Laws from Heaven for Life on Earth.

 

 

           ILLUSTRATIONS

 

                                 OF THE

 

        BOOK OF PROVERBS.

 

 

                                           BY THE

                            REV. WILLIAM ARNOT,

                ST. PETER'S FREE CLIMB, GLASGOW.

 

 

                                       First Series.

                                           Vol. 1.

 

 

 

                                    LONDON;

     T. NELSON AND SONS, PATERNOSTER ROW;

               EDINBURGH; AND NEW YORK.

                                 MDCCCLXIII.

 


 

 

            TO THE READER.

 

THESE illustrations of the Proverbs are not critical, con-

tinuous, exhaustive. The comments, in imitation of the

text, are intended to be brief, practical, miscellaneous,

isolated. The reader may, however, perceive a principle

of unity running through the whole, if he takes his stand

at the outset on the writer's view point—a desire to

lay the Christian System along the surface of common

life, without removing it from its foundations in the

doctrines of Grace. The authority of the instructions 

must be divine: the form transparently human. Al-

though the lessons should, with a pliant familiarity, lay

themselves along the line of men's thoughts and actions,

they will work no deliverance, unless redeeming love be

everywhere the power to press them in. On the other

hand, although evangelical doctrine be consistently main-

tained throughout, the teaching will come short of its

purpose unless it go right into every crevice of a corrupt

heart, and perseveringly double every turn of a crooked

path. Without "the love wherewith He loved us" as

our motive power, we cannot reach for healing any of the

deeper ailments of the world: but having such a power

within our reach, we should not leave it dangling in the

air; we should bring it down, and make it bear on every

 


iv                        TO THE READER.

 

sorrow that afflicts, and every sin that defiles humanity.

The two extremes to be avoided are, abstract unpractical

speculation, and shallow, powerless, heathen morality; the

one a soul without a body, the other a body without a

soul—the one a ghost, the other a carcass. The aim is

to be doctrinal without losing our hold of earth, and

practical without losing our hold of heaven.

            Most certain it is that if the Church at any period, or

any portion of the Church, has fallen into either of these

extremes, it has been her own fault; for the Bible, her

standard, is clear from both imputations. Christ is its

subject and its substance. His word is like Himself.

It is of heaven, but it lays itself closely around the life

of men. Such is the Bible; and such, in their own

place and measure, should our expositions of it be.

            Had our object been a critical exposition of the Book,

it would have been our duty to devote the larger share of

our attention to the more difficult parts. But our aim from

first to last has been more to apply the obvious than to

elucidate the obscure, and the selection of texts has been

determined accordingly. As there is diversity of gifts,

there should be division of labour. While scientific

inquirers re-examine the joints of the machine, and

demonstrate anew the principles of its construction, it

may not be amiss that a workman should set the machine

a-going, and try its effects on the affairs of life.

 

                                                                                  W. A.

 


               CONTENTS.

 

                                                                                                                                    Page

I.          THE PREACHER                                                                                          9

II.         THE BOOK—PROVERBS                                                              15

III.       THE ROOT OF KNOWLEDGE                                                                   19

IV.       THE FAMILY                                                                                                25

V.        FILIAL LOVE A BLOSSOM OF BEAUTY                                                30

VI.       THE FOE AND THE FIGHT                                                                        34

VII.      FILTHY LUCRE                                                                                            57

VIII.     THE CRY OF WISDOM                                                                               64

IX.       A REVIVAL                                                                                                   72

X.        SOWING DISOBEDIENCE, REAPING JUDGMENT                              78

XI.       SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND                                                                     88

XII.      PERILS IN THE DEEP                                                                                 97

XIII.    THE MEANS OF SAFETY                                                               104

XIV.    A GOOD MEMORY                                                                         106

XV.     THE ART OF PRINTING                                                                             110

XVI.    TRUST                                                                                                            116

XVII.   THE HEALTH OF HOLINESS                                                                    121

XVIII. CAPITAL AND PROFIT                                                                               123

XIX.    A FATHERLY WORD ON FATHERLY CORRECTION              126

XX.     TREASURES FOR THE TAKING                                                   134

XXI.    GAINFUL MERCHANDISE                                                                        136

XXII.   LENGTH OF DAYS IN THE HAND OF WISDOM                                   139

XXIII. A PLEASANT PATH                                                                         142

 


vi                      CONTENTS.

                                                                                                                                    Page

XXIV.     WISDOM MAKING AND MANAGING WORLDS                                  144

XXV.      CONFIDENCE IN GOD THE TRUE SAFEGUARD FROM           

               TEMPTATION                                                                                            147

XXVI.    THE RIGHT THING DONE AT THE RIGHT TIME                                   152

XXVII.   THE CURSE AND THE BLESSING UPON THE HOUSE             158

XXVIII.  PRECEPT AND EXAMPLE                                                                        161

XXIX.    HOLD FAST                                                                                                163

XXX.      THE PATH OP THE JUST                                                                           166

XXXI.    THE FOUNTAIN AND ITS STREAM                                                        171

XXXII.   FAMILY JOYS                                                                                            179

XXXIII.  THE METHOD OP PROVIDENCE FOR RESTRAINING EVIL   185

XXXIV.  SEVEN HATEFUL THINGS                                                                       188

XXXV.    MOTHER'S LAW                                                                                       190

XXXVI.   THE WORTH Or WISDOM                                                                       197

XX XVII. HATE EVIL                                                                                                200

XXXVIII. RANK AND RICHES                                                                                202

XXXIX.   THE REDEEMER ANTICIPATING REDEMPTION                                 205

XL.           THE MARRIAGE SUPPER FOR THE KING'S SON                               200

XLI.          REPROOF                                                                                                 213

XLII.         THE TALENT AND ITS PRODUCT                                                         219

XLIII.      THE PLEASURES OF SIN                                                                        221

XLIV.       THE PLACE AND POWER OF A SON                                                   229

XLV.        DILIGENT IN BUSINESS                                                             234

XLVI.      POSTHUMOUS FAME                                                                             236

XLVII.     THE WISE TAKE ADVICE: FOOLS ONLY GIVE IT                              238

XLVIII.    THE CENTRE OF GRAVITY                                                                    240

XLIX.      THE WELL OF LIFE                                                                                 242

L.              EXPERIENCE KEPT FOR USE                                                                245

LL             THE MONEY POWER                                                                              247

LII.           THE LIPS AND TONGUE                                                                        251

LIII.          THE BLESSING OF THE LORD MAKETH RICH                                   254

LIV.          A FOOL'S SPORT                                                                                     261


                    CONTENTS.                                     vii

 

