
-families; he was recognized in Church and State; he had
-social position which introduced him to the refined and educated.
-If he met a public speaker of eminence, or a man of
-reputation, he honored him by inviting him to dinner. Let
-us not too severely pass upon the conduct of Simon. He was
-undoubtedly a worthy man. Christ’s reference to him in
-the parable implies that his outward life was not that of a
-hypocrite or a mere formalist. But this parable makes him
-a bankrupt debtor. He can no more pay his fifty pence
-than the woman her five hundred pence. So both were sinners,
-and both needed to be forgiven. Here there was no
-difference. Both had broken the law of God, and both were
-in need of a Saviour.</p>
-
-<p>We see again that penitence breaks down the wall that
-separated from God. This poor woman saw her dreadful
-sin and turned from it in an agony of repentance. She
-sought the Lord. He was the only friend to whom she
-could turn in her need. She was sure of His sympathy and
-help. She desired forgiveness and found it. She had been
-alienated from God, but through her penitence had reached
-a comprehension of Christ’s character impossible to the self-satisfied
-Pharisee. She was far more at one with God, as
-He was revealed in Christ, than was the dignified gentleman,
-indignant at her presence in his house.</p>
-
-<p>This woman felt a great need. She was sin-burdened,
-and needed a divine deliverer, and the Saviour proved to be
-an all-sufficient helper. How was it with Simon? Why, he
-relied on himself. He felt no need of Christ’s help. He
-was self-satisfied—a very good man in his own opinion.
-The woman had expressed her gratitude in many touching
-ways, but Simon had no sense of gratitude. He had given<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>
-no kiss of welcome, had provided no water for the feet, had
-failed to anoint the Saviour’s head.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond a doubt there are a great many excellent people
-to-day of Simon’s stamp. They are quite courteous, if their
-social position is not compromised thereby. They will spread
-a feast, and invite the Lord to dinner. And yet, they feel
-no need of Christ. The whole show of hospitality is a cold,
-heartless formality, with no tenderness of emotion towards
-Him. They feel no longing to make sacrifices for His sake
-as expressive of their love. And so, while treating Christ
-respectfully, they do not treat Him lovingly. They think
-too well of themselves. They need to recognize more fully
-their position of danger and their dependence upon
-Christ.</p>
-
-<p>There is also a wonderful picture in this narrative of
-Christ’s love for us. How considerate His treatment of this
-penitent and broken-hearted woman! He was not supercilious.
-He had no feeling of pride that resented her touch.
-It was not necessary that He avoid her in order to vindicate
-His own purity.</p>
-
-<p>Hitherto Jesus had said nothing to the woman, though it
-must have thrilled her soul when she heard what had been
-said to Simon in the application of the parable. She was
-first indirectly assured of the grace of God in respect to
-herself, and of the principle on which her forgiveness was
-vouchsafed. She knew that He was not ashamed of her,
-and, finally, she heard Him say in so many words, “Her
-sins which are many are forgiven her.”</p>
-
-<p>Having said so much to Simon concerning her, Jesus now
-turned to the woman herself, laid His hand tenderly upon
-the bowed head, for He would not break the bruised reed,
-nor quench the smoking flax, He would not by bitterness
-drive her from Him, but as her Defence and Deliverer, personally
-addressed her, and said, “Thy sins are forgiven!”
-There now remained not a doubt in her mind. She had His
-word personally addressed to her, and this was the ground
-of her assurance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus208.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE UNINVITED GUEST.</p>
-
-<p>Now see what followed. “They that sat at meat with
-Him began to say, within themselves, Who is this that forgiveth
-sins also?” Simon and his friends were offended
-because there was no sympathy in their hearts for Christ and
-His works of mercy. They did not desire the salvation of
-this woman who had come in to their feast. It did not once
-occur to them that Christ could know the character of the
-woman and yet be willing to let her approach Him that He
-might forgive her sin. They saw only a man, and said,
-“Who is this that forgiveth sins also?” Only God could do
-that. But she saw a Saviour before her, and our Lord fearing
-the cavil of the Pharisees might distress the woman, He said to
-her, “Thy faith hath saved thee; go in peace!” He would get
-her away from the doubting Pharisees as quickly as possible.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>It is worthy of observation that, notwithstanding the
-beautiful exhibition this woman gave of her love and affection,
-it was her “faith,” not her love, that saved her.</p>
-
-<p>Tradition identifies this woman as Mary Magdalene, a
-native, it is thought of Magdol, the modern <i>Mejdel</i>, a town
-on the west shore of the Sea of Galilee, and south of the
-plain of Gennesaret. The present village lies close to the
-water’s edge, and, Tiberias excepted, is the only place on
-the western coast of Galilee which survives the wreck of
-time.</p>
-
-<p>Much is said by the Talmudists of her wealth, her extreme
-beauty, her braided hair, but all we know of her from Scriptures
-is her enthusiasm of devotion and gratitude which,
-henceforth, attached her, heart and soul, to her Saviour’s
-service. For we read, “And it came to pass afterward,”
-after this feast in the house of Simon the Pharisee, that Jesus
-“went through” the cities and villages of Galilee “preaching
-and showing the glad tidings of the kingdom of God,”
-and “certain women, which had been healed of evil spirits
-and infirmities, Mary Magdalene, out of whom went seven
-devils, and Joanna the wife of Chuza, Herod’s steward, and
-Susanna, and many others,” “ministered unto Him of their
-substance.” Thus we find this woman, with others, ministering
-to the temporal necessities of our Lord.</p>
-
-<p>In the last journey of Christ to Jerusalem, Mary Magdalene
-accompanied the women who were in the company.
-She was also among the women on the day of crucifixion
-who “stood afar off, beholding these things” during the
-closing hours of the agony on the cross, and remained till
-all was over, waited till the body was taken down, and
-wrapped in the linen cloth and placed in the sepulchre of
-Joseph of Arimathea. Thus, this loving, faithful woman,
-true to her nature, clung to her Lord to the very last.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of the resurrection, Mary Magdalene was
-among the women who found the tomb of our Lord empty.
-Instantly she hastened to inform the disciples. While she
-was gone, the remaining women saw the angels, who asked,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>
-“Why seek ye the living among the dead?” And instructed
-them to tell his disciples. So when Mary returned to the
-sepulchre, she was alone. She was also ignorant of what
-the angels had said to the other women, and the poor
-woman’s heart could no longer retain her pent-up grief, and
-stood at the open sepulchre weeping. Presently she saw a
-man, and supposing him to be the gardener, said, “Sir, if
-thou hast borne Him hence, tell me where thou hast laid
-Him, and I will take Him away.”</p>
-
-<p>While she is speaking to the supposed gardener, Jesus
-addressed her by her given name, “Mary!” Behold, it was
-her Lord, and she exclaims, “<i>Rabboni!</i>” It was the strongest
-word of reverence which a woman of Israel could use, and,
-in her joy, would have fallen on His neck, had He not
-restrained her. But what honor the Lord conferred upon
-her. She was the first human messenger to the world of
-a risen Saviour!</p>
-
-<p>Such was the beautiful pearl our Lord saw in the woman
-who poured out her penitence in a flood of tears at His feet in
-the house of Simon the Pharisee. While it was her faith
-that saved her, surely it can truthfully be said of her, “She
-loved much.”</p>
-
-<p>It was after Jesus had begun His new method of teaching
-by parables, the keynote of which was, “Take heed how ye
-hear,” and had, at the close of a hard day’s labor, sailed
-over the Sea of Galilee, and spent the night in the region of
-Decapolis, in the hope of getting away from the multitudes
-to obtain a little rest, that, on the following morning as he
-returned to Capernaum, the people, from the hillsides were
-watching for His return, and as soon as they recognized the
-sail of the little vessel, and long before he reached land, great
-throngs had lined the shore to welcome His return.</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding the prejudices of the Scribes and Pharisees
-had already been aroused against Christ, there was, on
-the shore, nervously moving among the people, a very prominent
-citizen of Capernaum, by the name of Jairus, a ruler of
-the synagogue. From the deep lines of anxiety visible on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
-his face, he was evidently in great mental distress. And
-well he might be, for his beautiful twelve year old daughter
-had been given up by the physicians and was dying. As a
-last resort, he hastened to find Jesus, who already had performed
-many cures in his city, and so when he learned that
-our Lord had passed over the Sea of Galilee, he could do no
-better than wait His coming. No sooner had the little vessel
-touched the landing than Jairus pushed his way through the
-crowd, and when he got near enough fell at Jesus’ feet, and
-in great agony of heart besought Him, saying, “My little
-daughter lieth at the point of death; I pray Thee come and
-lay Thy hands on her, that she may be healed.” There was
-no calmness in this appeal. On the other hand, it was full
-of agitation and fear, mingled with fancies that the Lord
-must first lay His hands upon his dying child. There is a
-striking similarity between this appeal of Jairus, and that of
-the nobleman who came to Jesus in the early part of His
-ministry, and cried out, “Come down ere my child die.”
-Then the Lord told the nobleman to go his way, his child
-should live, but here His divine compassion went out to the
-distressed father. Doubtless Jesus saw the weakness of his
-faith, but He also saw his sincerity, and so He “went with him.”</p>
-
-<p>But the daughter of Jairus was not the only sufferer in
-that city. We read, there was “a certain woman which had
-an issue of blood twelve years, and had suffered many things
-of many physicians, and had spent all that she had, and
-was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse.” Surely she
-was in a sorrowful condition, had suffered many things,
-besides the disease which was wasting her life away, for
-medicine in that age was but imperfectly understood, and
-diseases were often exorcised by charms, and, doubtless her
-“many physicians” practiced all sorts of charms and
-resorted to every kind of omen, until her money was gone,
-and she was not only poverty-stricken, but daily growing
-worse under her affliction. One almost wonders, since
-Jesus had now been for a year and a half a resident of
-Capernaum, that she had not sooner appealed to Him for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
-help. Perhaps his work had been in another part of the
-city, or she may have been deterred from asking His help
-because of the nature of her malady, or she may have
-thought within herself that she could do in the throng what
-she had not the courage to do openly, for she said, “If I
-may but touch His garment, I shall be whole.” And now
-was her opportunity, for “much people followed Him,
-and thronged Him.” Besides, on this occasion, Jesus may
-have passed through the street on which she lived, since
-He has such a way of passing by the door of helpless, suffering
-humanity, for He is “touched with the feeling of our
-infirmities.”</p>
-
-<p>This woman at first does not impress us as having a very
-exalted idea of the Saviour or faith in His ability to heal.
-Doubtless she shared the superstition of her people, and
-imagined that Christ healed by a sort of magic or magnetism,
-for, as she mingled in the throng, she said to herself,
-if I come “in the press,” if I can only get near enough
-to “touch the hem of His garment,” I will be healed. These
-seem to be the thoughts passing through her mind as she
-ventured out on her errand of being healed. It is important,
-however, though difficult, to realize her situation, for
-she had become impoverished, diseased, and almost helpless.
-Once she was possessed of health, and some means at least,
-and, no doubt moved in respectable society. Her changed
-relations to her former surroundings made it all the harder
-to be publicly recognized, and so she timidly permits herself
-to be absorbed by the multitude as they pressed their
-way through the crowded street that morning. There may
-be another reason of which she was fully conscious, namely,
-according to the Mosaic law, such a sufferer was unclean,
-and was required, after the cure was wrought, to bring an
-offering for purification. Orientals had a perfect abhorrence
-of such a person, for her very touch would render them
-unclean. Perhaps could we know all the circumstances
-which shaped her actions, the wonder would be, that she
-came at all, and that her courage was greater than her faith.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>At length, and as unobtrusively as possible, she came up,
-in the press of the people, behind Jesus, and stretched out
-her trembling hand, and in such a modest way touched the
-hem of His garment that no one saw it, not even His disciples,
-who were nearest the Saviour. Since no one saw her
-act, she thought no one needed to know it. Perhaps she
-was so careful that she even thought Jesus was not conscious
-of it. But to our Lord there was a difference between the
-touch of faith and the touch of the crowd. She was all too
-deeply conscious of her great need. She was carried along
-with the multitude, because she believed if she could get
-near enough to Jesus to touch Him, she would receive that
-which all her physicians were unable to bestow, namely,
-restoration to health. She was there for a blessing. The
-crowd was there through idle curiosity. They wanted
-nothing, only to see. They pushed through the thronged
-highway together, and as they did so talked about the simplicity
-of the great Man in their midst, were interested in
-Him because of His fame, discussed His origin, wondered at
-the growing opposition of the Scribes and Pharisees, but
-hoped some good would come of Him to the nation. The
-woman believed she would personally receive new life from
-Him. In this she was not disappointed, for “straightway
-the fountain of her blood was dried up; and she felt in her
-body that she was healed of that plague.” To her there was
-an inward consciousness, which could not be mistaken, of the
-staunching of a wound through which her life, for long
-years, had been slowly and yet surely ebbing, and she
-felt the rising tide of new existence and a return to
-wholeness.</p>
-
-<p>But now the scene changes. The great throng came to a
-halt. What has happened? one inquired of another. See!
-Jesus has turned around “in the press” and is sharply looking
-into the faces of those nearest Him, and demanding,
-“Who touched my clothes?”</p>
-
-<p>To the disciples this seemed a strange inquiry, and they
-could not understand its meaning, and replied, “Thou<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>
-seest the multitude thronging thee, and sayest thou, Who
-touched me?” To appreciate the astonishment of the disciples
-one must see an Oriental throng pushing its way
-through a narrow street of an Eastern city. There is no
-resisting its onward rush. Like some mighty river which,
-fed by a thousand spring freshets, irresistibly bears everything
-before it, so is an Eastern crowd, and the wonder is
-that Jesus could stay at all. But He immediately knew in
-“Himself that virtue had gone out of Him.” He was conscious
-that He had put forth power for the woman’s healing.
