Chapter
31 -
The Sermon on the Mount
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CHRIST seldom gathered His disciples alone to receive His words. He did not
choose for His audience those only who knew the way of life. It was His work
to reach the multitudes who were in ignorance and error. He gave His lessons
of truth where they could reach the darkened understanding. He Himself was
the Truth, standing with girded loins and hands ever outstretched to bless,
and in words of warning, entreaty, and encouragement, seeking to uplift all
who would come unto Him.
The Sermon on the Mount, though given especially to the disciples, was
spoken in the hearing of the multitude. After the ordination of the
apostles, Jesus went with them to the seaside. Here in the early morning the
people had begun to assemble. Besides the usual crowds from the Galilean
towns, there were people from Judea, and even from Jerusalem itself; from
Perea, from Decapolis, from Idumea, away to the south of Judea; and from
Tyre and Sidon, the Phoenician cities on the shore of the Mediterranean.
"When they had heard what great things He did," they "came to hear Him, and
to be healed of their diseases: . . . there went virtue out of Him, and
healed them all." Mark 3:8; Luke 6:17-19.
The narrow beach did not afford even standing room within reach of His voice
for all who desired to hear Him, and Jesus led the way back to the
mountainside. Reaching a level space that offered a pleasant gathering place
for the vast assembly, He seated Himself on the grass, and the disciples and
the multitude followed His example.
The disciples' place was always next to Jesus. The people constantly pressed
upon Him, yet the disciples understood that they were not to be crowded away
from His presence. They sat close beside Him, that they might not lose a
word of His instruction. They were attentive listeners, eager to understand
the truths they were to make known to all lands and all ages.
With a feeling that something more than usual might be expected, they now
pressed about their Master. They believed that the kingdom was soon to be
established, and from the events of the morning they gathered assurance that
some announcement concerning it was about to be made. A feeling of
expectancy pervaded the multitude also, and eager faces gave evidence of the
deep interest. As the people sat upon the green hillside, awaiting the words
of the divine Teacher, their hearts were filled with thoughts of future
glory. There were scribes and Pharisees who looked forward to the day when
they should have dominion over the hated Romans, and possess the riches and
splendor of the world's great empire. The poor peasants and fishermen hoped
to hear the assurance that their wretched hovels, the scanty food, the life
of toil, and fear of want were to be exchanged for mansions of plenty and
days of ease. In place of the one coarse garment which was their covering by
day, and their blanket at night, they hoped that Christ would give them the
rich and costly robes of their conquerors. All hearts thrilled with the
proud hope that Israel was soon to be honored before the nations as the
chosen of the Lord, and Jerusalem exalted as the head of a universal
kingdom.
Christ disappointed the hope of worldly greatness. In the Sermon on the
Mount He sought to undo the work that had been wrought by false education,
and to give His hearers a right conception of His kingdom and of His own
character. Yet He did not make a direct attack on the errors of the people.
He saw the misery of the world on account of sin, yet He did not present
before them a vivid delineation of their wretchedness. He taught them of
something infinitely better than they had known. Without combating their
ideas of the kingdom of God, He told them the conditions of entrance
therein, leaving them to draw their own conclusions as to its nature. The
truths He taught are no less important to us than to the multitude that
followed Him. We no less than they need to learn the foundation principles
of the kingdom of God.
Christ's first words to the people on the mount were words of blessing.
Happy are they, He said, who recognize their spiritual poverty, and feel
their need of redemption. The gospel is to be preached to the poor. Not to
the spiritually proud, those who claim to be rich and in need of nothing, is
it revealed, but to those who are humble and contrite. One fountain only has
been opened for sin, a fountain for the poor in spirit.
The proud heart strives to earn salvation; but both our title to heaven and
our fitness for it are found in the righteousness of Christ. The Lord can do
nothing toward the recovery of man until, convinced of his own weakness, and
stripped of all self-sufficiency, he yields himself to the control of God.
Then he can receive the gift that God is waiting to bestow. From the soul
that feels his need, nothing is withheld. He has unrestricted access to Him
in whom all fullness dwells. "For thus saith the high and lofty One that
inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy; I dwell in the high and holy place,
with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit, to revive the spirit
of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones." Isa. 57:15.