                                                                                                                        Page

LV.        FILM REALIZED, AND HOPES FULFILLED                                            263

LVI.       THE PAINING WHIRLWIND AND THE SURE FOUNDATION 273

LVII.      THE GREATNESS OF LITTLE THINGS                                                     274

LVIII.    HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY                                                  279

LIX.       ASSORTED PAIRS                                                                                      285

LX.        DIPLOMACY                                                                                               288

LXI.       THE DESTROYER OF A NEIGHBOUR                                                      290

LXII.      A TALEBEARER                                                                                          292

LVIII.    DEBTS AND SURETIES                                                                              294

LXIV.   VIRTUE ITS OWN REWARD                                                                      303

LXV.     EVERY SEED BEARS FRUIT OF ITS OWN KIND                                   305

LXVI.   GOD'S PEOPLE ARE GOD'S DELIGHT                                                      307

LXVII.  A JEWEL ILL SET                                                                                         308

LXVIII. THE DESIRE OF THE RIGHTEOUS                                                            312

LXIX.   SCATTERING TO KEEP, AND KEEPING TO SCATTER             315

LXX.     THE WATERER IS WATERED                                                                    319

LXXI.    RAISING THE MARKET—THE PRACTICE AND THE

               PENALTY                                                                                                    323

LXXII.   THE TREE AND ITS BRANCH                                                                   327

LXXIII.  THE WISDOM OF WINNING SOULS                                                      333

LXXIV.  A BITTER BUT HEALTHFUL MORSEL                                        336

LXXV.   A HUSBAND'S CROWN                                                                            340

LXXVI.  THE TENDER MERCIES OP THE WICKED                                             343

LXXVII.  LIES, THE SNARE THAT LIARS ARE CAUGHT IN                               345

LXXVIII. HOPE DEFERRED                                                                                     347

LXXIX.   GOD'S WORD THE PRESERVER OF NATIONS                                    350

LXXX.     THE HARD WAY                                                                          352

LXXXI.    THE CHOICE OF COMPANIONS                                                          355

LXXXII.   THE FATHER WHO HATES HIS SON                                                    359

LX XXIII. SECULARISM                                                                                          367

LXXXIV.  FLIGHT, THE SAFETY OF THE WEAK                                                 373

LXXXV.   SYMPATHY                                                                                              375


viii                        CONTENTS.

 

                                                                                                                        Page.

LXXXVI.         A MAN IS RESPONSIBLE FOR HIS BELIEF                      378

LXXXVII.       THE BACKSLIDER                                                                384

LXXXVIII.      THE TRUSTFUL AND THE TRUTHFUL                              388

LXXXIX.         THE FOOL'S CONFIDENCE                                                392

XC.                  WITNESS                                                                               396

XCI.                THE PLACE OF REFUGE                                                      401

XCII.               ENVY, THE DISEASE AND THE CURE                              406

XCIII.              THE MERCIFUL                                                                    410

XCIV.              THE TWO DEPARTURES—THE HOPEFUL AND THE

                        HOPELESS                                                                             417

XCV.               THE TRUTH IN LOVE                                                           424

 


 

 

 

              ILLUSTRATIONS

                     OF THE

          BOOK OF PROVERBS.

 

                                              I.       

                                THE PREACHER

 

"The Proverbs of Solomon the son of David, king of Israel."—i. 1.

 

GOD'S word is like God's world: it combines unity of

pervading principle, with endless variety in detail. The

whole Bible, considered as one book, stands entirely apart

from all other writings; and yet every several portion of

it is distinguished from every other portion, as much as

one merely human writing is distinguished from another.

This combination results from the manner in which it has

pleased God to make known his will. One Divine Spirit

inspires; hence the unity of the whole. Men of diverse

age, taste, and attainments write; hence the diversity of

the parts. Although the books are written by Moses,

David, Solomon, they are all alike the word of God:

therefore they exhibit a complete separation from all

other writings, and a perfect consistency among them-

selves. Again, although they are all one as being the

word of God, they are as much the genuine product of

different human minds, as the ordinary writings of men

are the work of their authors: therefore there is in matter

 


10                    THE PREACHER.

 

and manner, an unconstrained, natural, life-like diversity.

It was God who "spake unto the fathers," but it was "by

the prophets" that he spoke; not by their tongues only,

but their understandings, memories, tastes; in short, all

that constituted the men. There is as much individuality

in the books of Scripture as in any other books. There

is as much of Moses shining through the Pentateuch, as

of Gibbon in the Decline and Fall. As are the articulat-

ing lips to the soul whose thoughts they utter, so are the

prophets to the Holy Spirit, whose mind they reveal.

            Every writer was chosen by God, as well as every word.

He had a purpose to serve by the disposition, the acquire-

ments, and the experience of each. The education of

Moses as one of the royal race of Egypt was a qualifica-

tion necessary to the leader of the exodus, and the writer

of the Pentateuch. The experience of David, with its

successive stages, like geologic strata, touching each other

in abrupt contrast, first as a shepherd youth, then as a

fugitive warrior, and last as a victorious king, was a quali-

fication indispensable to the sweet singer of Israel. God

needed a human spirit as a mould to cast consolation in,

for every kindred in every age. He chose one whose ex-

perience was a compound of meekness and might, of deep

distress and jubilant victory. These, when purged of

their dross, and fused into one by the Spirit's baptism of

fire, came forth an amalgam of sacred psalmody, which

the whole church militant have been singing ever since,

and "have not yet sung dry."

            Solomon did not, like David, pass his youth in pastoral

simplicity, and his early manhood under cruel persecution.

 


                          THE PREACHER.                                11

 

Solomon could not have written the twenty-third psalm-

"The Lord is my Shepherd;" nor the fifty-seventh—A

psalm of David when be fled from Saul in the cave. His

experience would never have suggested the plaintive strains

of the ninetieth psalm—A prayer of Moses the man of

God—"Lord, thou hast been our dwelling-place." But,

on the other hand, Solomon went through a peculiar ex-

perience of his own, and God, who in nature gives sweet

fruit to men through the root sap of a sour crab, when a

new nature has been engrafted on the upper stem, did not

disdain to bring forth fruits of righteousness through

those parts of the king's experience that cleaved most

closely to the dust. None of all the prophets could

have written the Proverbs or the Preacher; for God is

not wont, even in his miraculous interpositions, to make

a fig-tree bear olive berries, or a vine figs: every crea-

ture acts after its kind. When Solomon delineated

the eager efforts of men in search of happiness, and

the disappointment which ensued, he could say, like

Bunyan, of that fierce and fruitless war, "I was there."