-He would there and at once correct any superstition that
-there was any healing virtue in His clothes. Not in the
-touch of the garment, for the people pressed Him on all sides,
-and experienced nothing of His healing power, even though
-one or another might have had a concealed disease, simply
-because this conscious need of help was lacking in them, and
-so it was her own faith had saved her, even though in the
-beginning it was not wholly free from superstition.</p>
-
-<p>But what a trial this stop must have been to the woman,
-especially when there was such urgent haste, and this seeming
-leisurely way of calling out all the circumstances of the
-case, even after all disavowed touching Him, and His looking
-“round about to see her that had done this thing.” She
-must have thought to herself, “I will surely be discovered.”
-And timidly shrank back in the crowd, her face burning
-with confusion, for doubtless she was not only alarmed at the
-delay, but also mortified and afraid on account of the nature
-of her malady, disturbed by the consciousness of impropriety,
-as having, while Levitically unclean, dared to mingle with
-the people, and even touch the great Teacher Himself. We
-wonder, in the sweep of the Saviour’s eye over the multitude
-“to see her,” as she caught sight of His beneficent face,
-possibly for the first time, she did not see something in it that
-calmed her fears and inspired hope? It would seem so, for
-even while yet “fearing and trembling” she came promptly
-out from among the throng, “fell down before Him,” and,
-hard as it must have been for her to tell her shame in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>
-ears of the multitude, woman-like, she bravely “told Him
-all the truth!” Confessed the whole sad story of her life,
-and twelve long years of suffering. Oh, the touch of loyalty
-to truth and honor in this woman, prostrate at the feet of
-Jesus, pleading for mercy and forgiveness! How His own
-heart must have been touched by it. He would not break
-the bruised reed, even in this necessity for the good of her
-faith, to have her openly confess the great blessing she had
-received. Doubtless the Lord constrained her to make this
-confession, partly to seal her faith and to strengthen her
-recovery, and partly to present her to the world as healed
-and cleansed.</p>
-
-<p>But while she is sobbing out her confession at the Saviour’s
-feet, He graciously addresses her, “Daughter, be of good
-comfort; thy faith hath made thee whole; go in peace!”
-Had ever such endearing words fallen upon human ears!
-To the woman in the house of Simon the Pharisee, He had
-said, “Thy faith hath saved thee!” To this one He says,
-“Daughter, be of good comfort; thy faith hath made thee
-whole!” That endearing appellation, “daughter,” must
-have sounded as a lost note out of heaven in the ear of this
-woman. Could it be possible that she, who, under the
-Levitical law, had been held by her people as unclean, is
-called “daughter” by the pure, sinless Son of God? Did
-ever heaven come down to earth in such graciousness, and
-rescue from the mire of uncleanness and elevate womanhood
-to be a princess of the sky? Surely these were days of
-heaven upon earth, and we may well believe that “daughter”
-arose from her prostrate attitude at the feet of the Lord
-of life and glory, “a new creature” in Christ.</p>
-
-<p>Early ecclesiastical legends have garlanded this woman
-with many beautiful fancies. Her birthplace, according to
-tradition, was Paneas (the modern Banias), located at the
-sources of the Jordan. Here, in the front of her residence,
-she caused a monument to be erected to her Deliverer. She
-must also have been in the company of women who followed
-Jesus to Jerusalem at the last Passover, for, at the several<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
-trials of our Lord she is made to appear under the name of
-Veronica, and is said, in the presence of Pilate, to have
-proclaimed, in a clear, loud voice, the innocence of our Lord,
-and after he was condemned to be crucified, on the way to
-Calvary, wiped His face with her own handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever value or genuineness there may be attached to
-these traditions, they certainly show in what reverence she
-was held in Christian antiquity, and how highly the faith
-and the hope of this sufferer were esteemed.</p>
-
-<p>But, above all these traditionary legends, we behold the
-glory and majesty of our Lord in that, in the midst of the
-multitude, He displayed no traces of excitement, but that in
-calm consciousness He was ready to receive any impression
-from without. Of this there is the clearest evidence, when,
-in the midst of the excited crowd, He perceived that one
-timid, shrinking woman, in the agony of her faith touched
-the fringe of His garment; and when He stopped to comfort
-and confirm the trembling believer, whom His power and
-grace had restored, He had recognized, even in a throng,
-that faith which was unperceived by men, and only found
-expression in the inmost desires of the one who was not even
-known to the crowd. He alone could develop and strengthen
-this unobtrusive and shrinking “daughter” until she breaks
-forth in open and public profession.</p>
-
-<p>There are also reasons why Christ ascribes to faith the
-deliverance which He alone works: 1. Faith alone can receive
-the needed deliverance. 2. Shrinking modesty, and even a
-feeling of unworthiness, need no longer be kept back by any
-sense of uncleanness, from the full exercise of that faith. 3.
-God’s gifts are not alone for the rich and those high in the
-ranks of social life, for even this ruler of the synagogue had
-to give place to this timid woman, therefore faith may be
-exercised by those in the humblest walks of life. 4. Jesus
-would convert the act of faith into a life of faith. This
-woman was not hid from the searching glance of Christ, but
-His gracious act of healing was concealed from the world
-until He brought her before Him in her public confession.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>If there is anything that can grieve the heart of Christ it
-must be the person who absorbs like a sponge all the gifts of
-grace, but never gives any of them out to others. If every
-one acted thus, Christianity would be blotted from the face
-of the earth in a single generation. Hence the wisdom and
-justice in requiring believers to be witnesses and confessors.
-If you have received any good, tell it out, that others may
-be blessed and God glorified.</p>
-
-<p>It was now becoming manifest that the opposition of the
-Pharisees was deepening, and, because they were bitterly
-offended at the Saviour’s work, shortly after the healing of
-the woman with a bloody issue, Jesus withdrew from Capernaum
-to the “borders of Tyre and Sidon.” Only a little before
-this so many were coming and going that our Lord and
-His disciples “had no leisure so much as to eat,” and because
-of these throngs upon His public ministry, He had said to
-the apostles, “Come ye yourselves apart into a desert place,
-and rest awhile.” So they sailed for the farther shore, to find
-a safe retreat in the sheltered uplands in the dominion of
-Herod Philip. But the people, who seemed to be always on
-the watch, when they saw the little vessel sailing out from
-Capernaum, and knew, by the direction it was taking, they
-quickly spread the news of His departure, and thronged out
-of Capernaum, Bethsaida, Chorazin and other cities, and
-hastened on foot around the shores of the sea, and outran
-the vessel and reached His contemplated place of retirement
-in advance of the little craft, and there was no rest, but a
-great multitude to be instructed, and healed, and fed, for it
-was on this occasion that He spread a table in the desert,
-and five thousand, besides women and children, sat down to
-eat. And so there was nothing but a hard day’s work, and
-a night on the desolate mountain in prayer. So obviously
-His journey to the “borders of Tyre and Sidon,” was
-to find seclusion and rest, which He had sought, but
-in vain, in the “desert place.” But even here, down by
-the coast of the Mediterranean, “He could not be hid,”
-although, when He had reached the “borders” of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
-land, He “entered into a house and would have no man
-know it.”</p>
-
-<p>To our mind this is one of the most remarkable incidents
-in our Lord’s ministry. In the house of some sheltering
-friend, on the remote frontier of Galilee, He hoped to escape
-popular attention and to be relieved from the demands of
-the crowds, who had even deprived Him of the needed time
-to eat, but “He could not be hid.” A woman, a Syro-Phœnician,
-that is to say, one of the mixed race, in whom the
-blood of the Syrians and Phœnicians mingled, and for that
-reason doubly despised by the Jews, this woman had observed
-His presence, and was soon “at His feet.” From the fact
-that she was a Gentile, and of a mixed race at that, made
-her coming to Jesus an act of heroic faith. She came not
-only without invitation, or a single promise to warrant her
-coming, but in the face of heart-breaking discouragements.
-We have been trained to believe, from the clear teaching of
-Scripture, that when we come to Christ with our burdens of
-sorrow, be they ever so heavy, and ask for help, our prayers
-must always be subject to His will. And indeed He set us
-a beautiful object-lesson in His own great agony in Gethsemane.
-But here it would seem as if the process had been
-reversed, and as if this poor Syro-Phœnician woman had succeeded
-in imposing her will on the Son of God. Did He not
-say, “Be it unto thee even as thou wilt?” And is there not
-in this the appearance, at least, of the monarch abdicating in
-favor of the subject? Strange, indeed, that any one should
-get their own way and will with the Sovereign of all, for the
-sin that is in us so dyes the color of our will and deflects it,
-that we can seldom think of it as being other than a crooked
-piece of bent or twisted iron. It is very wonderful that this
-woman’s faith was able to get deliverance for her daughter
-possessed of an “unclean spirit.” Somehow she believed
-beforehand in His love to her, a poor Gentile mother, and
-this was great faith indeed. All the miracles of Christ were
-wrought in response to faith, either in the sufferers who besought
-His aid, or in their friends. There must be faith by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
-which, as over a bridge, the divine help might pass into the
-nature of man. Faith is the unfurled petal, the opened door,
-the unshuttered lattice. And so, in this case, it was through
-the mother’s faith that God’s delivering help passed to the
-child.</p>
-
-<p>Upon a careful study of the secret of this woman’s faith,
-we shall discover that her faith was severely tested. Christ
-gave her four tests, each of which was necessary to complete
-her education; and by each, with agile foot, she climbed the
-difficult stairway, which some would say was of upward
-ascent, but which in point of fact was one of downward
-climbing, until she got low enough to catch the waters which
-issue from the threshold of the door of heaven’s mercy.</p>
-
-<p>The first test was that of silence. “She cried unto Him,
-saying, Have mercy on me, O Lord, thou Son of David; my
-daughter is grievously vexed with a devil.” The effects of
-these unclean spirits are described in the instance where the
-distressed father brought his demoniac boy to be healed.
-And while the father is bringing him, the poor child is seized
-with paroxysms of his malady, having fallen to the ground
-at the feet of Jesus, foaming at the lips under the violent
-convulsions. When the father was asked how long the boy
-had thus been possessed, he answered, “Of a child, and ofttimes
-it hath cast him into the fire, and into the water to
-destroy him;” and whenever the spirit “taketh him, he
-teareth him, and he foameth, and gnasheth with his teeth
-and pineth away.” Such was the demon this poor mother’s
-daughter was possessed with, and grievously tormented.
-But to her appeal for help, Jesus “answered her not a word.”
-He alone had the power to help, but the agonizing mother
-awakened no response. And yet, His very silence is a testing
-of her faith. Often it has happened that God’s answer
-which has best met our need was the silence which has not
-been a refusal, but has given time for us to reach a condition
-of lowliness and helplessness before God. He always lets
-the fruit upon His trees ripen before He plucks it. Through
-the silence of the winter the sap is touching again its mother<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-earth, and becoming reinforced by her energy for its work
-in the blossoms of May and the fruit of September. The
-mind reaches its clearest, strongest conclusion by processes
-carried on in its depths during hours of silence and repose.
-It is in the long, silent hours, when the heart waits at the
-door, listening for the footstep down the corridor in vain,
-that processes are at work that shall make it more able to
-hold the blessedness which shall be poured out from the
-chalice of a Father’s pity.</p>
-
-<p>Again. She was sorely tested in the conduct of the disciples.
-They were eager to rid themselves of the worry of
-this woman’s crying, and, as the quickest solution—a solution
-which we are all ready enough to imitate—advised Christ
-to give her what she wanted and send her off. They thought
-a miracle to Christ was not more than a penny to a millionaire.
-They did not see that Christ’s hands were tied until
-the conditions of blessing were fulfilled in the suppliant.
-He loves us too well to give His choicest boons to those who
-have not complied with the lofty spiritual conditions which
-are part of the standing orders of the kingdom of heaven.
-Much of our charity is sheer selfishness. We would rather
-grant the request any day than have an unsightly beggar
-intrude into our bowers of selfish repose. “She crieth after
-us,” the disciples said; “her misery is unpleasant; heal it.”</p>
-
-<p>But Christ was tied by the terms of His commission. She
-had appealed to Him as Son of David, and He said that He
-had been sent to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. She
-belonged to one of the alien races. She was not even a
-“sheep” of the house of Israel, much less a “lost” one.
-The question was, “Could He, even for once, transcend His
-commission, and grant the request of this weary soul which
-had traveled so far to find the Christ?” As Messiah, she
-had no claim on Him, for, in that capacity, He had been
-commissioned to the house of Israel only.</p>
-
-<p>Once again. Her faith was tested in His farther refusal
-to her pleadings, when He said, “It is not meet to take the
-children’s bread, and cast it to the dogs.” Somehow her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>
-quick woman’s instinct perceived a way up what had seemed
-to be the unscalable path of Christ’s refusal. If she had no
-claim on Him as Messiah, was He not something more?
-Was He not Lord and Master? Did not deity blend with
-humanity in that nature, which, whilst His voice repelled
-her, yet fascinated and attracted her? It would almost seem
-as if the Holy Spirit whispered, “Accost Him as Lord;”
-“Touch Him on the side of His universal power;” “Speak
-to Him as Son of Man.” So she acted upon His suggestion,
-and, throwing herself at His feet, said, “Lord, help me.”