"Blessed are they that mourn: for they shall be comforted." By these words
Christ does not teach that mourning in itself has power to remove the guilt
of sin. He gives no sanction to pretense or to voluntary humility. The
mourning of which He speaks does not consist in melancholy and lamentation.
While we sorrow on account of sin, we are to rejoice in the precious
privilege of being children of God.
We often sorrow because our evil deeds bring unpleasant consequences to
ourselves; but this is not repentance. Real sorrow for sin is the result of
the working of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit reveals the ingratitude of the
heart that has slighted and grieved the Saviour, and brings us in contrition
to the foot of the cross. By every sin Jesus is wounded afresh; and as we
look upon Him whom we have pierced, we mourn for the sins that have brought
anguish upon Him. Such mourning will lead to the renunciation of sin.
The worldling may pronounce this sorrow a weakness; but it is the strength
which binds the penitent to the Infinite One with links that cannot be
broken. It shows that the angels of God are bringing back to the soul the
graces that were lost through hardness of heart and transgression. The tears
of the penitent are only the raindrops that precede the sunshine of
holiness. This sorrow heralds a joy which will be a living fountain in the
soul. "Only acknowledge thine iniquity, that thou hast transgressed against
the Lord thy God;" "and I will not cause Mine anger to fall upon you: for I
am merciful, saith the Lord." Jer. 3:13, 12. "Unto them that mourn in Zion,"
He has appointed to give "beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the
garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness." Isa. 61:3.
And for those also who mourn in trial and sorrow there is comfort. The
bitterness of grief and humiliation is better than the indulgences of sin.
Through affliction God reveals to us the plague spots in our characters,
that by His grace we may overcome our faults. Unknown chapters in regard to
ourselves are opened to us, and the test comes, whether we will accept the
reproof and the counsel of God. When brought into trial, we are not to fret
and complain. We should not rebel, or worry ourselves out of the hand of
Christ. We are to humble the soul before God. The ways of the Lord are
obscure to him who desires to see things in a light pleasing to himself.
They appear dark and joyless to our human nature. But God's ways are ways of
mercy and the end is salvation. Elijah knew not what he was doing when in
the desert he said that he had had enough of life, and prayed that he might
die. The Lord in His mercy did not take him at his word. There was yet a
great work for Elijah to do; and when his work was done, he was not to
perish in discouragement and solitude in the wilderness. Not for him the
descent into the dust of death, but the ascent in glory, with the convoy of
celestial chariots, to the throne on high.
God's word for the sorrowing is, "I have seen his ways, and will heal him: I
will lead him also, and restore comforts unto him and to his mourners." "I
will turn their mourning into joy, and will comfort them, and make them
rejoice from their sorrow." Isa. 57:18; Jer. 31:13.
"Blessed are the meek." The difficulties we have to encounter may be very
much lessened by that meekness which hides itself in Christ. If we possess
the humility of our Master, we shall rise above the slights, the rebuffs,
the annoyances, to which we are daily exposed, and they will cease to cast a
gloom over the spirit. The highest evidence of nobility in a Christian is
self-control. He who under abuse or cruelty fails to maintain a calm and
trustful spirit robs God of His right to reveal in him His own perfection of
character. Lowliness of heart is the strength that gives victory to the
followers of Christ; it is the token of their connection with the courts
above.
"Though the Lord be high, yet hath He respect unto the lowly." Ps. 138:6.
Those who reveal the meek and lowly spirit of Christ are tenderly regarded
by God. They may be looked upon with scorn by the world, but they are of
great value in His sight. Not only the wise, the great, the beneficent, will
gain a passport to the heavenly courts; not only the busy worker, full of
zeal and restless activity. No; the poor in spirit, who crave the presence
of an abiding Christ, the humble in heart, whose highest ambition is to do
God's will,--these will gain an abundant entrance. They will be among that
number who have washed their robes and made them white in the blood of the
Lamb. "Therefore are they before the throne of God, and serve Him day and
night in His temple: and He that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among
them." Rev. 7:15.
"Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness." The sense
of unworthiness will lead the heart to hunger and thirst for righteousness,
and this desire will not be disappointed. Those who make room in their
hearts for Jesus will realize His love. All who long to bear the likeness of
the character of God shall be satisfied. The Holy Spirit never leaves
unassisted the soul who is looking unto Jesus. He takes of the things of
Christ and shows them unto him. If the eye is kept fixed on Christ, the work
of the Spirit ceases not until the soul is conformed to His image. The pure
element of love will expand the soul, giving it a capacity for higher
attainments, for increased knowledge of heavenly things, so that it will not
rest short of the fullness. "Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst
after righteousness; for they shall be filled."
The merciful shall find mercy, and the pure in heart shall see God. Every
impure thought defiles the soul, impairs the moral sense, and tends to
obliterate the impressions of the Holy Spirit. It dims the spiritual vision,
so that men cannot behold God. The Lord may and does forgive the repenting
sinner; but though forgiven, the soul is marred. All impurity of speech or
of thought must be shunned by him who would have clear discernment of
spiritual truth.
But the words of Christ cover more than freedom from sensual impurity, more
than freedom from that ceremonial defilement which the Jews so rigorously
shunned. Selfishness prevents us from beholding God. The self-seeking spirit
judges of God as altogether such a one as itself. Until we have renounced
this, we cannot understand Him who is love. Only the unselfish heart, the
humble and trustful spirit, shall see God as "merciful and gracious,
long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth." Ex. 34:6.
"Blessed are the peacemakers." The peace of Christ is born of truth. It is
harmony with God. The world is at enmity with the law of God; sinners are at
enmity with their Maker; and as a result they are at enmity with one
another. But the psalmist declares, "Great peace have they which love Thy
law: and nothing shall offend them." Ps. 119:165. Men cannot manufacture
peace. Human plans for the purification and uplifting of individuals or of
society will fail of producing peace, because they do not reach the heart.
The only power that can create or perpetuate true peace is the grace of
Christ. When this is implanted in the heart, it will cast out the evil
passions that cause strife and dissension. "Instead of the thorn shall come
up the fir tree, and instead of the brier shall come up the myrtle tree;"
and life's desert "shall rejoice, and blossom as the rose." Isa. 55:13;
35:1.
The multitudes were amazed at this teaching, which was so at variance with
the precepts and example of the Pharisees. The people had come to think that
happiness consisted in the possession of the things of this world, and that
fame and the honor of men were much to be coveted. It was very pleasing to
be called "Rabbi," and to be extolled as wise and religious, having their
virtues paraded before the public. This was regarded as the crown of
happiness. But in the presence of that vast throng, Jesus declared that
earthly gain and honor were all the reward such persons would ever receive.
He spoke with certainty, and a convincing power attended His words. The
people were silenced, and a feeling of fear crept over them. They looked at
one another doubtfully. Who of them would be saved if this Man's teachings
were true? Many were convicted that this remarkable Teacher was actuated by
the Spirit of God, and that the sentiments He uttered were divine.
After explaining what constitutes true happiness, and how it may be
obtained, Jesus more definitely pointed out the duty of His disciples, as
teachers chosen of God to lead others into the path of righteousness and
eternal life. He knew that they would often suffer from disappointment and
discouragement, that they would meet with decided opposition, that they
would be insulted, and their testimony rejected. Well He knew that in the
fulfillment of their mission, the humble men who listened so attentively to
His words were to bear calumny, torture, imprisonment, and death, and He
continued:
"Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake: for theirs
is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and
persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely, for My
sake. Rejoice, and be exceeding glad: for great is your reward in heaven:
for so persecuted they the prophets which were before you."
The world loves sin, and hates righteousness, and this was the cause of its
hostility to Jesus. All who refuse His infinite love will find Christianity
a disturbing element. The light of Christ sweeps away the darkness that
covers their sins, and the need of reform is made manifest. While those who
yield to the influence of the Holy Spirit begin war with themselves, those
who cling to sin war against the truth and its representatives.
Thus strife is created, and Christ's followers are accused as troublers of
the people. But it is fellowship with God that brings them the world's
enmity. They are bearing the reproach of Christ. They are treading the path
that has been trodden by the noblest of the earth. Not with sorrow, but with
rejoicing, should they meet persecution. Each fiery trial is God's agent for
their refining. Each is fitting them for their work as colaborers with Him.