The heights of human prosperity he had reached: the

paths of human learning he had trodden, farther than any

of his day: the pleasures of wealth and power and pomp

he had tasted, in all their variety. No spring of earthly

delight could be named, of whose waters he had not deeply

drunk. This is the man whom God has chosen as the

schoolmaster to teach us the vanity of the world when it

is made the portion of a soul, and He hath done all things

well. The man who has drained the cup of pleasure can

best tell the taste of its dregs.

 


12                       THE PREACHER.

 

            The choice of Solomon as one of the writers of the

Bible, at first sight startles, but on deeper study instructs.

We would have expected a man of more exemplary life

a man of uniform holiness It is certain that in the main;

the vessels which the Spirit used were sanctified vessels.

"Holy men of old spoke as they were moved by the Holy

Ghost." But as they were all corrupt at first, so there

were diversities in the operation whereby they were called

and qualified for their work. There were diversities in

the times, and degrees of their sanctification. Some were

carried so near perfection in the body, that human eyes

could no longer discern spot or wrinkle; in others the

principle of grace was so largely overlaid with earthli-

ness, that observers were left in doubt whether they had

been turned to the Lord's side at all. But the diversity

in all its extent is like the other ways of God; and He

knows how to make either extreme fall into its place in

the concert of his praise. He who made Saul an apostle,

did not disdain to use Solomon as a prophet. Very

diverse were the two men, and very diverse their life

course; yet in one thing they are perfectly alike. To-

gether in glory now they know themselveselves to have been

only sinners, and agree in ascribing all their salvation to

the mercy of God.

            Moreover, although good men wrote the Bible, our

faith in the Bible does not rest on the goodness of the

men who wrote it The fatal facility with which men

glide into the worship of men may suggest another reason

why some of the channels chosen for conveying the mind

of God were marred by glaring deficiencies. Among

 


                             THE PREACHER.                              13

 

many earthen vessels, in various measures purged of their

filthiness, may not the Divine Administrator in wisdom

select for actual use some of the least pure, in order by

that grosser argument to force into grosser minds the con-

viction that the excellency of the power is all of God?

If all the writers of the Bible had been perfect in holiness

—if no stain of sin could be traced on their character,

no error noted in their life, it is certain that the Bible

would not have served all the purposes which it now serves

among men. It would have been God-like indeed in

matter and in mould, but it would not have reached down

to the low estate of man—it would not have penetrated

to the sores of a human heart. For engraving the life

lessons of his word, our Father uses only diamonds: but

in every diamond there is a flaw, in some a greater and

in some a less; and who shall dare to dictate to the Omni-

scient the measure of defect that blinds Him to fling the

instrument as a useless thing away?

            When God would leave on my mind in youth the

lesson that the pleasures of sin are barbed arrows, he uses

that same Solomon as the die to indent it in. I mark

the wisdom of the choice. I get and keep the lesson, but

the homage of my soul goes to God who gave it, and not

to Solomon, the instrument through which it came. God

can make man's wrath to praise him, and their vanity too.

He can make the clouds bear some benefits to the earth,

which the sun cannot bestow. He can make brine serve

some purposes in nature which sweet water could not

fulfil. So, practical lessons on some subjects come better

through the heart and lips of the weary repentant king,

 


14                     THE PREACHER.

 

than through a man who had tasted fewer pleasures, and

led a more even life.

            Two principles cover the whole case. "All things are

of God;" and "All things are for your sakes." We can

never be sufficiently familiar with these two:  (1.) The

universality of God's government; and (2.) The special

use for his own people to which he turns every person

and every thing. All Solomon's wisdom, and power,

and glory and pleasure were an elaborate writing by the

finger of God, containing a needful lesson to his children.

The wisdom which we are invited to hear is Divine wis-

dom; the complicated life-experience of Solomon is the

machinery of articulation employed to convey it to the

ears of men. In casting some of the separate letters, the

king may have been seeking only his own pleasure, yet

the whole, when cast, are set by the Spirit so that they

give forth an important page of the word of truth.

            The thought recurs, that the king of Jerusalem was not

from his antecedents, qualified to sit in the chair of autho-

rity and teach morality to mankind. No, he was not:

and perhaps on that very account the morality which he

taught is all the more impressive. Here is a marvel;

NOT A LINE OF SOLOMON'S WRITINGS TENDS TO PALLIATE

SOLOMON'S SINS. How do you account for this? The

errors and follies were his own; they were evil. But out

of them the All-wise has brought good. The glaring im-

perfections of the man's life have been used as a dark

ground to set off the lustre of that pure righteousness

which the Spirit has spoken by his lips.

 


                   THE BOOK—PROVERBS.             15

 

 

 

                                        II.

 

                    THE BOOK—PROVERBS.

 

"To understand a proverb, and the interpretation;

  the words of the wise, and their dark sayings."—i. 6.

 

 

IT is safer and better to assume that all men know what

a proverb is, than to attempt a logical definition of it.

As a general rule, the things that are substantially best

known are hardest to define.

            Proverbs are very abundant in all languages, and

among all peoples. Many of them, though they seem

fresh and full of sap on our lips to-day, have descended

to us from the remotest antiquity. They deal with all

manner of subjects, but chiefly with the broadest features

of common life. The peculiar charm and power of the

proverb are due to a combination of many elements.

Among others are the condensed antithetic form of

expression and the mingled plainness and darkness of

the meaning. Often there is something to startle at first;

and yet, on closer inspection, that which seemed paradox,

turns out to be only intenser truth. Like those concen-

trated essences of food, which are so much used by tra-

vellers in our day, the proverb may not present to the

eye the appearance of the wisdom that it was originally

made of; but a great quantity of the raw material has

been used up in making one, and that one, when skil-

fully dissolved, will spread out to its original dimensions.

 


16                  THE BOOK—PROVERBS.

 

Much matter is pressed into little room, that it may

keep, and carry. Wisdom, in this portable form, acts an

important part in human life. The character of a people

gives shape to their proverbs; and again, the proverbs

go to mould the character of the people who use them.

These well worn words are precious, as being real gold,

and convenient, as being a portable, stamped, and recog-

nised currency.

            As a general rule, proverbs spring from the people at

large, as herbage springs spontaneously from the soil, and

the parentage of the individual remains for ever unknown.