-To this appeal Christ gave answer that seemed churlish
-enough. But the bitter rind encased luscious fruit. The
-nut had only to be cracked to disclose the milk, sweeter than
-that of the cocoanut in the desert waste. He compared the
-Jews to children, Himself to bread, and this woman to a dog.
-But for the word “dog” he used the tender diminutive,
-which was not applicable to the wolfish, starving animals
-that prowl and snarl through the streets of Eastern towns,
-but was used for the little dogs brought up with the children
-in the home. Now, hope once again sprang up in her heart.
-Jesus had talked about dogs, and little house dogs, the playthings
-of the children. He said it was not proper to cast the
-children’s bread to dogs. If by children he meant the “sheep
-of the house of Israel,” then she must belong to the household
-after all.</p>
-
-<p>She was quick to see her opportunity. “Truth, Lord!”
-she exclaimed, “Yet the dogs eat of the crumbs which fall
-from their masters’ table!” When she said that, her lesson
-was learnt. In her former reply she had given the Lord
-His right place; in this she took her own as a little dog.
-You are not a child of Abraham’s stock! Truth, Lord. You
-are a Syro-Phœnician, and, for that reason, doubly unfit to
-be called a child! Truth, Lord. All I do for you must be
-of grace, and not of merit! Truth, Lord. She admitted all
-and accepted His most discouraging statements concerning
-herself. But, after the worst that can be said about dogs,
-they “eat of the crumbs.” All these seeming objections are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>
-in favor of her request. She only wants a little crumb of
-His mercy, which will take nothing from others.</p>
-
-<p>Jesus could stand such pleadings no longer, and he
-answered and said, “O, woman, great is thy faith: be it
-unto thee even as thou wilt.” She had come for crumbs, but
-the Lord handed to her the key of the storehouse, and said,
-“Have your way, go in and help yourself to all its stores.”
-She would have been content with the crumbs that fell
-beneath the table on the floor, but she finds herself seated at
-the table itself, and feasting like a daughter of the king on
-its rich and bountiful provision. No longer a dog, she proves
-herself to be one of those other sheep which shamed the lost
-sheep of the house of Israel by docility and purity and grace.</p>
-
-<p>This woman had many graces. She had wisdom, humility,
-meekness, patience, perseverance in prayer; but all these
-were the fruits of her faith; therefore, of all graces, Christ
-honors faith most. The perseverance of this woman may
-well be considered as every way calculated to teach us the
-power and efficacy of faith, and the greatness of her faith
-consisted in this, that in spite of all discouragements she
-continued her plea. Many a blessing has been lost out of
-our lives just because we lacked these graces of the soul.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX.<br />
-
-Womanhood During Our Lord’s Judean Ministry.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><span class="smcap">The Sisters of Bethany—Their Characteristics—Not Good, But
-Best Gifts—The Extravagance of Love—Salome’s Strange
-Request—Her Fidelity—Joanna—The Poor Widow’s Gift—How
-Estimated—The Saviour’s Words of Peace.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> sisters of Bethany, Martha and Mary, come to our
-view three times during our Lord’s Judean ministry. The
-first view we have of them is recorded in Luke x, 38-42,
-where these sisters entertain our Lord after a long, weary
-day’s teaching. The second is recorded in John xi, 1-46,
-and relates to the sickness and raising from the dead their
-brother Lazarus. The third is the anointing of Jesus by
-Mary, the account of which is found in Matt. xxvi, 6-13;
-also in Mark xiv, 3-9, and John xii, 1-8. Though these
-three events are each distinct, yet a careful study will discover
-a close connection between the deep, underlying truths
-in each, the attitude taken by Jesus, and the results in the
-circumstances of everyday life.</p>
-
-<p>A great deal has been said and written about these sisters
-of Bethany, some regarding Martha at fault, while others
-think Mary did not do the right thing to leave her sister do
-all the work. It is related of three theologians that they
-were talking together about these two women, and at last
-made their discussions concrete by questioning each other as
-to which of the women they would like to have married.
-The first said he would rather take Martha, to have his home
-looked well after; the second said he would much prefer to
-have married Mary, the tender and the loving; and the
-third, who had been silent up to this point, said, “I should
-like Martha before dinner and Mary after.” We think there
-is a great deal in this statement. There are excellencies in
-each, and it is impossible for us to do without our busy Marthas<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>
-in our homes and churches, but we must remember at the
-same time that our Lord’s estimate is that Mary had chosen
-the better part which was not to be taken from her.</p>
-
-<p>The location of Bethany is most picturesque and charming.
-It is scarcely two miles from Jerusalem, yet, by its situation
-on the south-eastern side of a lateral spur of Olivet, is completely
-hid from view. Here, amid the olive yards and fig
-orchards, lived this happy family in comfortable circumstances,
-and, we think, were possessed of considerable property,
-and ranked well among the learned and affluent.
-Jesus had been slowly journeying from Galilee down the east
-borders of Samaria to Jerusalem. Those who are familiar
-with that journey will remember how replete it was with incidents,
-wayside sermons, parables and miracles. At length,
-late in the afternoon, we may well believe, He arrived at
-Bethany weary with the long journey, exhausted by the
-labors which attended it, and glad to get away from the
-multitudes which thronged Him. That there should be
-some stir in the pious household at the coming of such a
-guest is perfectly natural, and that Martha, the busy, eager-hearted,
-and no less affectionate hostess, should hurry to and
-fro with somewhat excited energy to prepare for His proper
-entertainment, is not to be wondered at, for, in all probability,
-she had had no information of His coming, and along
-with Him twelve disciples to be provided for. The wonder
-is she was as self-contained as she was.</p>
-
-<p>There can be no doubt but Martha was a good housekeeper.
-She kept everything straight, clean and neat.
-And when Jesus came, it upset her somewhat, and she ran
-out into the kitchen, at the back of the house to get the
-supper; not a single thing must be left undone, everything
-must be there. She is so eager about it, coming in and
-out of the little guest-chamber where the Master is sitting,
-hurrying here and there with this one thought in her heart,
-that the Lord must have her best, nothing must be left
-unturned to give Him comfort. And, of course, there is a
-good deal of excitement and possible anxiety. The disarranged<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>
-furniture is hastily put to rights, the table had to be
-freshly laid with clean white cloths, and the dining-room
-made presentable, for it must be remembered Christ did not
-come alone. He had a group of twelve disciples with Him,
-and such an influx of visitors would throw any village home
-into perturbation. Then, no doubt, the day’s labor had been
-a good appetizer. The kitchen department that day was a
-very important department, and probably Martha had no
-sooner greeted her guests than she fled to that room. No
-doubt she was a good cook. Mary had full confidence that
-her sister could get up the best dinner of any woman in
-Bethany, for Martha was not only a hard-working and painstaking
-woman, but also a good manager, ever inventive of
-some new pastry, or discovering something in the art of
-cookery and housekeeping.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, Mary had no worriment about household
-affairs. She seemed to say, “Now, let us have a
-division of labor. Martha, you cook, and I’ll sit down and
-be good.” So you have often seen a great difference between
-two sisters. Mary is so fond of conversation she has no time
-to attend to the household welfare. So by this self-appointed
-arrangement, Mary is in the parlor with Christ, and Martha is
-in the kitchen. It would have been better if they had
-divided the work, and then they could have divided the
-opportunity of listening to Jesus; but Mary monopolizes
-Christ while Martha swelters at the fire. It was a very
-important thing that they should have a good dinner that
-day. Christ was hungry, and He did not often have a luxurious
-entertainment. Alas! if the duty had devolved upon
-Mary, what a repast that would have been! But something
-went wrong in the kitchen. Perhaps the fire would not burn,
-or the bread would not bake, or Martha scalded her hand,
-or something was burned black that ought only to have been
-made brown; and Martha lost her patience, and forgetting
-the proprieties of the occasion, with besweated brow, and,
-perhaps with pitcher in one hand and tongs in the other,
-she rushes out of the kitchen into the presence of Christ,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>
-saying, “Lord, dost thou not care that my sister hath left
-me to serve alone?”</p>
-
-<p>Now look at Martha, but while you look, do not get out of
-patience with her. She is cumbered and growing fretful.
-Her service is getting too much for her, she can not get things
-done as well as she would like. And being fretful and tired
-she goes wrong herself. First she is cumbered; the next
-thing she feels cross with Mary; “Mary is sitting there at
-the feet of Jesus, and I am so busy getting the supper.
-What right has she down there when I am so busy?” The
-third thing she gets cross with Jesus, and she says, “Dost
-not Thou care that my sister hath left me to serve?” Cumbered
-in her own spirit, angry with her sister, reflecting
-upon her Master, and putting the blame on him of her weariness.
-Dear soul, how she loved and wanted that supper to
-be all that it ought to be, but she had forgotten that service
-only was acceptable which was filled up with communion
-with the Lord.</p>
-
-<p>How tenderly the Lord deals with Martha! There was
-nothing acrid in His words. He knew that she had almost
-worked herself to death to get Him something to eat, and so
-He throws a world of tenderness into His intonation as He
-seems to say, “My dear woman, do not worry, let the dinner
-go; sit down on this ottoman beside Mary, your younger
-sister. Martha, Martha, thou art careful and troubled about
-many things, but one thing is needful.” Is there not a volume
-of love and sympathy expressed in these words? And
-may not the Marthas of to-day learn wisdom from them and
-seek in Jesus that Friend who can be touched with the feelings
-of our infirmities, “that good part which shall not be
-taken away?” The Saviour looked with love and pity upon
-the troubled Martha, for He realized that she was not only
-cumbered with many cares, but she was also anxious for His
-personal comfort. He was her Guest. Though the Lord of
-Glory, He was also man, having human wants. He hungered
-and thirsted as other men, and it was the duty of these sisters
-to provide for Him the necessary food. If at the last<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>
-day it will be a matter of condemnation to any one that he
-has seen one of Christ’s disciples an hungered or athirst and
-did not minister unto him, how much more guilty would they
-be who would suffer Christ Himself to go without food when
-He was hungry, and that too in their own house!</p>
-
-<p>Martha was right, therefore, in seeing that a suitable meal
-was prepared for her guests. Her mistake was that she set
-an undue importance upon the matter. She represents that
-large class of Marthas which emphasizes fidelity to temporal
-cares and subordinates the devotional and spiritual. Mary
-represents that side which magnifies the devotional and
-spiritual, and which subordinates the temporal and physical
-things, making them subserve the other. The one is serving
-Christ in our own way and according to our own zeal; the
-other is humbly waiting at His feet for direction. Martha
-must needs get up a great entertainment. She must have a
-needless variety of dishes, show thereby the skill and resources
-of her art as a housekeeper. Instead of thinking
-mainly of what her distinguished Guest might do for her, of
-the infinite store of blessing that hung upon His lips, she
-was wholly intent upon what she might do for Him. While
-thus absorbed and fretted with cares of how she might give
-her table a more comely appearance, she was losing the
-heavenly manna which Jesus came to dispense, and which
-she so much needed for her soul. Not only did she throw
-away this priceless opportunity of hearing the words of eternal
-life directly from her Lord, but she was unreasonably
-vexed at Mary for not being as foolish as herself.</p>
-
-<p>The thoughts and purpose of her heart were as open to Him
-as were those of the gentle, loving Mary; and while one
-revealed care and anxiety for the perishing things of this
-life the other told of perfect love and trust in her adored
-Lord; of earnest longing for the knowledge of the truth, of
-deep humility, of self-forgetting devotion, of that quiet
-courage which fears neither ridicule nor opposition.</p>
-
-<p>There may have been some truth in Martha’s complaint
-against her sister. Very possibly Mary may have been so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>
-absorbed with the “good part” which she had chosen, as to
-be really negligent of her household duties, and to throw
-upon Martha burdens which should have been shared
-equally by the sisters. Had Mary, sitting at the Master’s
-feet and drinking in the precious doctrine that fell from His
-lips, been puffed up thereby, and said to Jesus, “Speak to
-my sister Martha, that she stop her household cares, and
-come and sit with me in this devout frame of mind,” very
-likely the rebuke would have fallen in the other direction.</p>
-
-<p>Observe, Jesus did not meet Martha’s words against her
-sister with a denial, or with an apology. He simply vindicated
-Mary’s religious integrity, by testifying that she had
-“chosen the good part.” She was a faithful, humble, loving
-disciple, and delighted to sit at His feet and receive
-instruction. That which Jesus calls “that good part” must
-be of priceless value, a treasure well worth obtaining in this
-changing, perishing world; for it is to be enduring, “it
-shall not be taken away.” Like the favored Mary, we may
-not literally sit at the Master’s feet, yet He is speaking to
-every humble child of God, in and by His Word. We may
-choose the world with all its vanities which perish with the
-using, or we may choose Christ as our portion, both for time
-and eternity. O! how many troubled Marthas there are in
-these modern times that need to choose the “good part,”
-that need to sit humbly at the dear Saviour’s feet, to be
-nourished by His love, cheered by His council, and approved
-by the divine “well done!” The lowly life of humble
-sacrifice is the only life worth living.</p>
-
-<p>The next view we have of this beautiful Bethany home the
-scene is all changed. The sunshine is all gone out and
-great clouds of sorrow and distress have rolled into the sky
-of its happiness. Prosperity has given place to the bitterest
-adversity, the brightness and gladness are banished, and
-the sisters are right down under the deepest, darkest shadow
-of sorrow that ever settled on their home. The well-beloved
-brother, Lazarus, is ill unto death, and Jesus is far away,
-and in the very midst of His Peræan ministry. In their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>
-distress, the first thought of these sisters was of Jesus. “If
-He only knew our brother was sick,” they doubtless said one
-to the other, He would sympathize with us, and at once
-restore him to health. And so they sent him the simple message,
-“He whom Thou lovest is sick.”</p>
-
-<p>Our first thought is when the messengers, bearing the sad
-intelligence, had informed the Lord, He would have at once
-promptly responded to this cry of help coming from the home
-where he had been so heartily welcomed and so bountifully
-entertained. But how different was His reception of the
-message from what we naturally expected. So far as is
-known, He did not even return an answer. Could they have
-been mistaken? Did not Jesus love Martha and her sister,
-and was not the very message couched in the words, “He
-whom thou lovest?” Would He dishonor the confidence they
-had reposed in Him?</p>
-
-<p>For two whole days He continued His Paræan ministry
-“in the same place where He was.” To us this conduct is
-most surprising. O, how often the Lord does so with us, even
-when we cry after Him in our sorrow He does not come. But
-always right in front of the statement, that He does not
-come, we have “Jesus loved.” How it added to their sorrow.