Each conflict has its place in the great battle for righteousness, and each
will add to the joy of their final triumph. Having this in view, the test of
their faith and patience will be cheerfully accepted rather than dreaded and
avoided. Anxious to fulfill their obligation to the world, fixing their
desire upon the approval of God, His servants are to fulfill every duty,
irrespective of the fear or the favor of men.
"Ye are the salt of the earth," Jesus said. Do not withdraw yourselves from
the world in order to escape persecution. You are to abide among men, that
the savor of the divine love may be as salt to preserve the world from
corruption.
Hearts that respond to the influence of the Holy Spirit are the channels
through which God's blessing flows. Were those who serve God removed from
the earth, and His Spirit withdrawn from among men, this world would be left
to desolation and destruction, the fruit of Satan's dominion. Though the
wicked know it not, they owe even the blessings of this life to the
presence, in the world, of God's people whom they despise and oppress. But
if Christians are such in name only, they are like the salt that has lost
its savor. They have no influence for good in the world. Through their
misrepresentation of God they are worse than unbelievers.
"Ye are the light of the world." The Jews thought to confine the benefits of
salvation to their own nation; but Christ showed them that salvation is like
the sunshine. It belongs to the whole world. The religion of the Bible is
not to be confined between the covers of a book, nor within the walls of a
church. It is not to be brought out occasionally for our own benefit, and
then to be carefully laid aside again. It is to sanctify the daily life, to
manifest itself in every business transaction and in all our social
relations.
True character is not shaped from without, and put on; it radiates from
within. If we wish to direct others in the path of righteousness, the
principles of righteousness must be enshrined in our own hearts. Our
profession of faith may proclaim the theory of religion, but it is our
practical piety that holds forth the word of truth. The consistent life, the
holy conversation, the unswerving integrity, the active, benevolent spirit,
the godly example,--these are the mediums through which light is conveyed to
the world.
Jesus had not dwelt on the specifications of the law, but He did not leave
His hearers to conclude that He had come to set aside its requirements. He
knew that spies stood ready to seize upon every word that might be wrested
to serve their purpose. He knew the prejudice that existed in the minds of
many of His hearers, and He said nothing to unsettle their faith in the
religion and institutions that had been committed to them through Moses.
Christ Himself had given both the moral and the ceremonial law. He did not
come to destroy confidence in His own instruction. It was because of His
great reverence for the law and the prophets that He sought to break through
the wall of traditional requirements which hemmed in the Jews. While He set
aside their false interpretations of the law, He carefully guarded His
disciples against yielding up the vital truths committed to the Hebrews.
The Pharisees prided themselves on their obedience to the law; yet they knew
so little of its principles through everyday practice that to them the
Saviour's words sounded like heresy. As He swept away the rubbish under
which the truth had been buried, they thought He was sweeping away the truth
itself. They whispered to one another that He was making light of the law.
He read their thoughts, and answered them, saying,--
"Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come
to destroy, but to fulfill." Here Jesus refutes the charge of the Pharisees.
His mission to the world is to vindicate the sacred claims of that law which
they charge Him with breaking. If the law of God could have been changed or
abrogated, then Christ need not have suffered the consequences of our
transgression. He came to explain the relation of the law to man, and to
illustrate its precepts by His own life of obedience.
God has given us His holy precepts, because He loves mankind. To shield us
from the results of transgression, He reveals the principles of
righteousness. The law is an expression of the thought of God; when received
in Christ, it becomes our thought. It lifts us above the power of natural
desires and tendencies, above temptations that lead to sin. God desires us
to be happy, and He gave us the precepts of the law that in obeying them we
might have joy. When at Jesus' birth the angels sang,-- "Glory to God in the
highest, And on earth peace, good will toward men" (Luke 2:14), they were
declaring the principles of the law which He had come to magnify and make
honorable.
When the law was proclaimed from Sinai, God made known to men the holiness
of His character, that by contrast they might see the sinfulness of their
own. The law was given to convict them of sin, and reveal their need of a
Saviour. It would do this as its principles were applied to the heart by the
Holy Spirit. This work it is still to do. In the life of Christ the
principles of the law are made plain; and as the Holy Spirit of God touches
the heart, as the light of Christ reveals to men their need of His cleansing
blood and His justifying righteousness, the law is still an agent in
bringing us to Christ, that we may be justified by faith. "The law of the
Lord is perfect, converting the soul." Ps. 19:7.