Very few proverbs are attached, even traditionally, to the

name of any man as their author. From time to time

collections of these products are made, and catalogued

by the curious; and the stock is continually increasing

as the active life of a nation gives them off. In other

cases, books of proverbs have an opposite origin. Persons

who appreciate the proverbial form cast their own thoughts

in that mould, and so make a book of sentences, which

are proverbs in their nature, although not, in point of

fact, generated by casual contact of mind with mind in

miscellaneous human life. It is altogether probable that,

as to its construction, the Book of Proverbs partook of

both kinds. It is probable that Solomon gathered and

recast many proverbs which had sprung from human ex-

perience in preceding ages, and were floating past him on

the tide of time; and that he also elaborated many new

ones from the material of his own experience. Towards

the close of the book, indeed, are preserved some of

Solomon's own sayings, that seem to have fallen from

 


                  THE BOOK—PROVERBS.                  17

 

his lips in later life, and been gathered by other

hands.

            Even in this one book the proverb appears under con-

siderable diversity of form. Both in the beginning and

towards the close, occur arguments, more or less length-

ened, of continuous texture. But even in these the seve-

ral links of the connected chain are cast in the proverbial

mould; and the great central mass of the book consists

of brief sayings, more or less arranged, indeed, but almost

entirely isolated.

            Considering how great a place proverbs hold in human

language—how great a part they act in human life—it

was to be expected that the Spirit would use that instru-

ment, among others, in conveying the mind of God to

men. Proverbs, like hymns and histories, are both in

human life and in the Bible—in the Bible, because they

are in human life. If you wished to convey a message

to a number of countrymen in France, you would not

speak in Latin in order to display your own learning; you

would speak in French in order to accomplish your object.

God's will to man is communicated by means of instru-

ments which man already uses, and therefore understands.

            A greater than Solomon spoke in proverbs. He who

knew what was in man sometimes took up that instru-

ment, to probe therewith the secrets of the heart. Some

he gathered as they grew in nature, and others he created

by his word; but the old and the new alike are spirit

and life, when they drop from the lips of Jesus.

            Of the proverbs current in the world many are light, and

some are wicked. Those of this book are grave and good.

 


18               THE BOOK—PROVERBS.

 

God's words are pure, whether he speaks by the prophets

of old, or by his own Son in the latter day. "More

be desired are they than gold, yea, than much fine gold;

sweeter also than honey, and the honey-comb. Moreover,

by them is thy servant warned."—Psalm xix. 10, 11.

The book from which the following studies are selected

is peculiarly rich in "warnings," and the age in which

we live peculiarly needs them. "Speak, Lord, for thy

servant heareth."

 


                    THE ROOT OF KNOWLEDGE.               19

 

 

                                          III.

 

                     THE ROOT OF KNOWLEDGE.

 

 

"The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge:

            but fools despise wisdom and instruction."—i. 7.

 

 

THE royal preacher begins his sermon at the beginning.

He intends to discourse largely of knowledge and wisdom

in all their aspects, and he lays his foundation deep in

"the fear of the Lord." This brief announcement con-

tains the germ of a fair-reaching philosophy. Already it

marks the book divine. The heathen of those days pos-

sessed no such doctrines Solomon had access to a

Teacher who was not known in their schools

            "The fear of the Lord" is an expression of frequent

occurrence throughout the Scriptures. It has various

shades of meaning, marked by the circumstances in which

it is found; but in the main it implies a right state of

heart toward God, as opposed to the alienation of an

unconverted man. Though the word is "fear," it does not

exclude a filial confidence, and a conscious peace. There

may be such love as shall cast all the torment out of the

fear, and yet leave full bodied, in a human heart, the

reverential awe which all, creatures owe to the Highest

One.  "There is forgiveness with thee, that thou mayest be

feared." "Oh fear the Lord, ye his saints; for there is

no want to them that fear him!" "I am the Lord thy

God;" behold the ground of submissive reverence:

 


20             THE ROOT OF KNOWLEDGE

 

"which brought thee up from the land of Egypt;" be-

hold the source of confiding love. What God is inspires

awe; what God has done for his people commands affec-

tion. See here the centrifugal and centripetal forces of

the moral world, holding the creature reverently distant

from the Creator, yet compassing the child about with

everlasting love, to keep him near a Father in heaven.

The whole of this complicated and reciprocal relation is

often indicated in Scripture by the brief expression, "the

fear of God."

            "Knowledge" and "wisdom" are not distinguished

here; at least they are not contrasted. Both terms may

be employed to designate the same thing; but when they

are placed in antithesis, wisdom is the nobler of the two.

Knowledge may be possessed in large measure by one

who is destitute of wisdom, and who consequently does

no good by it, either to himself or others. A lucid defi-

nition of both, in their specific and distinct applications,

is embodied in a proverb of this book, xv. 2, "the tongue

of the wise useth knowledge aright" We take the two

terms of this text as in effect synonymous,—the best

knowledge wisely used for the highest ends.

            What is the relation which subsists between the fear

of the Lord and true wisdom? The one is the founda-

tion, the other the imposed superstructure; the one is

the sustaining root, the other the sustained branches;

the one is the living fountain, the other the issuing

stream.

            The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge:

the meaning is, he who does not reverentially trust in

 


               THE ROOT OF KNOWLEDGE.                   21

 

God, knows nothing yet as he ought to know. His know-

ledge is partial and distorted. Whatever acquisitions in

science he may attain, if his heart depart from the living

God, he abides an ignorant man. He who in his heart

says "no God," is a fool, however wise he may be in the

estimation of the world, and his own.

            But how does this judgment accord with facts?

Have not some Atheists, or at least Infidels, reached the

very highest attainments in various departments of know-

ledge? It is true that some men, who remain willingly

ignorant of God, who even blaspheme his name, and

despise his word, have learned many languages, have

acquired skill in the theory and application of mathema-

tics, have stored their memories with the facts of history,

and the maxims of politics—this is true, and these

branches of knowledge are not less precious because they

are possessed by men whose whom life turns round

on the pivot of one central and all-pervading error; but

after this concession, our position remains intact. These

men possess some fragments of the superstructure of

knowledge, but they have not the foundation; they

possess some of the branches, but they have missed the root.

            The knowledge of God—his character and plans, his

hatred of sin, his law of holiness, his way of mercy—

is more excellent than all that an unbelieving philo-

sopher has attained. If it be attainable, and if a Chris-

tian has reached it, then is a Christian peasant wiser

than the wisest who know not God. It is a knowledge

more deeply laid, more difficult of attainment, more fruitful,

and more comprehensive, than all that philosophers know.

 


22                THE ROOT OF KNOWLEDGE.

 

            What right has an unbelieving astronomer to despise a

Christian labourer as an ignorant man? Let them be

compared as to the point in question, the possession of

knowledge. Either is ignorant of the other's peculiar

department, but it is an error to suppose the astronomer's

department the higher of the two. The Christian knows

God; the astronomer knows certain of his material

works. The Christian knows moral, the astronomer phy-

sical laws. The subjects of the Christian's knowledge are

as real as the heavenly bodies. The knowledge is as dif-

ficult, and perhaps, in its higher degrees, as rare. It  

reaches further, it lasts longer, it produces greater results.