-Lazarus dying, Christ not coming, and at last Lazarus is
-dead and in the tomb, and yet the Master has not come.
-Surely the dense gloom of bereavement has settled down
-over the home, but a little while ago so full of sunshine and
-beauty.</p>
-
-<p>Heartbroken, the sisters keep their vigil by the sepulchre,
-but among the friends coming and going to tender
-their sympathy, the Friend does not appear. He came not
-to save; He comes not to weep. The fact must have added
-poignancy to their grief. But wait in your judgment. Right
-through these dark hours Jesus loved these sisters. Do not
-lose sight of this fact. It may comfort you some day. He
-refrained from bestowing a small favor only that He might
-have an opportunity to bestow a greater. If he had healed
-Lazarus by a word, Martha and Mary would have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-grateful and satisfied, but by waiting He could give them a
-greater blessing, and one which might be shared by sorrowing
-ones in all ages to come.</p>
-
-<p>But Jesus is coming. Lazarus is dead, but Jesus is come
-at last, and is halting on the brow of the hill, just outside of
-the village. The news of His arrival reach the stricken
-sisters. How does the intelligence of His presence affect
-them? “Then Martha,” the dear woman, “as soon as she
-heard that Jesus was coming, went and met him; but Mary
-sat still in the house.” What a contrast. Martha hastens
-along the village road to the brow of the hill where the
-Saviour had halted, doubtless that He might meet the sisters
-apart from the crowd, which had come in accordance with
-Jewish custom, to mourn with them, and as she comes running
-to meet Him, she exclaims, “Lord, if Thou hadst been
-here my brother had not died.” He certainly understood
-that. But in her blind grief she could not understand how,
-if He loved her and her sister, He could delay His coming
-until it was too late. In her words there was almost the
-accent of rebuke and reproach, “If <i>Thou</i> hadst been here
-my brother had not died.” But how graciously He deals
-with her. He comes to her in her argumentative state and
-with words the most comforting said, “Thy brother shall
-rise again.”</p>
-
-<p>Martha could hardly believe her ears, as she certainly did
-not comprehend the meaning of these words with her heart,
-and replied, “I know that he shall rise again in the resurrection
-at the last day.” She believed in the life everlasting,
-but she was going to put off being comforted until “the last
-day.” In that Martha has many sisters.</p>
-
-<p>But how patiently our Lord recalls the mind of Martha
-from the resurrection of the last day to Himself. He said,
-“I am the resurrection, and the life; he that believeth in
-Me, though he were dead, yet shall he live; and whosoever
-liveth and believeth in Me shall never die!” He is master
-of the thing that fills her heart with dread, and patiently
-He deals with her. Was not that beautiful?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>Comforted in her heart, Martha hastened back to her
-home, and called Mary her sister secretly, saying, “The
-Master is come, and calleth for thee.” He wanted to meet
-Mary apart from the public mourners, as He had met Martha.
-The custom was for the comforters to do as the mourners.
-If they were silent, to remain so; if they wailed, to wail
-with them. The shrieks of Oriental mourners are often ear-piercing.
-Our Lord wanted to avoid this, and so no doubt,
-although it is not chronicled, He had commissioned Martha
-to bear the tidings of His arrival, and she went and quietly
-and said, “The Master wants you, Mary.”</p>
-
-<p>Mary “rose quickly, and came unto Him.” But mark
-her coming. Unlike her sister, “when Mary was come
-where Jesus was, and saw Him, she <i>fell down at His feet</i>,
-saying unto Him, Lord, if Thou hadst been here, my brother
-had not died.” That’s what Martha said. Yes, but what
-effect did it produce upon Him when Mary said it? “When
-Jesus therefore saw her weeping,” and the company of
-mourners who had followed her soon after she left the house,
-“also weeping” with her, “He groaned in the spirit and
-was troubled,” no doubt, at the empty platitude on the part
-of those miserable comforters. But at the sepulchre, where
-lay the mortal remains of the loved Lazarus, He wept. The
-Son of God in tears! His great heart sharing another’s sorrow.
-This scene is the most precious and comforting in the
-record of the Saviour’s life so far as the revelation of His
-heart is concerned.</p>
-
-<p>Martha gets His teaching, Mary gets His tears. Martha
-said exactly what Mary said. When Mary said it, what a
-difference! Which do you think was the better thing, to
-run after Him and get His teaching, or wait till sent for and
-get His tears? The reasoning mind will receive the Master’s
-teaching; the broken, weeping heart, His tears. Bright
-and luminous as were His words with resurrection glory,
-Mary got to deeper depths in the heart of God when she came
-than Martha, because she drew His tears of deepest sympathy
-with her sorrow.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>Why did Jesus weep? Because Lazarus died? No, He is
-going to call Him back for a definite purpose. He knows
-that bereavement has broken the hearts of these two sisters,
-and though He is going to heal sorrow’s wound, He sympathized
-with their grief, and His heart went out in their distress.
-Every wounded heart that belongs to a child of God,
-the Master is going to heal by and by; yet He suffers with
-you in the wounding, and enters by tears with you into the
-sacrament of your sorrow. And so He wept when these
-women wept. There are times in our lives when the tears
-of sympathy speak greater comfort than the most eloquent
-words. Beloved, when you go to your friend sitting in the
-shadow of her deepest sorrow, spare your words, but freely
-mingle your tears with hers. Job’s comforters sat in silence
-for seven days before they spoke. But if you are not delivered
-out of your bereavement, may this scene in the life of
-our Lord comfort you with the thought that He has something
-better for you. The best thing came to these sisters,
-right after the bitter weeping.</p>
-
-<p>In the third and last view we have of this blessed Bethany
-home, we see some of the scenes of the first view coming
-up to us. It is the same home, only, because of better
-accommodations, the feast is held in the house of Simon, but
-the same people are in it. But what a change there is here!
-Let us get the humanness as well as the divinity out of it.
-Look at those people, what are they doing? Sitting at the
-table. A lovely place for us men to sit. <i>But Martha
-served.</i> Do not miss that. She is doing what she did
-before,—getting supper ready. She is bustling about in
-her earnestness, but she has lost her grumbling. She gets
-through the entertainment with smiles from first to last.
-She is no less busy, but she is at rest in her mind. She is
-cumbered, but is not angry with Mary, and is not reflecting
-on Jesus Christ. She had learned something
-in the day of sorrow and darkness. It has not altered
-her power to serve, but the matter and the manner of her
-service.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>What about Mary? If you have carefully studied the
-last few days of our Lord’s life upon the earth you have
-noticed that He was a lonely man, and that even His disciples
-failed to enter into sympathy with His suffering as it
-overshadowed His life. Take the story of those last six
-days and our Lord’s journey to Jerusalem, and you will find
-that it is an awful picture. He has the shadow of the cross
-upon Him, and He keeps calling these men to Him saying,
-“I am going to Jerusalem to suffer, to be delivered into the
-hands of men, and they will crucify Me.” His disciples
-broke in upon that awful revelation by asking, “Master,
-who is the greatest among us?”</p>
-
-<p>But there was one soul that saw the cross—Mary. Never
-forget it, you men; it was a woman that saw the cross and
-went into the shadow of it with Christ, as it was a woman
-who became the first human preacher of the resurrection
-when He came back again. So while He “sat at meat,” in
-the house of Simon the leper, with the man whom He had
-cured of the most terrible of diseases upon one side, and the
-man whom He had raised from the dead on the other, and
-the disciples on either side of these, Mary looks into the
-faces of the guests, and they all were happy, as men usually
-are with a feast spread before them, and even Christ, though
-fully conscious of his approaching death, and all the humiliation
-accompanying it, did not abandon Himself to melancholy
-feelings or looks, yet with that deep intuition that is only
-born of the highest and the holiest love, she sees what no
-one else sees, that on His heart is the shadow of a great
-sorrow. And she is thinking, “What can I do? Can I do
-anything that will let Him see I know something of His
-pain? Can I go into the darkness with Him and share in
-that sorrow?” And when love does this kind of thinking
-it is always extravagant. She slipped away from her sister’s
-side in serving, hastened to her room, where the precious
-treasure was kept, and seizing the alabaster box of spikenard,
-for which she had paid more than 300 pence, she
-hastened back to the feast, saying to herself, “I will give<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
-Him this; it is the choicest thing I can get hold of, and I
-want to pour it out upon Him, for He knows I can see His
-sorrow and pain.” So speaking, she fell at His feet and
-poured the perfume on His head and feet. It was a lavish
-waste of love—nearly $1,000 expressed in our money now.
-But nothing is wasted that is done in love for our Lord.
-Some murmured, others “had indignation,” and Judas spoke
-right out, “Why this waste?” Poor Mary, she had never
-thought of there being any waste to her act of love. “Three
-hundred pence!” Judas had quickly ciphered out the contents
-of the broken alabaster box, and just now, at the
-expense of Mary, was very benevolent. The unbroken box
-of ointment might have been sold, and the money “given to
-the poor.”</p>
-
-<p>But, in a moment they were hushed. “Let her alone,”
-said Jesus. How fortunate for Mary that she had a more
-righteous Judge to pass sentence upon her action. “Against
-the day of My burying hath she kept this.” Nobody else
-understood it. The motive determines the act. “Nothing
-can be wasted that love pours upon Me, because love enters
-into My suffering and sorrow, and that is what it meant.”</p>
-
-<p>“She hath done what she could.” O, what a precious
-revelation! Jesus is fully satisfied with the limit of our
-ability to serve Him. And the sequel showed that she met
-her Lord’s future as no other of His disciples had been able;
-anointed His brow for the thorns, and his feet for the nails,
-that both thorns and nails may draw blood in the perfume of
-at least one woman’s love.</p>
-
-<p>In this act of love done for Jesus she has erected to herself
-a monument as lasting as the Gospel, for the Master declared,
-“Verily, verily, I say unto you, wheresoever this Gospel shall
-be preached in the whole world, there shall this also, that this
-woman hath done, be told for a memorial of her.” Mary
-had loved wiser than she knew, but then it is just like Jesus
-to pay back into our hands a hundredfold more than the
-most liberal of us ever bestowed upon Him. The sweet
-story of that beautiful act of the breaking of the alabaster<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>
-box will be told as long as there is a Gospel to be preached
-or a soul to be saved. The wonder of wonders is, that in
-this world of sin and suffering there are not more Marys to
-break alabaster boxes over the world’s burdened laborers.</p>
-
-<p>We now pass to notice another beautiful womanly character
-in White Raiment, namely, Salome. Her name means
-“peaceful,” and, though she developed considerable womanly
-ambition, her name quite describes her character. She was
-the wife of Zebedee, a well-to-do fisherman on the Sea of
-Galilee, and the mother of James and John, two of our Lord’s
-best loved disciples; two who, with Simon Peter, one of their
-business partners, constituted the inner apostolic circle. She
-had not only given two sons to the ministry, but she herself
-accompanied Jesus in His Galilean ministry, and, with
-others, ministered of her substance in meeting the expenses
-of His journeys. She must, therefore, not only have been a
-woman of means, but liberal in her use of it. No doubt she
-was a quiet, home-loving body; but she liked so well to listen
-to those sayings of our Lord that she was glad to leave her
-pleasant, comfortable Bethsaida house beside the beautiful
-“blue sea of the hills,” to go about hither and thither with her
-sons and drink in the wonderful words of Christ.</p>
-
-<p>Salome is best remembered as coming to our Lord, on His
-last memorable journey to Jerusalem, with the strange
-request that her two sons might sit, the one on the right
-hand of Jesus and the other on the left, in His kingdom.
-Just as in the Sanhedrin, on each side of the high priest
-there sat the next highest dignitaries, so here she requested
-the two highest places for James and John. However, perhaps,
-this was not a selfish ambition, since the request is
-made for others. Some one has said, “Plan great things for
-God, and expect great things from God,” and an apostle
-has said, “Covet earnestly the best gifts.” O, these mothers,
-when there are seats of honor to be given out can not only
-“covet,” but “earnestly” ask for great things for their sons.</p>
-
-<p>These two disciples had already been favored. They were
-with Jesus when He raised Jairus’ daughter from the dead;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>
-they were with our Lord on the Mount of Transfiguration,
-and, later on, in the Garden of Gethsemane, and witnessed
-His agony. Though of the inner circle, yet they possessed
-characteristics of their own. They were more eager for
-extreme measures for pushing their Master’s cause than was
-even the tempestuous Peter. Their self-poised love of the
-truth made them zealous. It was they who rebuked the one
-who cast out demons in Jesus’ name, because he did not
-follow them. They requested Christ to call down fire from
-heaven to burn up the Samaritan village that refused to
-receive them on account of an old prejudice against the Jews.