"Till heaven and earth pass," said Jesus, "one jot or one tittle shall in
nowise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled." The sun shining in the
heavens, the solid earth upon which you dwell, are God's witnesses that His
law is changeless and eternal. Though they may pass away, the divine
precepts shall endure. "It is easier for heaven and earth to pass, than one
tittle of the law to fail." Luke 16:17. The system of types that pointed to
Jesus as the Lamb of God was to be abolished at His death; but the precepts
of the Decalogue are as immutable as the throne of God.
Since "the law of the Lord is perfect," every variation from it must be
evil. Those who disobey the commandments of God, and teach others to do so,
are condemned by Christ. The Saviour's life of obedience maintained the
claims of the law; it proved that the law could be kept in humanity, and
showed the excellence of character that obedience would develop. All who
obey as He did are likewise declaring that the law is "holy, and just, and
good." Rom. 7:12. On the other hand, all who break God's commandments are
sustaining Satan's claim that the law is unjust, and cannot be obeyed. Thus
they second the deceptions of the great adversary, and cast dishonor upon
God. They are the children of the wicked one, who was the first rebel
against God's law. To admit them into heaven would again bring in the
elements of discord and rebellion, and imperil the well-being of the
universe. No man who willfully disregards one principle of the law shall
enter the kingdom of heaven.
The rabbis counted their righteousness a passport to heaven; but Jesus
declared it to be insufficient and unworthy. External ceremonies and a
theoretical knowledge of truth constituted Pharisaical righteousness. The
rabbis claimed to be holy through their own efforts in keeping the law; but
their works had divorced righteousness from religion. While they were
punctilious in ritual observances, their lives were immoral and debased.
Their so-called righteousness could never enter the kingdom of heaven.
The greatest deception of the human mind in Christ's day was that a mere
assent to the truth constitutes righteousness. In all human experience a
theoretical knowledge of the truth has been proved to be insufficient for
the saving of the soul. It does not bring forth the fruits of righteousness.
A jealous regard for what is termed theological truth often accompanies a
hatred of genuine truth as made manifest in life. The darkest chapters of
history are burdened with the record of crimes committed by bigoted
religionists. The Pharisees claimed to be children of Abraham, and boasted
of their possession of the oracles of God; yet these advantages did not
preserve them from selfishness, malignity, greed for gain, and the basest
hypocrisy. They thought themselves the greatest religionists of the world,
but their so-called orthodoxy led them to crucify the Lord of glory.
The same danger still exists. Many take it for granted that they are
Christians, simply because they subscribe to certain theological tenets. But
they have not brought the truth into practical life. They have not believed
and loved it, therefore they have not received the power and grace that come
through sanctification of the truth. Men may profess faith in the truth; but
if it does not make them sincere, kind, patient, forbearing,
heavenly-minded, it is a curse to its possessors, and through their
influence it is a curse to the world.
The righteousness which Christ taught is conformity of heart and life to the
revealed will of God. Sinful men can become righteous only as they have
faith in God and maintain a vital connection with Him. Then true godliness
will elevate the thoughts and ennoble the life. Then the external forms of
religion accord with the Christian's internal purity. Then the ceremonies
required in the service of God are not meaningless rites, like those of the
hypocritical Pharisees.
Jesus takes up the commandments separately, and explains the depth and
breadth of their requirement. Instead of removing one jot of their force, He
shows how far-reaching their principles are, and exposes the fatal mistake
of the Jews in their outward show of obedience. He declares that by the evil
thought or the lustful look the law of God is transgressed. One who becomes
a party to the least injustice is breaking the law and degrading his own
moral nature. Murder first exists in the mind. He who gives hatred a place
in his heart is setting his feet in the path of the murderer, and his
offerings are abhorrent to God.
The Jews cultivated a spirit of retaliation. In their hatred of the Romans
they gave utterance to hard denunciations, and pleased the wicked one by
manifesting his attributes. Thus they were training themselves to do the
terrible deeds to which he led them on. In the religious life of the
Pharisees there was nothing to recommend piety to the Gentiles. Jesus bade
them not to deceive themselves with the thought that they could in heart
rise up against their oppressors, and cherish the longing to avenge their
wrongs.