The astronomer knows the planet's path; but if that

planet should burst its bonds, and wander into dark-

ness, his knowledge will not avail to cast a line around

the prodigal and lead him home. He can mark the

degrees of divergence, and predict the period of total

loss, but after that he has no more that he can do. The

Christian's knowledge, after it has detected the time,

manner, and extent of the fallen spirit's aberration, avails

farther to lay a new bond unseen around him, soft, yet

strong, which will compel him to come in again to his

Father's house and his Father's bosom. The man who

knows that, as sin hath reigned unto death, even so grace

reigns through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus

Christ our Lord, possesses a deeper, more glorious, and

more potential knowledge, than the man who calculates

the courses of the planets, and predicts the period of the

comet's return.

            Men speak of the stupendous effects which knowledge,

 


                 THE BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE.                     23

 

in the department of mechanical philosophy, has produced

on the face of the world, and in the economy of human

life; but the permanence of these acquisitions depends on

the authority of moral laws in the consciences of men.

If there were no fear of God, there would be no reverence

for moral law in the bulk of mankind. If moral re-

straints are removed from the multitude, society reverts

to a savage state. Inventions in art, though once at-

tained, are again lost, when a community feed on venison,

and clothe themselves with skins. So, "the fear of the

Lord" is a fundamental necessity, on which high attain-

ments, even in material prosperity, absolutely depend.

True knowledge in the spiritual department, as to the

authority, the sanction, and the rule of morality, is a

greater thing than true knowledge in the material depart-

ment, for the moral encircles and controls the economic

in the affairs of men.

            The man whose knowledge begins and ends with

matter and its laws, has got a superstructure without a

foundation. In that learning the enduring relations of

man as an immortal have no place, and the fabric topples

over when the breath of life goes out. But this begin-

ning of knowledge, resting on the being and attributes of

God, and comprehending all the relations of the crea-

ture, is a foundation that cannot be shaken. On that

solid base more and more knowledge will be reared, high

as heaven, wide as the universe, lasting as eternity.

            The knowledge of God is the root of knowledge.

When branches are cut from a tree and laid on the

ground at a certain season, they retain for a time a por-

 


24               THE ROOT OF KNOWLEDGE.

 

tion of their sap. I have seen such branches, when the

spring came round, pushing forth buds like their neigh-

bours. But very soon the slender stock of sap was

exhausted, and as there was no connection with a root,

so as to procure a new supply, the buds withered away.

How unlike the buds that spring from the branches grow-

ing in the living root!  This natural life is like a severed

branch. The knowledge that springs from it is a bud

put forth by the moisture residing in itself.  When

life passes, it withers away. When a human soul is, by

the regeneration, "rooted in Him," the body's dissolution

does not nip its knowledge in the bud. Transplanted

into a more genial clime, that knowledge will flourish for

ever. Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, what it will

grow to.

 


                                  THE FAMILY.                       25.

 

 

                                            IV.

 

                                   THE FAMILY.

 

 

"My son, hear the instruction of thy father,

       and forsake not the law of thy mother."—i. 8.

 

THE first and great commandment is the fear of God, and

the, second, which is next to it, and like to it, is obedience

to parents. Wherever the root is planted, this is the first

fruit which it bears.

            The teaching of the Decalogue, and of the Proverbs,

though circumstantially different, is essentially the same.

On the one hand we have the legislator formally record-

ing a code of laws; on the other, the aged, prosperous,

and witty monarch collecting the best sayings that had

been current at his court in that Augustan age of Hebrew

literature. The cast of the writings corresponds with

the position of the men; yet there are evident marks

of the same spirit as the teacher, and the same truth

as the lesson. The ten commandments are divided into

two tables. The first lays the foundation of all duty

in our relation to God, and the second rears the super-

structure in the various offices of love between man and

his fellow. In the Decalogue the fear of God, lies deepest

as the root; and of the manifold duties which man owes

to man, the branch that springs forth first is filial love.

It is precisely the same here. The beginning of the com-

mandment is "Fear the Lord" and the earliest outcome is,

 


26                         THE FAMILY.

 

"My son, hear the instruction of thy father." This verse

of the Proverbs flows from the same well-spring that

had already given forth the fifth commandment.

            God honours his own ordinance, the family. He gives

parents rank next after himself.  Filial love stands near,

and leans on godliness.

            God is the author of the family constitution. He has

conceived the plan, and executed it. Its laws are stamped

in nature, and declared in the word. The equal num-

bers of the sexes born into the world, the feebleness of

childhood at first, and the returning frailty of age, are

so many features of the family institute left by the

Creator indented on his work. They intimate not ob-

scurely the marriage of one man with one woman, the

support of children by parents, and the support of decayed

parents by ther children grown. There are many such

laws deeply imprinted in nature; and in nature, too, a

terrible vengeance is stored up, which bursts with uner-

ring exactitude on the head of the transgressor.

            One of the wonders of that little world in the dwelling

is the adaptation by which all the powers of the elder

children are exerted for the protection of the youngest.

A boisterous and impulsive boy, able and willing to main

tain his rights by force of arms against a rival older than

himself, may be seen to check suddenly the embryo man-

hood that was spurting prematurely out, and put on a

mimic motherliness, the moment that the infant appears,

bent on a journey across the room, and tottering unsteady

by. A condescending look, and a winning word, and a

soft arm around,—all the miniature man is put forth in

 


                                  THE FAMILY.                               27

 

self-forgetting benevolence. How exquisitely contrived is

this machinery in nature, both for protecting the feeble

thing that receives the kindness, and softening the rude

hand that bestows it! There is fine material here for

parents to watch and work upon. The stem is soft, you

may train it; the growth is rapid, you must train it

now.

            In proportion as men have adopted and carried out the

ordinance in its purity, have the interests of society pros-

pered. All deviations are at once displeasing to God and

hurtful to men. The polygamy of Eastern peoples has made

the richest portions of the earth like a howling wilderness

The festering sores opened in the body of the community

by the licentiousness of individuals among ourselves, make

it evident, that if the course, which is now a too frequent

exception, should become the general rule, society itself

would soon waste away. It is chiefly by their effects in

deranging the order of families, that great manufactories

deteriorate a community. Though the socialist bodies,

being so sickly and diseased in constitution, have never

lived much beyond infancy amongst us; yet, as they are

founded on a reversal of the family law, their effects,

as far as they have produced effects, are misery and ruin.