-If these disciples could have had their own way, that village,
-with all its inhabitants, innocent and guilty, would have
-speedily been reduced to ashes. How little they understood
-their Lord, or even themselves. They did not get the idea
-from their Lord, for He came to save men’s lives, and not to
-destroy them.</p>
-
-<p>Possibly Salome may have thought her sons had some
-claim to these honors. The family had some business standing.
-They had partners and servants. John had some
-acquaintance with the High Priest, the great head of the
-Hebrew Church. They had left all to follow Jesus, giving
-up not only their business prospects, but their friendship
-with ecclesiastical aristocrats, and now she was looking out
-for a good place in His kingdom for her sons.</p>
-
-<p>Probably the two brethren had directed this request
-through their mother, because they remembered the rebuke
-which had followed their former contention about precedence.
-She asked simply, directly, humbly, nothing for herself, but
-what she thought was her due. He gave her no rebuke, as
-He would have been sure to do if she had asked through any
-selfish motive. Turning to James and John He questioned
-them about their fitness for such promotion. Could
-they drink of His cup and be baptized with His baptism?
-They thought they were able. They knew better what He
-meant when Herod beheaded James, and John was banished
-to Patmos.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>Salome remained true to her Lord. When the terrible
-death-hour came she stood beside the cross, held there by
-her faith and love through the jeers of the mocking crowd,
-the dying agony of her Saviour, and the darkness which
-veiled His terrible suffering.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus237.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">SEEKING THE LIVING AMONG THE DEAD.</p>
-
-<p>After the body was taken down from the cross, Salome,
-with others, “beheld where He was laid.” O, this loving,
-faithful woman, true to her nature, how she clung to her
-Lord to the very last. And on the morning of the resurrection,
-“as it began to dawn,” we find Salome among the company
-of women hastening to the sepulchre to complete the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
-anointing of the body of our Lord which had been so hurriedly
-buried on the evening of the crucifixion. But, upon
-reaching the garden, these women were amazed to find the
-tomb open and empty. These women—Salome, Mary Magdalene,
-Joanna, and others with them—came seeking a dead
-body, but, instead, they found a living angel, who asked,
-“Why seek ye the living among the dead?” “He is risen;
-He is not here; behold the place where they laid Him!”</p>
-
-<p>What these women, in company with Salome, had seen
-was enough to fill them with astonishment, and what they
-had heard from the lips of the angel was enough to fill their
-hearts with joy. Wonderful that He whom they had mourned
-as dead was indeed alive again, though they could hardly
-believe it.</p>
-
-<p>But Salome’s prayer for her sons had sure answer. To
-James was given the high honor of being the first apostolic
-martyr. John had the distinction of caring for the Virgin
-Mary during her last years, and, on Patmos, the little rocky
-isle of his banishment, where he could hear only the sea-bird’s
-cry and the melancholy wash of waves, he listened to
-apocalyptic thunderings that were enough to tear any common
-soul to tatters. He was permitted to put the capstone
-on the magnificent column of Holy Scripture, a column that
-had been forty centuries in building.</p>
-
-<p>Salome, the peaceful and brave, at the last went gladly
-away to her reward; for she was sure that her sons, having
-drank of His cup, and been baptized with His baptism, were
-now seated with Him in the throne of His glory.</p>
-
-<p>In connection with our Lord’s Galilean ministry, we find
-the name of Joanna mentioned. She was the wife of Chuza,
-the steward of Herod Antipas. No doubt she followed
-Jesus, and ministered to Him out of her substance, out of
-gratitude for having restored her child to health. Her husband
-was the nobleman who went all the way from Capernaum
-to Cana, and besought our Lord that He “would come
-down and heal His son, for he was at the point of death.”
-Joanna was both at the crucifixion, and is mentioned by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>
-name as being one of those who brought spices and ointments
-to embalm the body of our Lord on the morning of the
-resurrection.</p>
-
-<p>These women must have possessed means, as well as a
-spirit of liberality. All this is very beautiful indeed.</p>
-
-<p>The last woman in White Raiment during the ministry of
-our Lord, is the widow with two mites. Her act of benevolence
-has associated with it many tender and pathetic touches.
-The circumstances, so far as they relate to the ministry of
-our Lord, are inexpressibly sad. He had come down to the
-last day of His public teaching, and the last hour of that
-ministry. Indeed the time of His departure from the Temple
-was at hand. He had taught in their streets, by the wayside,
-in desert places, in the Temple. He had wept over
-Jerusalem that had seen so many of His mighty works, and
-as in mental vision He saw the coming doom, He sobbed out,
-“Oh if thou hadst known ... the things which belong to
-thy peace!” But they refused to know, and had finally
-rejected Him as they had rejected His teaching. The very
-tears of the suffering Saviour broke out in great sobs of grief
-in the words, “<i>Ye would not!</i>” So, in the very last act, all
-efforts having failed, He exclaims, “Behold your house,” it
-was no longer God’s house, “is left unto you desolate!” As
-Jesus on that last day, and at the close of the last hour of
-the day, closed the door of mercy, how that word, “<span class="allsmcap">DESOLATE</span>”
-must have sounded through its God-forsaken courts.</p>
-
-<p>At a time when such a burden of unrequited toil and sorrow
-was resting upon the grieved heart of Jesus, the touching
-incident of this poor widow comes to our view. Jesus
-had left the inner court of the Temple, and, on His way
-through the court of the women, paused over against the
-treasury to point out one more beautiful lesson to His disciples.
-The people were casting their offerings into the thirteen
-great chests set to receive their gifts. These offerings
-were gifts of the people, and had no reference to “tithes.”
-These Jews, though they had utterly failed to comprehend
-the “day of their visitation,” were, nevertheless, liberal givers.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>
-They did not content themselves with giving a tenth of
-their income. So it was the “freewill offering,” the love gifts,
-that Jesus was watching. Twice in Exodus, once in Deuteronomy
-and once in Leviticus had God commanded, “And
-none shall appear before Me empty.” Three times a year
-was every Jew required to come before the Lord, and not
-one time empty-handed. Never was there an exception for
-rich or for poor, for great or for small. Not a pauper from
-Dan to Beer-sheba, would have dared to come without his
-offerings. In these modern times a sickly sentimentality
-has well-nigh made void the commandment of God. He
-made no discrimination in favor of the poor. He that had
-little, gave little. He that had much, gave much. A lamb
-or a kid was an offering acceptable. If any were too poor
-to furnish either, “a pair of turtle-doves or two young
-pigeons” might be brought. If this was too much, a few
-“tablespoonfuls of fine flour” was enough, and any neighbor
-would furnish them these. The money value of gifts
-might be brought, but the law was inexorable, “None shall
-appear before Me empty-handed”—none at these great
-feasts. At all other times they might be brought, at these
-they must.</p>
-
-<p>So while the people brought their offerings, “Jesus sat
-over against the treasury.” He noted carefully each person,
-and the ability of each one, as the long line of contributors
-moved forward toward the treasury. No one escaped His
-notice. The rich, from their mansions of luxury, rulers of
-the people, clad in costly robes, stately Pharisees, nobles,
-grand and lordly, jingling with ornaments of their social
-standing, swept over the tessellated floor to the treasury as
-if by special training for that particular occasion; and there,
-from soft white hands whose fingers were decked in gold,
-cast into the treasure chests such offering as their liberality
-prompted. Among the throng came a “certain poor widow.”
-No one knew who she was, or where she came from. Gliding
-so softly that no ear heard her footfall, and shying so timidly
-that no eyes but His saw her, until her hand was over the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>
-trumpet-shaped mouths through which the money was cast
-into the chests. She deliberately of her “penury cast in all
-her living that she had.” How much was that? Mark tells
-us her offering consisted of “two mites, which make a farthing.”
-They were the smallest copper coin, and the two were
-equivalent to two-fifths of a cent of our money. As these
-two mites slid down the narrow tube of the trumpet-shaped
-aperture into the chest below, they did not ring as did the
-gold and silver pieces of the rich, but they rang to the echo
-in our Lord’s ears.</p>
-
-<p>She was a “poor widow” before this contribution, but now
-she is an utter bankrupt. If she ever had any financial
-standing, this rash act of giving swept it all away. She
-would have to go without her supper, for there was no opportunity,
-at the Passover time, to earn money. On the contrary,
-it was a time for spending it. These great conventions
-absorbed the small earnings of poor people. But such
-sacrifices never go unrewarded, and that poor widow had her
-supper through some God-appointed channel.</p>
-
-<p>Jesus was so well pleased with her gift, and the faith
-which prompted it, that He called the attention of His disciples
-to this act of benevolence, and said, “This poor widow
-had cast in more than all they.” Not more money. Two
-mites can not be more than the “abundance” of the rich.
-How more, then? All gifts have double value—their commercial
-and their representative value. They represent the
-self-denial, the faith and the love of the giver. In the
-markets of the world the two mites would hardly have been
-looked at, but in the eyes of the King they represented more
-than all.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“Ah! He knew of want and hunger,</div>
-<div class="indent">Grief and care, and sorrow too;</div>
-<div class="verse">And the widow’s paltry farthing</div>
-<div class="indent">Cost a sacrifice He knew.</div>
-<div class="verse">So all fruits of self-denial</div>
-<div class="indent">Are the gifts He loves the best;</div>
-<div class="verse">Not the richest or most costly</div>
-<div class="indent">Are the offerings most blest!”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>If ever there was an exception, or if ever one could be
-exempt, surely this widow would have been. She was in the
-weeds of widowhood; in the depths of poverty; in the extreme
-of want; with only “two mites” in the world and no
-bread for the morrow. Her own weary fingers her only
-means of living; with her earthly all in her hands she freely
-cast it into the treasury. Jesus was sitting where He saw it
-all. He who—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“Searched and tried the hearts” of men,</div>
-<div class="indent">Saw what prompted every offering,</div>
-<div class="verse">With His wondrous, God-like ken.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Did He stop her? He came to preach the gospel to the
-poor; did He tell her she was too poor to do as she had
-done? He brought all His apostles to witness the sight; did
-He say, “It shall not be so among you?” He was giving
-laws for His Kingdom for all generations; did He say, as
-He did in other cases where He intended any modification,
-“Ye have heard that it was said by them of olden times
-that ‘none should come before Me empty,’ but I say unto you,
-that whosoever is poor and needy shall bring no gift into
-mine house?” Did He say it, or anything like it? Can there
-ever be another occasion half so thrilling on which to say it?</p>
-
-<p>The contrast between the rich and noble, the grand and
-lordly, who offered tithes of all their stores, and this shy and
-shrinking woman, in her garb of widowhood, is very striking.
-There is not a word of reflection on the gifts or the motives
-of the rich. “The rich and the poor meet together—the
-Lord is the maker of them all.” “No respecter of persons”
-is He. All honor to the rich who bring their treasures into
-the storehouse of God. All honor to the poor who make
-“their deep poverty abound unto the riches of their liberality.”
-May we not from this lesson draw illustrations of
-consecration?</p>
-
-<p>God requires of every Christian a complete consecration of
-soul, body, time, talent, means, and everything else. Consecration
-means giving to God. When a thing is given
-away, ownership is transferred in the act of giving, or presenting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>
-from the giver to the receiver. In consecration the
-Christian gives himself literally to the Lord, and is henceforth
-not his own, but the Lord’s. This transaction must be
-as real as any in life, and divine ownership of all given to
-God must be recognized.</p>
-
-<p>If we wholly consecrate our souls, our bodies, our time,
-our several abilities, then God can use us. The Holy Spirit
-dwelling in the soul will dictate to the eyes where to look,
-and what to look upon, that the soul may be enriched by
-seeing. He will direct the feet in paths of safety and usefulness.
-He will teach the hands to labor skillfully, laying
-up treasures in heaven. He will give the lips messages of
-love, comfort and sympathy to speak. He will direct us
-how to use our time, that the best possible results may be
-achieved for both God and man, and also for heaven and
-earth. When such consecration is made, and we recognize
-fully God’s supreme ownership, then we are in a condition
-to “bear much fruit.”</p>
-
-<p>Few men would banish God from the universe. Too many
-worlds are wheeling in their orbits, and their orbits cross
-and recross each other too often to be left without a guiding
-hand. Moreover, the one we inhabit is the home of the
-earthquake and the volcano; hurricanes and tornadoes are
-born and bred on every continent and island; plague and
-pestilence ride on every breeze; death and destruction waste
-at noonday. In the presence of such dangers it is a comfort
-to know “the Lord reigneth.” But, alas! how many would
-banish God from their hearts! The clouds are the commissary
-trains of the nations; who would have them without
-their driver? Men want God on the throne, but not in their
-hearts. They would have Him watch the worlds, the
-clouds, the seasons, but not their actions. As if God was
-not a discerner of the very thoughts and intents of the heart.</p>
-
-<p>And then this poor widow loved much. And in God’s
-sight no offering of love is too small. Love is sometimes a
-babbling brook, leaping, laughing, sparkling, splashing. It
-is beautiful then. It is sometimes a mighty river—deep,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>
-broad, swift and strong, shouldering the burdens of a continent
-and bearing them without a murmur. It is glorious
-then. But it is sometimes the boundless ocean—feeding all
-the brooks and rivers, bearing the commerce of the world,
-and yet never losing one note in its everlasting lullaby. It
-rolls against all its shore lines and moans, “If there were no
-bounds, I’d bring your ships to all your doors.” Love is
-sublime then. The widow’s love was like the ocean; it
-rolled against its farthest shore and longed to go farther.