It is true there is an indignation that is justifiable, even in the
followers of Christ. When they see that God is dishonored, and His service
brought into disrepute, when they see the innocent oppressed, a righteous
indignation stirs the soul. Such anger, born of sensitive morals, is not a
sin. But those who at any supposed provocation feel at liberty to indulge
anger or resentment are opening the heart to Satan. Bitterness and animosity
must be banished from the soul if we would be in harmony with heaven.
The Saviour goes farther than this. He says, "If thou bring thy gift to the
altar, and there rememberest that thy brother hath aught against thee; leave
there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way; first be reconciled to thy
brother, and then come and offer thy gift." Many are zealous in religious
services, while between them and their brethren are unhappy differences
which they might reconcile. God requires them to do all in their power to
restore harmony. Until they do this, He cannot accept their services. The
Christian's duty in this matter is clearly pointed out.
God pours His blessings upon all. "He maketh His sun to rise on the evil and
on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust." He is "kind
unto the unthankful and to the evil." Luke 6:35. He bids us to be like Him.
"Bless them that curse you," said Jesus; "do good to them that hate you, . .
. that ye may be the children of your Father which is in heaven." These are
the principles of the law, and they are the wellsprings of life.
God's ideal for His children is higher than the highest human thought can
reach. "Be ye therefore perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is
perfect." This command is a promise. The plan of redemption contemplates our
complete recovery from the power of Satan. Christ always separates the
contrite soul from sin. He came to destroy the works of the devil, and He
has made provision that the Holy Spirit shall be imparted to every repentant
soul, to keep him from sinning.
The tempter's agency is not to be accounted an excuse for one wrong act.
Satan is jubilant when he hears the professed followers of Christ making
excuses for their deformity of character. It is these excuses that lead to
sin. There is no excuse for sinning. A holy temper, a Christlike life, is
accessible to every repenting, believing child of God.
The ideal of Christian character is Christlikeness. As the Son of man was
perfect in His life, so His followers are to be perfect in their life. Jesus
was in all things made like unto His brethren. He became flesh, even as we
are. He was hungry and thirsty and weary. He was sustained by food and
refreshed by sleep. He shared the lot of man; yet He was the blameless Son
of God. He was God in the flesh. His character is to be ours. The Lord says
of those who believe in Him, "I will dwell in them, and walk in them; and I
will be their God, and they shall be My people." 2 Cor. 6:16.
Christ is the ladder that Jacob saw, the base resting on the earth, and the
topmost round reaching to the gate of heaven, to the very threshold of
glory. If that ladder had failed by a single step of reaching the earth, we
should have been lost. But Christ reaches us where we are. He took our
nature and overcame, that we through taking His nature might overcome. Made
"in the likeness of sinful flesh" (Rom. 8:3), He lived a sinless life. Now
by His divinity He lays hold upon the throne of heaven, while by His
humanity He reaches us. He bids us by faith in Him attain to the glory of
the character of God. Therefore are we to be perfect, even as our "Father
which is in heaven is perfect."
Jesus had shown in what righteousness consists, and had pointed to God as
its source. Now He turned to practical duties. In almsgiving, in prayer, in
fasting, He said, let nothing be done to attract attention or win praise to
self. Give in sincerity, for the benefit of the suffering poor. In prayer,
let the soul commune with God. In fasting, go not with the head bowed down,
and heart filled with thoughts of self. The heart of the Pharisee is a
barren and profitless soil, in which no seeds of divine life can flourish.
It is he who yields himself most unreservedly to God that will render Him
the most acceptable service. For through fellowship with God men become
workers together with Him in presenting His character in humanity.
The service rendered in sincerity of heart has great recompense. "Thy Father
which seeth in secret Himself shall reward thee openly." By the life we live
through the grace of Christ the character is formed. The original loveliness
begins to be restored to the soul. The attributes of the character of Christ
are imparted, and the image of the Divine begins to shine forth. The faces
of men and women who walk and work with God express the peace of heaven.
They are surrounded with the atmosphere of heaven. For these souls the
kingdom of God has begun. They have Christ's joy, the joy of being a
blessing to humanity. They have the honor of being accepted for the Master's
use; they are trusted to do His work in His name.