The Romish priesthood, abjuring the divinely provided

companionship of the household, and adopting solitude, or

something worse, have ever been like a pin loose in the

circling machinery of society, tearing every portion as it

passes by. In the constitution of nature there is a self-

acting apparatus for punishing the transgression of the

family laws. The divine institute is hedged all round.

 


28                            THE FAMILY.

 

The prickles tear the flesh of those who are so foolish as

to kick against them.

            In practice, and for safety, keep families together as

long as it is possible. When the young must go forth

from a father's house, let a substitute be provided as

closely allied to the normal institution as the circum-

stances will admit. Let a sister be spared to live with

the youths, and extemporize an off-shoot family near the

great mart of business, with a dwelling that they may call

their own. The cutting, though severed from the stem,

being young and sapful, will readily strike root, and imi-

tate the parent. This failing, let a lodging be found in a

family where the youths will be treated as its members,  

participating at once in the enjoyments and restraints of

a home. When the boy must needs be broken off from

the parental stem, oh, throw him not an isolated atom on

the sea of life that welters in a huge metropolis. Nor

pen him up with a miscellaneous herd of a hundred men

in the upper flat of some huge mercantile establishment,

a teeming islet lapsed into barbarism, with the waters of

civilization circling all around. If you do not succeed

in getting the severed branch engrafted into some stock

that shall be an equivalent to the family, and so exercise

the natural affections, the natural affections checked, will

wither up within, or burst forth in wickedness. The

youth will be ruined himself, and the ruined youth will

be an element of corruption to fester in the heart of the

society that neglected him.

            Honour thy father and thy mother. This is the

pattern shown in the mount. The closer we keep to it,

 


                                THE FAMILY.                              29

 

the better will it be both for the individual and the com-

munity. God is wiser than men,

            Children obey your parents in the Lord, for this is

right, and all right things are profitable. To violate the

providential laws is both a crime and a blunder.

            Love to parents ranks next under reverence to God.

That first and highest commandment is like the earth's

allegiance to the sun by general law; and filial obedience

is like day and night, summer and winter, budding spring 

and ripening harvest, on the earth's surface. There could

be none of these sweet changes, and beneficent operations

of nature on our globe, if it were broken away from the

sun. So when a people burst the first and greatest bond

—when a people cast off the fear of God, the family rela-

tions, with all their beauty and benefit, disappear. We

may read this lesson in the fortunes of France. When

the nation threw off the first commandment, the

second went after it. When they repudiated the fear of

God, they could not retain conjugal fidelity, and filial love.

Hence the wreck and ruin of all the relations between

man and man. As well might they try to make a new

world, as to manage this one wanting the first and second,

the primary and subordinate moral laws of its Maker.

 


30          FILIAL LOVE A BLOSSOM OF BEAUTY.

 

 

                                                 V.

 

                FILIAL LOVE A BLOSSOM OF BEAUTY.

 

 

"For they shall be an ornament of grace unto thy head,

            and chains about thy neck."-i. 9.

 

IT seems an instinct of humanity to put ornaments upon

the person. It is greatly modified in its development

by circumstances, but it is certainly a uniform tend-

ency of our nature. It does not rank high among the

exercises of the human faculties, yet it is quite above

the reach of all inferior creatures. The propensity is fully

developed in tribes that lie lowest in the scale of human-

ity; yet no germ of it can be traced in species that form

the culminating point in the brute creation. By so many

and so various marks may be known the abrupt and

absolute separation between men who have fallen the

lowest, and other sentient beings that occupy the summit

of their scale.

            Ornaments on the fallen, like many other innocent

things, become the occasions of sin, but they are not in

their own nature evil. It is probable that the pleasure

which we derive from them springs originally from some

association with moral qualities. There is some connec-

tion between sensible beauty and moral goodness, although

the instances of deception are so numerous as to deprive

that connection of all value as a rule of life. To deck

with external beauty that which is morally corrupt within,

 


         FILIAL LOVE A BLOSSOM OF BEAUTY.             31

 

is a cheat which men practise on themselves and others;

but adornment of the person, modest in measure, and

adopted instinctively by an innate sense of propriety, is

conducive to virtue, and consistent with Scripture.

            Ornaments, however, are mentioned here not for their

own sakes, either to commend or forbid them, but as a

form of expression to convey emphatically the truth that

moral qualities, after all, are the true adornments of a

human being. All the graces of the Spirit are lovely;

but here the foremost of relative duties, a child's reveren-

tial regard for a parent, is recommended as an ornament

of surpassing beauty. Young men and young women,

put that ornament on your heads—twine that chain of

gold around your necks!  These jewels from heaven, set

deep within your souls, and glancing at every turn

through the transparency of an unaffected life, will do

more to make your persons attractive than all the

diamonds that ever decked a queen.

            The world and its history teem with types of heaven.

Beauty, and the love that fastens on it, are types, and

they have their antitypes on high. The ransomed Church

is the bride of the Lamb, and she is adorned for her hus-

band. When the adorning is complete, she is all glorious,

and the King greatly desires her beauty. When he pre-

sents unto himself a church without spot or wrinkle, or

any such thing, then shall he see of the travail of his

soul and be satisfied.

            Put on now, oh son! daughter! put on these beautiful

garments; love, obey, cherish, reverence your parents.

These are in God's sight of great price. They are valued

 


32        FILIAL LOVE A BLOSSOM OF BEAUTY.

 

not only by the spiritually minded disciples of Jesus, but

even by every man of sense around you. They are

thought becoming by all but fools. These ornaments will

not be out of date when time has run its course. They

will be worn on the golden streets of the New Jeru-

salem, when the fashion of this world shall have passed

away.

            Over against this beaming beauty, of similar shape and

size, a dark shadow stands. Whithersoever that comely

body turns, this ghastly spectre follows it. It is a daughter,

emerging into womanhood, with ruddy cheek and spark-

ling eye,—with beads on her neck and bracelets on her

arms,—who has so crushed a mother's heart, by con-

stantly trampling down its desires, that the disconsolate

mother never utters now the reproof which she knows

would be despised. Personal beauty, aided by costly orna-

ments, cannot make that creature gainly.  The deformity

within will make itself felt through all the finery.

The evil spirit that possesses the heart will glance from

the eye, and tinkle on the tongue, in spite of every effort

to act the angel. Every mind that retains in any mea-

sure a healthful moral tone will, in close contact with

such a character, infallibly be sensible of a discord. Felt

repulsive, she will be repelled. The disobedient daughter

will gravitate down to the companionship of those who,

having no sense of harmony, recoil not from a spirit out

of tune. She is miserable, and knows not what ails her.