-“She of her penury” had cast into the treasury all that she
-had, and therefore had given “more than all they,” for, not
-what is given, but what is left, marks the grade of self-denial.
-There may be trust for bread when the storehouse
-is full, but the faith that empties the storehouse and then
-trusts for bread, is a purer and diviner faith. This poor
-widow was a heroine of faith.</p>
-
-<p>This apparently trifling event in the life of our Lord is of
-inestimable importance. It shows, after He had ended His
-oppressive day’s labor in the Temple, how he would still
-pause, in retiring from it, to bless the loving act of a poor
-widow, rendered unto the Lord in faith, and to adorn even
-so lowly a head with the crown of honor. We need no other
-proof for the celestially pure temper in which He left the inner
-courts of the Temple after He had pronounced His great
-denunciations against the hypocritical professions of Scribes
-and Pharisees. It is as if He could not so part, as if at least
-His last word must be a word of blessing and of peace.</p>
-
-<p>This incident of the poor widow with the two mites is also
-a new proof of the power of little things, and of the gracious
-favor with which the Lord looks upon the least offering which
-only bears the stamp of love and faith. The last object on
-which our Lord’s eyes rested as He departed from the Temple
-was the widow’s two mites.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X.<br />
-
-Womanhood During the Apostolic Ministry.</h2>
-</div>
-<div class="blockquot">
-<div class="hangingindent">
-<p><span class="smcap">Tabitha—Glorified Her Needle—The Results of Little Acts—Lydia—Her
-Humility—Philip’s Four Daughters—Phœbe—Priscilla—Eunice—Lois—Eudia—Syntyche—Hulda—The
-Hebrew Maid—Tamar—Mothers of Great Men—The Author
-of the Bible Woman’s Best Friend.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">We</span> now come to the blessed ministry of women during the
-Apostolic age. And the first of these is Tabitha. Her residence
-was at Joppa. She was a “disciple,” and Luke renders
-her name, Tabitha, out of the Aramaic into the Greek as
-Dorcas. We further read that she was “full of good works,”
-among which that of making clothes for the poor is specifically
-mentioned. Tabitha had, without doubt, served Christ
-with her needle for many years, and exercised her faith by
-performing works of love. But there came a day when the
-fingers refused longer to ply the needle, and the heart grew
-faint, and in weariness she laid aside the unfinished garment,
-just to take a little rest, and when the neighbors and
-“widows” came in, they quickly saw the flushed cheek, and
-her critical condition aroused their anxious solicitude to
-relieve and care for and comfort her. The fear of losing her
-excited and agonized them. The apprehension of their
-great loss, in case she should be removed from them, almost
-drove the little church at Joppa to distraction.</p>
-
-<p>But, notwithstanding the tender ministry of loving hands
-and aching hearts, Tabitha daily grew worse, and finally
-yielded up her spirit.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“The calm moon looked down while she was dying,</div>
-<div class="indent">The earth still held her way;</div>
-<div class="verse">Flowers breathed their perfume, and the wind kept sighing;</div>
-<div class="indent">Nought seemed to pause or stay.”</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Clasp the hands meekly over the still breast, they have no
-more work to do; close the weary eyes, they have no more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>
-tears to shed; part the damp tresses, they have no more
-pain to bear. Closed is the ear to love’s kind and gentle
-voice. No anxious care gathers on the marble brow as you
-gaze. No throb of pleasure pulsates from the dear, loving
-bosom, nor mantling flush mounts the blue-veined temple.
-Can this be death? Oh, if beyond death’s swelling flood
-there was no eternal shore! If for the struggling bark there
-were no port of peace! If athwart that lowering cloud
-sprang no bright bow of promise! Alas for love if this were
-all, and naught beyond the parting at earth’s portals.</p>
-
-<p>The remains of Tabitha were carefully laid in a retired
-upper chamber. And now there was hurry and bustle in
-preparation for the final rites. Friends were sent for, neighbors
-were present, the funeral arrangements were discussed,
-the mourning procured, the hospitalities of the house provided
-for. All was excitement—the loss was not then perceived
-in all its greatness. But after the preparations were
-all made, after the bustle had subsided, and the watchers
-had come for the night, then it was that the friends of
-Tabitha began to realize what had befallen them. Now the
-house seemed so still and sepulchral, though in the heart of
-the city, and though its threshold was still trodden by
-friendly feet, it seemed so empty. The apartments—how
-deserted! especially the room where she struggled and surrendered
-in the last conflict. There are the clothes, the garments
-and unfinished coat, there was the vacant chair and
-idle work-basket. During her sickness they had not so
-much noticed these things, for they were ever hopeful that
-these things might be used or occupied again. But now it
-can not be, and they perceive the dreadful vacancy everywhere.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, how dark and cheerless the shadows came down over
-that home! No moon or stars have ever shown so dimly—no
-darkness ever seemed so utterly dark. The ticking of the
-clock resounds like bell-strokes all over the house. Such deep
-silence! No footsteps now on the stairs, or in the sick-chamber;
-no nurse to come and say, “she is not so well,” and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>
-come and ask for you. No, indeed, only the silent watchers
-move about with muffled step, and “you may sleep on now
-and take your rest,” if you can. Ah, poor bereaved hearts!
-It will be long ere the sweet rest you once knew will visit
-your couch. Slumber will bring again the scenes through
-which you have just passed, and you will start from it but
-to find them all too real. God pity the mourners after the
-body of the loved one lies unburied “in an upper chamber.”</p>
-
-<p>All the members of the Christian congregation of Joppa
-appear to have been deeply moved by the loss which they
-had sustained, and to have entertained the wish in their
-hearts, although they did not venture to express it, that, if
-it were possible, Tabitha might be recalled to life, and yet,
-in sending for Peter, who at this time was at Lydda, ten
-miles away, they scarcely expected a miracle, and only
-desired that he would address words of consolation to them.
-Much is already gained, when they who abide in the house
-of mourning sincerely desire the consolations of God’s word
-spoken through human lips. It was only after her death
-that it became known what a treasure she had been to the
-church. It is one of the beautiful charms of the Christian
-life, that in nearly every congregation there is a Tabitha to
-be found who constitutes, as it were, the central point around
-which the love that exists in the society, collects. Every
-love is guided by her hand, and even when she utters no
-words, she successfully admonishes others.</p>
-
-<p>Such a woman could not well be spared out of the Joppa
-church, and so, with the sunrising, the little congregation
-despatched two men, who hastened over the plain of Sharon
-to Lydda, with a message to Peter, saying, “Delay not to
-come to us!” There was haste in the matter. The body of
-Tabitha, in accordance with Oriental usage, could not be
-long held “in the upper chamber.” Peter seemed to have
-recognized this, for he at once “arose and went with them.”</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the Apostle, who had made no delay, had
-arrived at Joppa, the elders of the congregation conducted
-him to the late home, and to the upper chamber in which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>
-the corpse lay. As Peter entered he saw the widows, on
-whom the deceased had conferred such benefits, standing
-around the bier of Tabitha, weeping, and “shewing the
-coats and garments which Dorcas made, while she was with
-them.” These acts of benevolence which survived their
-author, were indeed noble testimonials of the deceased
-woman’s love and charity.</p>
-
-<p>After these weeping widows had told out their sorrow and
-their gratitude, Peter directed them all to withdraw. Doubtless
-he made this request that he could more fully engage
-in prayer when alone. He may also have perceived that
-some were governed by an idle curiosity. At all events, he
-did not yet know whether it was the Lord’s will to restore the
-deceased woman to life. Hence he desired to be alone with
-the Lord, in order to make known to Him the requests of the
-disciples.</p>
-
-<p>After having poured out his soul in fervent prayer on his
-knees, Peter turned toward the body and called to Tabitha,
-saying, “Arise.” Luke gives us a graphic description of
-the scene: at first she opened her eyes, then, on seeing
-Peter, rose and sat up, and, at length, when Peter had given
-her his hand, stood up.</p>
-
-<p>The Lord having restored Tabitha to life through the
-prayers of Peter, the Apostle called to the saints and widows,
-and presented to them the woman, who had been raised up
-by the power of God.</p>
-
-<p>This great miracle, we are further told, produced an
-extraordinary effect in Joppa, and was the occasion of many
-conversions. “Many,” Luke says, “believed in the Lord.”</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless, Tabitha, when she realized what the Lord had
-done for her, for the remainder of her life, said:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">“I shall go softly,” since I’ve found</div>
-<div class="verse">The mighty arm that girds me round</div>
-<div class="verse">Is gentle, as it’s sure and strong;</div>
-<div class="first">“I shall go softly” through the throng</div>
-<div class="verse">And with compulsion calm and sweet</div>
-<div class="verse">Lead sinners to the Saviour’s feet.</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>Tabitha, in her good works and alms-deeds, and in her
-garments that she made, is not a fashion-plate, but a model
-for every Christian woman. We may learn, in her life, the
-glorification of little things. She was not rich, at least we
-are not told that she was, and yet how she glorified her
-needle, until a whole city is moved to bitter weeping at her
-death. Her needle brought her unsought fame. Little acts
-are the elements of all true greatness. They test our disinterestedness.
-The heart comes all out in them. It matters
-not so much what we have, as to what use we put that which
-we have. A man who had made an immense fortune out of
-a factory in which its builder had sunk $75,000 and failed,
-said, “I am always here to watch the little things, to pick
-up a bunch of cotton, to tighten a screw, to turn on a nut, to
-regulate a machine, to mend a band, to oil a dry place, and
-so prevent breakages and stopping of the work. These little
-wastes of material and machinery in time will eat up the
-profits of any business. These little things I attend to myself.
-I can hire men to attend the large things.”</p>
-
-<p>This is the secret of success in every department of business
-and walk of life. The principle is equally applicable to
-women’s work. Perhaps no class of people ought to look
-after little things more than the house-wife. Certainly every
-woman ought to know that careless extravagance, and the
-little wastes in many ways, destroy the profits. There are a
-thousand ways in which opportunities for good may be
-wasted. Never wait for the evil to increase. “A stitch in
-time saves nine,” saves a rent, and, under the well-trained
-eye of Tabitha, saved a garment. Heavy doors turn on
-small hinges. Fortunes turn on pivots. Look out for small
-things. They are the atoms, the trifles, that make up the
-large things. A stitch is a small thing, but led by the needle
-of Dorcas, the garments and coats multiplied.</p>
-
-<p>So of Christian usefulness. The needle in Tabitha’s hand
-was a very small instrument, but the deeds it wrought,
-clothed the widows and blessed a church. The two mites of
-the poor widow were a little sum, but measured by their motive,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>
-they were perhaps the largest contribution ever made
-to Christian charity. It is said that a tract, from the hands
-of a servant girl, led to the conversion of no less than Richard
-Baxter. He awoke to a world of usefulness. Among
-the library of books he wrote was the “Call to the Unconverted.”
-It fell into the hands of Philip Doddridge. It led
-him to Christ. Doddridge, too, awoke to a world of usefulness.
-His “Rise and Progress” was the means of the
-awakening of William Wilberforce. A book of his writing
-led to the salvation of Leigh Richmond. He wrote the
-“Dairyman’s Daughter,” that fell upon the world like a leaf
-from heaven—all the fruitage of a single tract from the
-hand of a maid.</p>
-
-<p>“What is that in thine hand?” the Almighty asked Moses
-while he kept Jethro’s flock in the back side of the desert,
-and Moses said, “A rod,” a shepherd’s staff, cut out of the
-thicket near by, with which he guided his sheep. Any day he
-might throw it away and cut a better one, but God said,
-“With this rod thou shalt save Israel.”</p>
-
-<p>What is that in thine hand, Sarah? Three measures of meal
-with which I prepare my dinner. Hasten, knead it, and
-make cakes upon the hearth, and angels shall sit at thy
-table to-day. What is that in thine hand, Rebekah? A
-pitcher with which I carry water. Use it in watering the
-thirsty camels of Eliezer, and thou shalt be an heir in the
-house of Abraham? What is that in thine hand, Miriam?
-Only a timbrel. Use it in leading the women of Israel in
-the song of triumph over Pharaoh’s hosts. What is that in
-thine hand, Rahab? Only a scarlet thread. Bind it in
-the window, and thou shalt save thyself and household.
-What is that in thine hand, poor widow? Only two mites.
-Give them to God, and behold, the fame of your riches fills
-the world. What hast thou, weeping woman? An alabaster
-box of ointment. Give it to God. Break it, and pour it on
-thy Saviour’s head, and its sweet perfume is a fragrance in
-the church till now. What is that in thine hand? A broom.
-Use it for God. A broom in the hand of a Christian woman<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>
-may be as truly used for His glory, as was the sceptre of
-David. What is that in thine hand? A pen. Use it for
-God. Oh, matchless instrument! Write words of comfort
-and sympathy that shall echo around the globe. Oh, can
-you not find some poor soul to-day who does not know Jesus?
-Can you not tell some wanderer about the Christ? What is
-in thine hand? Wealth. Consecrate it now to God. What
-is in thy mouth? A tongue of eloquence. Use it for God.
-The tongue is the mightiest instrument that God ever made.