"No man can serve two masters." We cannot serve God with a divided heart.
Bible religion is not one influence among many others; its influence is to
be supreme, pervading and controlling every other. It is not to be like a
dash of color brushed here and there upon the canvas, but it is to pervade
the whole life, as if the canvas were dipped into the color, until every
thread of the fabric were dyed a deep, unfading hue.
"If therefore thine eye be single, thy whole body shall be full of light.
But if thine eye be evil, thy whole body shall be full of darkness." Purity
and steadfastness of purpose are the conditions of receiving light from God.
He who desires to know the truth must be willing to accept all that it
reveals. He can make no compromise with error. To be wavering and
halfhearted in allegiance to truth is to choose the darkness of error and
satanic delusion.
Worldly policy and the undeviating principles of righteousness do not blend
into each other imperceptibly, like the colors of the rainbow. Between the
two a broad, clear line is drawn by the eternal God. The likeness of Christ
stands out as distinct from that of Satan as midday in contrast with
midnight. And only those who live the life of Christ are His co-workers. If
one sin is cherished in the soul, or one wrong practice retained in the
life, the whole being is contaminated. The man becomes an instrument of
unrighteousness.
All who have chosen God's service are to rest in His care. Christ pointed to
the birds flying in the heavens, to the flowers of the field, and bade His
hearers consider these objects of God's creation. "Are not ye of much more
value than they?" He said. Matt. 6:26, R. V. The measure of divine attention
bestowed on any object is proportionate to its rank in the scale of being.
The little brown sparrow is watched over by Providence. The flowers of the
field, the grass that carpets the earth, share the notice and care of our
heavenly Father. The great Master Artist has taken thought for the lilies,
making them so beautiful that they outshine the glory of Solomon. How much
more does He care for man, who is the image and glory of God. He longs to
see His children reveal a character after His similitude. As the sunbeam
imparts to the flowers their varied and delicate tints, so does God impart
to the soul the beauty of His own character.
All who choose Christ's kingdom of love and righteousness and peace, making
its interest paramount to all other, are linked to the world above, and
every blessing needed for this life is theirs. In the book of God's
providence, the volume of life, we are each given a page. That page contains
every particular of our history; even the hairs of the head are numbered.
God's children are never absent from His mind.
"Be not therefore anxious for the morrow." Matt. 6:34, R. V. We are to
follow Christ day by day. God does not bestow help for tomorrow. He does not
give His children all the directions for their life journey at once, lest
they should become confused. He tells them just as much as they can remember
and perform. The strength and wisdom imparted are for the present emergency.
"If any of you lack wisdom,"--for today,--"let him ask of God, that giveth
to all men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him." James
1:5.
"Judge not, that ye be not judged." Do not think yourself better than other
men, and set yourself up as their judge. Since you cannot discern motive,
you are incapable of judging another. In criticizing him, you are passing
sentence upon yourself; for you show that you are a participant with Satan,
the accuser of the brethren. The Lord says, "Examine yourselves, whether ye
be in the faith; prove your own selves." This is our work. "If we would
judge ourselves, we should not be judged." 2 Cor. 13:5; 1 Cor. 11:31.
The good tree will produce good fruit. If the fruit is unpalatable and
worthless, the tree is evil. So the fruit borne in the life testifies as to
the condition of the heart and the excellence of the character. Good works
can never purchase salvation, but they are an evidence of the faith that
acts by love and purifies the soul. And though the eternal reward is not
bestowed because of our merit, yet it will be in proportion to the work that
has been done through the grace of Christ.
Thus Christ set forth the principles of His kingdom, and showed them to be
the great rule of life. To impress the lesson He adds an illustration. It is
not enough, He says, for you to hear My words. By obedience you must make
them the foundation of your character. Self is but shifting sand. If you
build upon human theories and inventions, your house will fall. By the winds
of temptation, the tempests of trial, it will be swept away. But these
principles that I have given will endure. Receive Me; build on My words.
"Everyone therefore which heareth these words of Mine, and doeth them, shall
be likened unto a wise man, which built his house upon the rock: and the
rain descended, and the floods came, and the winds blew, and beat upon that
house; and it fell not: for it was founded upon the rock." Matt. 7:24, 25,
R.V.
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