She has broken that commandment which holds a pro-

mise in its band, and been thrown over on the barbs of

the counterpart curse. Those who see her impaled alive

 


    FILIAL LOVE A BLOSSOM OF BEAUTY.           33

 

there, should learn that the moral laws of God have

avenging sanctions, even in the powers of nature. God-

liness is profitable unto all things. The first command-

ment is fruitful, even in this life; and the second is like

it,—like it in its heavenly origin,—like it in its holy

character,—like it in its glad results. Honour thy father

and thy mother,—this is an ornament of solid gold.

Unlike the watering of superficial accomplishments, the

more rudely it is rubbed, the more brightly it glows.

 


34                  THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.

 

                                          VI.

 

                      THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.*

 

   "My son, if sinners entice thee, consent thou not."--i. 10.

 

THE verse, in brief compass and transparent terms, reveals

the foe and the fight. It is a Father's voice. It speaketh

unto us as unto children. With a kindness and wisdom

altogether paternal, it warns the youth of the Danger

that assails him, and suggests the method of Defence.

            A glance at the three preceding verses will fix the

character of the persons whom Solomon has here in his

eye. They are not the ignorant, the outcast, the profli-

gate. The stages over which he travels before he reaches

this warning, show that he addresses the well-conditioned

and hopeful portion of the community. In the seventh

verse we have "the beginning of wisdom" laid in the

fear of God; in the eighth, the earliest outcome from

that unfailing source, the obedience of children to their

parents; in the ninth, the beauty of this filial obedience,

as the most winsome ornament that the young can deck

themselves withal. We have wisdom presented first in

its sustaining root, next in its swelling buds, and last in

its opening bloom of beauty. The preacher fastens upon

persons who have had the fear of God early implanted in

their hearts, who have reverently obeyed their parents

______________________________________________

 

* This chapter, with some additions, is published separately, as an Address

to Young Men.

 


                 THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.                           35

 

during childhood, and who in youth have been observed

by others as adorning the doctrine of the Saviour. To these,

as they are passing out of youth into the responsibilities

of manhood, and from a father's house to the wide theatre

of the world, he addresses this plain and pungent exhorta-

tion, "My son, if sinners entice thee, consent thou not."

            The Danger is, "if sinners entice thee. "There are

enticers and enticements; the fowler and his snare.

            The enticers of youth may be divided into two great

classes, the internal and the external. There are a mul-

titude of evil thoughts in the little world within, and a

multitude of evil men in the great world without.

            The sinners that entice from within are the man's

own thoughts and desires. There is quite an army of

these sinners in a young man's breast. Thoughts have

wings. They pass and repass unobserved. They issue

forth from their home in the heart, and expatiate over

every forbidden field, and return like doves to their win-

dows, through the air, leaving no track of their path.

These thoughts become acquainted with sin. They are

accustomed to visit the haunts of vice without detection.

They revel unchecked in every unclean thing. They

open up the way, and prepare a trodden path on which

the man may follow. A gossamer thread is attached to

an arrow, and shot through the air unseen, over an im-

passable chasm. Fixed on the other side, it is sufficient

to draw over a cord; the cord draws over a rope; the

rope draws over a bridge, by which a highway is opened

for all corners. Thus is the gulf passed that lies between

the goodly character of a youth fresh from his father's

 


36               THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.

 

family, and the daring heights of iniquity on which vete-

ran libertines stand. The sober youth stands on the solid

platform of religious and moral worth. No one can think 

it possible that he should go over to the other side. But

from the brink on this side he darts over a thought which

makes itself fast to something on these forbidden regions.

The film no one saw, as it sped through the air; but it

has made good a lodgment in that kingdom of darkness,

and the deeds of wickedness will quickly follow when the

way has been prepared. "Out of the heart," said He

who knows it (Matt. xv. 19), "proceed evil thoughts."

Yes; that is what we expected; but what come out

next?  "Murders, adulteries, fornication, thefts, false

witness, blasphemies." A horrible gang! How quickly

they come on! How closely they follow their leaders!

Murders and adulteries march forth unblushingly; but

they follow in the wake of evil thoughts. Oh, if the

fountain were cleansed, the streams of life would be

pure! So thought David, when, in an agony of grief

despairing of his own efforts, he cried, "Create in me a

clean heart, O God!" This is the root of the evil, and

no cure will be thorough or lasting that does not reach

and remove it.

            The sinners that entice from without are fellow-men,

who, having gone astray themselves, are busy leading

others after them. The servants of Satan seem to be

diligent and successful. When a society, associated for

economical or benevolent purposes, desires to enlarge the

number of its members, a common method is to request

every one to bring in two others. Thus the membership

 


                    THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.                     37

 

is tripled by a single effort. This seems to be the prin-

ciple of administration adopted by the god of this world.

All his subjects are busy. "Ye are of your father the

devil, and the deeds of your father ye will do." The

deed most characteristic that the father of lies ever did,

was to lead others after him into sin. To entice into

sin is specifically "the deed " of the devil, and that deed

his children will instinctively do. An evil-doer has a

craving for company in his wickedness. He cannot enjoy

solitary crime. He is impelled to seek company, as a

thirsty man is impelled to seek water. It is his vocation

to draw others after him into sin. By a natural neces-

sity, the licentious recruit among the ranks of the virtu-

ous; the drunken among the ranks of the sober. An

enemy is amongst us: let the inexperienced beware.

            How great the danger that every youth incurs as he

issues forth from his parents' control, to take his place in

the race of life, and on the stage of time!  A dreadful

conspiracy is organized against him. It is designed and

directed by spiritual wickedness in high places; its agents

swarm unseen in his own heart, a legion of evil spirits,

as it were, possessing him already. Co-operating with

these intestine foes, are the whole host of evil-doers who

come in contact with him in the world. Young man,

this life is not the place to walk at ease in. If you slum-

ber there, the Philistines will be upon you. Though you

have a Samson's strength, they will put out your eyes,

and make you grind in meanest slavery, and triumph in

your misery and death.

            It is a power of nature that is taken and employed to

 


38            THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.

 

enslave men. The disposition in youth to go together is

a law of the human constitution. Men are gregarious.

The principle of association is implanted in their nature,

and is mighty, according to the direction it gets, for good

or evil. This great power generally becomes a ready

agency of ill. How faithfully a youth clings to a com-

panion who has obtained an influence over him! It

often happens that the more vigorous mind has been

imbued with wickedness. The very abandonment of that

leading spirit adds to his power. There is a reckless

hardihood attained, where the restraints of conscience are

unknown, that acts like a charm on softer minds. One

bold, bad spirit often holds many gentler natures, as it

were, in a mesmerised state. They are not masters of

themselves. They have been drawn into the vortex of

the more powerful orb: destitute of an independent will,

they flutter fascinated around him.