-What is in thine hand? A kindly grasp? Give that to
-some sad, desponding soul. We need grit and grace to use
-the common things in the ordinary way in the daily occupations
-of life. Consecrate the pen, the needle, the tongue,
-the hands, the feet, and the heart to Jesus. Our Lord gave
-dignity to labor; the sweat-beads of honest toil stood on His
-brow.</p>
-
-<p>This is God’s way of working. He chooses to use the least
-things—even things that amount to nothing—to accomplish
-His work in the salvation of the race. Use your leisure.
-Feed the hungry, clothe the naked, visit the sick, comfort
-the wretched, spread the gospel far and wide. If you have
-nothing else, use your needle, and the garments will multiply,
-and the destitutes will be clothed. A poor girl who had
-nothing but a sewing machine, used it to aid a feeble church;
-all her earnings above her needs were given towards building
-a house of worship, and in a year she paid more than a
-hundred others richer than she. So you can do if you will.
-If you but knew it, you have Tabitha’s needle in your hand—the
-simple instrumentality with which to do good. When
-the pierced hand of our Lord is laid on consecrated needles,
-on the ordinary means within our reach, on wealth, on learning,
-on beauty, on culture, on every gift and grace in every
-relation in life, then the splendor of the millennial dawn will
-color the eastern sky with its crimson and gold.</p>
-
-<p>From the beautiful home of Tabitha, in Joppa, the Sacred
-history runs on until Lydia, in the city of Philippi, is
-reached.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>While at Troas, Paul had a remarkable vision in the night,
-of a man of Macedonia, standing before him and praying,
-“Come over into Macedonia, and help us.” How Paul knew
-this man to be a Macedonian is not stated. Perhaps he may
-have frequently seen Macedonian seamen in Tarsus, his birthplace,
-which was a flourishing commercial city on the Mediterranean,
-or he may have recognized him by his speech or
-national dress. This man entreated him, in the vision, to
-cross over the sea from Asia into Europe, and come to the aid
-of the inhabitants of Macedonia. Paul had never been in
-Europe, and had no thought of going there. On the other
-hand, he had been delivering the decrees issued by the
-church council at Jerusalem, through the maritime cities of
-Asia Minor, and “assayed to go into Bithynia,” but was
-restrained by the Spirit of God. Being thus convinced, he
-embarked at Troas, taking with him as fellow-laborers, Silas,
-Timothy, and Luke.</p>
-
-<p>After a rapid and successful voyage over the peaceful
-waters of the Ægean Sea, in a direct course to the north-west,
-they reached the island of Samothrace. The next day they
-proceeded to Neapolis, situated on the Strymonic Gulf, and a
-seaport of Thrace. From this point they continued their
-journey, probably, on foot. Following the ancient well-paved
-road up the steep Symbolum hills, until they reached
-the solitary pass through the mountains, at an elevation of
-1,600 feet above the sea. Once through this lonely pass and
-a magnificent view is obtained of the plain in which Philippi
-is located, and of the Pangæus and Hæmus ranges, which
-close in the plain to the south-west and north-east. At one
-point on the summit of Symbolum one can look down into
-Neapolis on the sea, and into Philippi in the plain. From
-this point the Apostles descended to the plain below by a
-yet steeper road than the ascent out of Neapolis. At
-length, at the end of a twelve miles’ jaunt on foot, finds
-them in “the chief city of that part of Macedonia,” and
-they were quite prepared for a good meal and a night’s
-rest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>The next morning, being the Sabbath day, the Apostles
-began to look about the city for a synagogue. But there
-was no synagogue in Philippi, only one of those light, temporary
-structures, called proseuchæ, which was merely an
-enclosure without a roof, and was located on the banks of
-the swiftly-rushing Anghista (not the Strymon, as some
-writers have it), and so the Apostles hastened “out of the
-city” to the “river side,” to the proseuchæ, “where prayer
-was wont to be made.”</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus253.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">THE CITY BY THE ANGHISTA.</p>
-
-<p>This place without the city wall was not a solitary locality,
-secluded and retired from the endless confusion of city
-streets, but, on the contrary, it was a market place, especially
-set apart for the mountain clans of the Pangæus and Hæmus<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>
-ranges, who came down with their pack animals to trade.
-No doubt this stream had its fountains high up among the
-Hæmus hills, and with great force came rushing down the
-mountain, and spreading out in the plain, gave a plentiful
-supply to man and beast. It flowed down through the
-market place; it was within reach of every child’s pitcher;
-it was enough for every empty vessel. The small birds
-came down thither to drink; the sheep and lambs had trodden
-down a little path to its brink. The thirsty beasts of
-burden, along the dusty road, knew the way to the stream,
-with its soft, sweet murmur of fullness and freedom. The
-clear, sparkling river must have reminded the Apostles of
-the waters of life and salvation, which they were bringing
-to these Philippians. This stream sometimes may cease to
-flow, and every other may be dry in the days of drought
-and adversity, but the heavenly stream whose spring was in
-Jesus Christ, they well knew, would never cease to flow.
-And they also well knew that whosoever drank from the
-river issuing from under the threshold of divine grace, should
-never thirst.</p>
-
-<p>Amid these surroundings, Paul and his companions sat
-down in the proseuchæ, “and spake unto the women” who
-had already assembled in the place of prayer. It would
-seem that there were no Hebrew men in Philippi, and possibly,
-for the reason this city was a military, and not a mercantile
-centre. Even the women may have been few in
-number, so that the speaker could not deliver a formal
-address, but only engage in familiar conversation, which
-could be easier done in a sitting posture, and in a comparatively
-free and conversational intercourse, thus assuming at
-once the attitude of teachers.</p>
-
-<p>The gracious words which fell from the lips of Paul in this
-first attempt to introduce the gospel into Macedonia, are not
-reported by Luke, but he tells us that the Lord opened the
-heart of a woman named Lydia. There is something very
-beautiful in this incident, that God should honor woman with
-being the first convert in Europe! It was a man who stood<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-before Paul in his vision, praying, “Come over into Macedonia
-and help us,” but it is a woman who is first willing to
-be helped. There was, that Sabbath morning, in the proseuchæ,
-by the rippling waters of the Anghista, one solitary
-woman who was in a special degree, open to the influence of
-the truth, and who listened with earnest attention to all that
-Paul said.</p>
-
-<p>Luke tells us that Lydia was a dealer in purple, and a
-citizen of Thyatira, Asia Minor, and, as Thyatira was a
-Macedonian colony, we may the more readily understand
-that circumstances connected with her trade brought her at
-this time to Philippi, and was probably only a temporary
-resident. Thyatira was celebrated, at a very early period,
-for its purple dyes and purple fabrics. The purple color, so
-extravagantly valued by the ancients, and even by the
-Orientals at the present day, included many shades or tints,
-from rose-red to sea-green or blue. Philippi being the military
-centre of Macedonia, the military trappings, with all
-their tinsel and show, made a brisk market for the purple
-cloth of Lydia, and, no doubt, she was a woman who prospered
-in her business, and was in good circumstances, and,
-possibly, possessed of considerable wealth, as she generously
-offered her home and hospitality to Paul and his companions.</p>
-
-<p>But now see how the words and acts of this noble woman
-demonstrates the genuineness of her faith. She at once,
-with her household, presents herself for baptism. While it
-is quite probable that the baptism was not performed on the
-spot, it took place, no doubt, at the first opportunity. Having
-become a member of the household of faith, she
-addresses the Apostles saying, “If ye have judged me to
-be faithful,” that is, judged that I am one that believeth in
-the Lord, “come into my house, and abide there.” What
-gentleness in her language, “If ye have judged me faithful,”
-humbly submitting to the experienced judgment of her
-religious benefactors, yet urgently inviting the Apostle and
-all his companions to enter her house, and remain there as
-her guests. This proffered hospitality furnished direct<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>
-evidence of her love to her Redeemer, which proceeded from
-faith, and which manifested itself by disinterested and kind
-attentions to His messengers. She supported her plea by
-appealing to the judgment which they had themselves pronounced
-in her case, and without which they would unquestionably
-have declined to baptize her.</p>
-
-<p>That these messengers of the gospel acceded to the request
-of Lydia, and entered her house as guests, may be confidently
-assumed. We also see with what beautiful fidelity
-she remained true to Paul and Silas when they were
-persecuted.</p>
-
-<p>It is also interesting to notice that through Lydia, indirectly,
-the gospel may have been introduced into that very
-section (Bithynia), where Paul had been forbidden directly
-to preach it. Whether she was one of “those women” who
-labored with Paul in the gospel at Philippi, as mentioned
-afterwards in the Epistle to that place (Phil. iv, 3) it is
-impossible to say, but from what we know of her history, it
-would be just like her, for, surely such a royal entertainer
-in true hospitality, would make a heroic laborer in any
-gospel field.</p>
-
-<p>We may learn from Lydia’s life that the human heart is
-closed and barred by sin, so that divine truth can not enter
-to enlighten the mind, direct the will, or renew the spiritual
-life forces until divine grace, through operations of the Holy
-Spirit, opens the heart. When the Lord opens the heart,
-conversion is possible, but it is actually effected only when
-the heart, like the prepared field, with willingness receives
-the seed of divine truth. God calls, and if but few are
-chosen, it is simply because men choose not to obey the call.
-The Lord opens only the hearts of those for His spiritual
-kingdom who are willing to and do accept His conditions.</p>
-
-<p>In the conversion of Lydia we see the Kingdom of Christ
-in its incipient state strikingly illustrated. In the parable
-of the grain of mustard-seed, Jesus told his disciples that
-the gospel in its beginning would be just like that smallest
-of seeds, but would grow and spread, and finally succeed.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>
-Lydia is only one convert, a lone woman in a great military
-camp of a heathen city, and women, socially, in those days,
-did not count for much. Humanly speaking, this first
-European convert appeared about as insignificant as a grain
-of mustard-seed. And yet this apparently insignificant seed
-produced a rich and precious harvest in the flourishing congregation
-of Philippi, in the spread of the gospel over all
-Europe, and it will soon cover the whole world.</p>
-
-<p>From Lydia’s candid reception of the gospel, her urgent
-hospitality, her unfaltering and continued friendship to the
-Apostles, her modest bearing in being accounted worthy of
-the confidence of her benefactors, we are led to form a high
-estimate of her character. Though possessed of considerable
-wealth, and, possibly, of social rank, she had the grace of
-humility. Her deep humility in the presence of God’s messengers
-was a clear and sufficient proof of her humility before
-God, and that it was real; that humility, if not already a
-resident in her heart, had, with the incoming of divine grace,
-taken up its abode in her, and become her very nature; that
-she actually, like Christ, made herself of no reputation,
-especially when persecution came to Paul and Silas.</p>
-
-<p>When, in the presence of God, lowliness of heart has
-become, not a posture we assume for a time, but the very
-spirit of our life, it will manifest itself, as it did in Lydia, in
-all our bearing towards others. The lesson is one of deep
-import. The only humility really ours is not that which we
-assume in our devotions to God, but that which we carry
-with us in our ordinary conduct. The insignificances of the
-daily life are the importances of eternity, because they prove
-what spirit really possesses us. It is in our most unguarded
-moments we really show what we are. To know the humble
-woman, to know how the humble woman behaves, you must
-accept her hospitality as the Apostles accepted the hospitality
-of Lydia, and follow her to her home, and into the
-common course of daily life.</p>
-
-<p>Humility before God is nothing if not proved in humility
-before men. It was when the disciples disputed who should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>
-be greatest that Jesus taught the lesson of humility by washing
-their feet. And this heavenly grace runs all through
-the epistles of Paul, the spiritual father of Lydia. To the
-Romans he writes, “In honor preferring one another.”
-“Set not your mind on high things, but condescend to those
-that are lowly.” “Be not wise in your own conceit.” To
-the Corinthians he said, “Love vaunteth not itself, is not
-puffed up, seeketh not her own, is not provoked.” These
-are all the gracious fruits of humility, for there is no love
-without humility at its roots. To the Galatians the Apostle
-writes, “Through love be servants one of another. Let us
-not be desirous of vain glory, provoking one another, envying
-one another.” To the Ephesians, immediately after the
-three wonderful chapters on the heavenly life, he writes,
-“Therefore, walk with all lowliness and meekness, with long-suffering,
-forbearing one another in love;” “Giving thanks
-always, subjecting yourselves one to another in the fear of
-Christ.” To the Philippians, “Doing nothing through faction
-or vain glory, but in lowliness of mind, each counting others
-better than himself. Have the mind in you which was also
-in Christ Jesus, who emptied Himself, taking the form of a
-servant, and humbled Himself.” And to the Colossians,
-“Put on a heart of compassion, kindness, humility, meekness,
-long-suffering, forbearing one another, and forgiving each
-other, even as the Lord forgave you.”</p>
-
-<p>It is in our relation to one another, that the true lowliness of
-mind and the heart of humility are to be seen. Our humility
-before God has no value but as it prepares us to reveal the humility
-of Jesus to our fellow-men. Let us cultivate this beautiful
-gem of divine grace, which was developed in such a marked
-degree in the life of Lydia, the first European Christian.</p>
-
-<p>But we hasten on in our narrative, and gather up in a
-group, as one would gather a handful of flowers, those Women
-in White Raiment so briefly mentioned in the Sacred records
-as not to give us enough of their history to write upon.</p>
-
-<p>Among these are the unnamed four daughters of Philip
-the evangelist, who lived at Cæsarea. These daughters<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>
-ranked high in the early church. They possessed the gift
-of prophetic utterance, and who apparently gave themselves
-to the work of teaching. Though no record is left us of their
-work, we may well believe their distinguished accomplishments
-brought them into contact with many people of that
-busy seaport city on the Mediterranean, where people of all
-nations came and went.</p>
-
-<p>Phœbe of Cenchrea, one of the ports of Corinth. She must
-have been a woman of influence, and worthy of confidence
-and respect. She is not only commended by Paul, but was
-also a deaconess in the church at Cenchrea. On her was conferred
-the honor of carrying the letter of Paul from Corinth
-to Rome. Whatever her errand to Rome may have been, the
-independent manner of her going there seems to imply
-(especially when we consider the secluded habits of Greek
-women) that she was a woman of mature age, and was acting
-in an official capacity. She was not only a woman of
-great energy, but possessed of wealth. She evidently was of
-great service to Paul, and he had confidence in her integrity,
-for he writes in the very letter of which she was the bearer
-to the Romans, “I commend you unto Phœbe our sister,
-which is a servant of the church which is at Cenchrea.”</p>
-
-<p>Priscilla, the wife of Aquila, who had fled from Rome, in
-consequence of an order of Claudius commanding all Jews to
-leave Rome. She, with her husband, came to Corinth. In
-the days of the Apostle, Corinth was a place of great mental
-activity, as well as of commercial enterprise. Its wealth and
-magnificence were so celebrated as to be proverbial; so were
-the vices and profligacy of its inhabitants. But it was just
-the kind of city Paul delighted in carrying the gospel to.
-Where vice abounded he would have grace much more
-abound. Here Priscilla became acquainted with Paul, and
-they abode together, and wrought at their common trade of
-making the Cilician tent. This woman, while taking stitches
-in the haircloth out of which the tents were made, could also
-conduct a theological school with no less apt a student than
-that of Apollos, already noted for his eloquence, and who was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>
-“mighty in the Scriptures.” But Priscilla, as she heard this
-eloquent young man, at once discovered there was something
-wanting in his ministry. It seemed to her that Apollos
-knew only the baptism of John. She knew of a more excellent
-way, and so while she was setting stitches, she “expounded
-unto him the way of God more perfectly.” O, for
-more Priscillas, versed in heavenly lore and skilled to impart
-it! Priscilla is certainly a noble example of what a
-woman in the ordinary walks of life may do for the church.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/illus260.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-<p class="caption">CORINTH, THE GATE OF THE PELOPONNESUS.</p>
-
-<p>Eunice, the mother, and Lois, the grandmother of Timothy,
-are beautiful examples of women in the home. These<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
-women had such unfeigned faith in the gospel, and so ably
-instructed Timothy in the Scriptures, that this home scene
-made a deep and lasting impression upon Paul, and later on,
-in one of his epistles to Timothy, he writes, “When I call to
-remembrance the unfeigned faith that is in thee, which
-dwelt first in thy grandmother Lois, and thy mother Eunice,
-... I put thee in remembrance (of this excellent home-training,
-and by reason of its superior advantage) that thou
-stir up the gift of God, which is in thee.”</p>
-
-<p>Euodias (or rather Eudia) and Syntyche, deaconesses in
-the church at Philippi. These women afforded Paul active
-co-operation under difficult circumstance, and in them, as
-well as other women of the same class, is an illustration of
-what the gospel, in the Apostolic times, did for women, and
-also what the women did for the gospel, for the Apostle expressly
-states that these women labored with him in the
-gospel, besides many other elect women, the detailed mention
-of whom fills nearly all of the last chapter of the epistle
-to the Romans, whose history, if known, would doubtless be
-as interesting as the history of those whose names and acts
-have been preserved to us for our study and comfort.</p>
-
-<p>And then there are a host of women whose names are not
-mentioned, but who, we have every reason to believe, were
-numbered with the Princesses of God, women whose faith
-and patience in labor clothed them in White Raiment. Of
-such we note a few: Noah’s wife and her three daughters-in-law,
-who must have exercised the same faith as their
-husbands, and who must have been in full sympathy with
-their labors; the host of Israelitish women led by Miriam
-in their song of triumph over the Lord’s deliverance from
-Pharaoh’s army; the wife of Manoah, the mother of Samson,
-who was twice visited by the angel of the Lord; Hulda, the
-prophetess, who lived in the time of King Josiah, to whom
-Hilkiah, the high priest, had recourse, when the book of the
-law was found, to procure an authoritative opinion, for,
-doubtless, in her time she was the most distinguished person
-for prophetic gifts in Jerusalem; the captive Hebrew maid<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>
-in the house of Naaman, the Syrian general, who knew all
-about the prophet in Samaria, and had faith to believe that
-Elisha would heal him of his leprosy, even though captive as
-she was, and in a strange land; in the days of Saul and
-David, when returning from the conquests, “the women”
-who “came out of all the cities of Israel” to welcome, with
-tabrets and song, the deliverers of God’s people.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps we should not fail to briefly mention Tamar, the
-daughter of David, for she was not only a chaste virgin, but
-was also remarkable for her extraordinary beauty. Her
-high sense of honor must ever stand as a memorial of her
-virtue, especially when we take into account the low standard
-of morality which prevailed in her time.</p>
-
-<p>Added to her beauty, she had domestic accomplishments.
-It would almost seem that Tamar was supposed, at least by
-her perfidious brother Amnon, to have a peculiar art in
-baking palatable cakes.</p>
-
-<p>With no suspicion of any wicked design, this beautiful
-princess, at her father’s request, goes to the house of her
-supposed sick brother to prepare the food she was assured he
-would relish. So she took the dough and kneaded it, and then
-in his presence (for this was a part of his fancy, as though
-there was something exquisite in the manner of performing
-the work), kneaded it a second time into the form of cakes.</p>
-
-<p>After the cakes were baked, she took them, fresh and
-crisp, to Amnon to eat. When she fully realized his wicked
-designs, she touchingly remonstrated, and held up to him
-the infamy of such a crime “in Israel,” and appealed to his
-sense of honor, saying, “As for thee, thou shalt be as one of
-the fools in Israel.” Her indignation after his unnatural
-designs were accomplished, and she had been thrust out,
-was even more heroic than her protests. In her agony she
-snatched a handful of ashes and threw them on her beautiful
-hair, then tore her royal gown, and, clasping her hands
-upon her head, rushed to and fro through the streets crying.</p>
-
-<p>While this is one of the most pathetically sad scenes
-recorded in Bible history, yet it brings out in a remarkable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-manner, the virtue and high honor of womanhood in those
-rude ages of the world.</p>
-
-<p>But over against this dark background of Amnon’s conduct
-the careful home-training of Timothy, under the moulding
-influence of his mother Eunice, and his grandmother
-Lois, shines with a brightness that reflects great credit.
-And if such careful home-training was so far-reaching in its
-results as to cause Paul, in later years, to remind Timothy
-of this training as an inspiration to stir up the gift of God in
-him, what shall be said of motherhood and wifehood of the
-many noble characters found in the Sacred record? It is a
-fact that women have great influence in shaping the lives of
-men. Who can tell how greatly womanhood influenced the
-lives of such men as Enoch, who walked with God; Noah,
-whose faith led him to the building of the ark; Abraham,
-whose wonderful life of trust has made him the father of the
-faithful in all generations of men; Melchizedek, king of
-Salem and priest of the most high God; Job, whom adversity
-could not shake, and who, in the midst of his calamities,
-exclaimed, “Though He slay me, yet will I trust in Him;”
-Caleb and Joshua, whose confidence in God’s ability to lead
-the host of Israel into the promised land, was unwavering
-under most trying circumstances; Elijah and Elisha, who
-stood as the defences of God’s people amid idolatrous times;
-the good King Hezekiah, and his ever faithful counselor,
-Isaiah, who went up into the Temple and spread out the
-insulting letter of Sennacherib, and “prayed and cried to
-heaven;” Daniel and his companions, who walked through
-the fire and the den of lions, and thus proved their fidelity
-to truth and righteousness; Nehemiah, who, by moonlight,
-viewed the ruins of the city of his fathers, and then, with
-wonderful courage, repaired its broken-down walls and set
-up its gates that had been burned with fire; and the great
-host of women mentioned by Paul, who, through faith, “received
-their dead raised to life again,” and others who “were
-tortured, not accepting deliverance, that they might obtain
-a better resurrection.” Surely such mothers and wives would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>
-raise up heroic men. The Spartan mother told her son,
-when he started for the war, “to return with his shield, or
-upon it.” But the Hebrew women led armies, subdued
-kingdoms, and turned to flight the armies of the aliens.</p>
-
-<p>Such is the womanhood of the Bible, and while with her
-companion, man, she inherited the infirmities brought upon
-the race in the transgression, yet she is infinitely in advance
-of the women living in lands where the Bible is unknown.
-Indeed, the condition of Hebrew women has always presented
-a marked contrast with heathen women, and for the
-reason, while the Bible seeks to elevate them, heathendom
-has sought to degrade them. Heathen oppression of womanhood
-rests upon the nations where the Bible is not known,
-like the mountain upon Typho’s heart. Buddhism presents
-no personal god. He is “eyeless, handless, never sad and
-never glad.” For sinning man there is no pity, for of all his
-hundreds of names there is no “Father.” Confucianism,
-with its backward gaze, teaches no sin, no Saviour, and only
-China for heaven. Mohammedanism has its creeds, prayers,
-alms, fastings and pilgrimages. But its creeds were partly
-written on human bones, its pilgrimages are corrupt and its
-formal prayers are to “Allah,” who bears little resemblance
-to the Christian’s God. Not censure, but pity, hovers over
-these classic religions and the millions who are under the
-pall of paganism.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Hark! From far distances voices are calling;</div>
-<div class="indent">Hushed be earth’s clamor, be silent and hear;</div>
-<div class="verse">Thrilling the heart with sad cadences falling,</div>
-<div class="indent">Comes the appeals in their syllables clear,</div>
-<div class="verse">Knowing no song but the breath of a sigh,</div>
-<div class="verse">Send o’er the ocean their heart-breaking cry.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Lips that are muffled yet utter their story,</div>
-<div class="indent">O the sad plea of their multiplied wrongs;</div>
-<div class="verse">Grim superstition grown ancient and hoary,</div>
-<div class="indent">Shuts in dim prisons these languishing throngs,</div>
-<div class="verse">Heathen womanhood, with piteous pleading,</div>
-<div class="verse">Call to us blindly, their woes interceding.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>The non-Christian religions offer no light in life and no
-hope in death. The bitter cry of the Hindoo widow’s prayer
-is, “O God, let no more women be born in this land.” The
-horrors of heathenism are unknown in Christian lands.
-What makes the difference? We have clearly shown in these
-pages that it is the teaching of the Bible, and this one fact
-alone stamps the book as divine. It has God for its Author,
-and, from Genesis to Revelation, it blesses and elevates
-women.</p>
-
-<p>Why does paganism oppress womanhood? Because these
-monstrous systems are dominated by Satan, and knowing as
-he must, that woman stands at the fountain of the race, he
-poisons and corrupts the very sources of life. For the truth
-of this one needs only to compare Christian with heathen
-lands. Compare America with its happy Christian homes,
-with India in whose cloistered zenanas are millions of widows,
-many of them under ten years of age, and doomed to a living
-death—must sleep on the ground, feed on herbs, and
-practice rigid mortification. Before Christianity entered
-that land, the horrors of the suttee (the burning alive of the
-widow with her dead husband), the sacrificing of infants to
-the River Ganges, the slaying of young men and women in
-Hindu temples to appease Kali, the god of the soil, the “Car
-of Juggernaut,” rolling over hundreds of beings annually,
-and crushing them to death, the burning alive of lepers, the
-hastening of the death of a parent by the children in carrying
-the former to the River Ganges and there, on the banks,
-filling the afflicted one’s mouth with sand and water are left
-to die, the public exhibition of voluntary starvation on the
-part of Hindu devotees,—all these terrible practices, once
-so popular in India, have passed away since the missionary
-has planted his foot upon the soil. To-day none of these
-things can be found, and India’s voice, as well as the voice
-of all Christendom, can go up to God in praise that these
-things no longer exist there. And what has taken place in
-India, is also fast taking place in China and Africa. Surely,
-the Christian woman needs to press her Bible to her heart,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
-and love it as she loves her God, for, were it not for this
-blessed book, her condition would be no better than is the condition
-of woman in the lands where Buddhism, Confucianism
-and Mohammedanism have crushed out of her all that
-is worth having, and even denies that she has a soul. It
-must be seen that such systems are incapable of elevating
-womanhood.</p>
-
-<p>The thought uppermost in our mind, when we set out to
-write these pages was, to show that God created man and
-woman as equals, that Christ came to save our whole humanity,
-and that Christianity is the true friend of woman. How
-beautiful is all this in contrast with the cruelties of heathenism.
-See how patiently Jesus talks with a lone woman by
-Jacob’s well, how tenderly he speaks to the woman who
-sobbed out her sorrow for her sins at His feet, how compassionately
-He says to the woman for whose blood her accusers
-had clamored, after He had silenced them, “Go, and sin no
-more.” And, to the credit of head and heart, be it said,
-woman has appreciated her Saviour, and in many ways
-shown her gratitude. Perhaps there is no more beautiful
-and touching incident in the life of our Lord than that
-recorded by Luke, where women “ministered unto Him of
-their substance.”</p>
-
-<p>Finally, if any have been helped to a better understanding
-and appreciation of the Bible by the perusal of these
-pages, and have been lifted nearer to the heart of God, we
-shall feel that our labors have not been in vain.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-
-<p>Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.</p>
-
-<p>The cover image for this eBook was created by the transcriber and is entered into the public domain.</p>
-</div></div>
-
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