            The enticements, like the enticers, are manifold. As

addressed to well-educated, well-conducted youth, they

are always more or less disguised. The tempter always

flings over at least his ugliest side some shred of an angel's

garment. An enemy who desired to destroy you by your

own deed, would not lead you straight to a yawning pre-

cipice, and bid you cast yourself down. He would rather

lead you along a flowery winding path, until you should

insensibly be drawn into a spot which would give way

beneath you. Enticements to moral evil will generally

take that form. You will not be persuaded all at once

to plunge into deeds of darkness, knowing them to be

such. Few young men who have enjoyed a religious

 


                   THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.                     39

 

education come to a sudden stand, and at once turn their

back upon God and godliness. Most of those who do

fall, diverge at first by imperceptible degrees from the

path of righteousness. When it is intended, by a line of

rails, to conduct a train off the main trunk, and turn it

aside in another direction, the branch-line at first runs

parallel with the trunk. It goes alongside for a space in

the same direction; but when it has thus got fairly off,

then it turns more rapidly round, and bounds away at

right angles to its former course. As engineers avoid the

physical, so the tempters avoid the moral difficulty. An

abrupt turn is not attempted in either case. The object

is far more surely attained by a gently graduated diver-

gence. The importance of the ancient rule, Obsta prin-

cipiis (resist the beginnings), can never be over-rated.

The prize is great. Everything is at stake. Life is at

stake, —both the lives. Time and eternity, body and

soul; all that you have or hope, is to be lost or won.

Watch the beginnings of evil. "Watch and pray, that

ye enter not into temptation."

            We must name and briefly describe some of these

snares. Their name is Legion. They cannot be num-

bered. We shall uncover and expose two from among

the multitude of betrayers that lurk beside your path,

one peculiar to large towns, the other common to all

places.

            High in the list of dangerous enticements to the young

stands the theatre. We shall not waste time in a dispute

regarding the possibility of obtaining innocent and harm-

less dramatic entertainments. Enough for our present

 


40                THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.

 

purpose is the fact that there are none such. The idea,

wherewith some would fain excuse their sin, is a stage

managed in accordance with pure morals. It is a vain

imagination. Those who build and manage theatres do

so with the view of a good investment and profitable

employment. They know the tastes of their customers.

They must either conform to these tastes, or lose money

by opposing them. A theatre conducted on such prin-

ciples as would make it safe to the morals of youth

would not pay its proprietor. There are many enlight-

ened and benevolent citizens who rear and maintain

institutions which do not bear their own charges. They

submit to loss from zeal for the public good: but these

men never choose theatres as the instruments of elevating

the community.

            We scarcely know anything that would make us fear

more for a young man than to hear that he was in the

habit of attending the theatre. We know that the prac-

tice, besides its own proper evil, would not long stand

alone. A man cannot take fire into his bosom without

being burned.

            Does the impatient spirit of youth attempt to ward off

our word, by averring that we would smother the joys of

the young under the gloomy cloud of religion? Oh, for

a balance that could nicely discriminate the degrees of

happiness that each enjoys!  We would enter the com-

petition with the merriest frequenter of the stage. We

would set any sensible, God-fearing youth in competition

with him, and show that, even as to present gladness, the

theatre is a cheat and a lie. Once, on a Sabbath morn-

 


                     THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.                    41

 

ing, as the writer was going to church through the streets

of a large city, he saw, flaunting gaudily on the walls, the

stage placards of the preceding Saturday evening. In

large, lying letters, they announced, "A Cure for the

Heartache." Avaunt, deceivers! Ye often inoculate

your victims with the poison of that disease, but ye have

no power to take it away. Can the company of rakes

and courtezans minister consolation to a mind distressed?

Will they parody the griefs that wring a human heart?

Will they make sport of that deep-set disease that Jesus

died to heal? When a sinner's heart is aching, he must

bend his steps to another place—he must seek the skill

of another Physician! We have sometimes thought the

matter of attending the theatre, and similar scenes of

midnight merriment, might be profitably put in the form

of a dilemma, thus:—

            The unconverted (having other work before them) have

no time to be there.

            The converted (having other joys within them) have no

inclination.

            The customs of society encouraging the use of intoxi-

eating drinks constitute one of the most formidable dan-

gers to youth in the present day. All are aware that

drunkenness, in our country, is the most rampant vice.

How broad and deep is the wave whereby it is desolating

the land. It is not our part, at present, to register

an array of facts tending to show how many are held

helpless in its chain, and how deeply that chain cuts into

the life of the victim. The extent and the virulence of

the malady we shall not prove, but assume to be known.

 


42                 THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.

 

Our special business is to remind the young of the entice-

ments by which they are led into that horrible pit. It

is specially true of this potent enemy, that it makes its

approaches unsuspected and by slow degrees. We have

known many drunkards. We have witnessed scenes of

wretchedness which haunt our memory in shapes of terror

still!  We have seen a youth brought down by it from a

place of honour and hopefulness, laid upon his bed utter-

ing hideous groans, twisting himself, in mingled bodily

and mental agony, like a live eel upon a hook. We have

seen an old man, who knew that drink was making his

life-springs fail fast away, yet, in spite of threats and per-

suasion, going drunk to bed every night. We have heard

that man, when sober, say, "If there is one place of hell

worse than another, it must be mine, for I know the

right, and do the wrong;" and yet he drank himself to

death. We have seen a female, with a gentle air and a

tender frame, stand and tell that she had a batch of

demons within her, uttering loud voices, and declaring

that they had her surely bound over to hell. Reason had

fled. Drink had brought madness on. And yet, when-

ever the delirium abated, she returned to the drink again.

What need of cases? We have seen drunkenness in most

of its stages, and forms, and effects; but we never yet met

a drunkard who either became a drunkard all at once, or

who designed to become one. In every case, without ex-

ception, the dreadful demon vice has crept over the faculties

by slow degrees, and at last surprised the victim. The

sinners with whom he kept company did not entice him

to become a sot in a single night. They only invited him

 


                THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.                    43

 

to go into cheerful company. They suggested that reli-

gion, when rightly understood, did not forbid a merry

evening. He went; and the evening was merry. Strong

drink contributed to its merriment He was sober. He

had no intention of becoming a drunkard, either then or

on any subsequent occasion. A drunkard, however, he

now is. He is in the pit, and who shall pull him out!  

May God have mercy on the lost immortal, for he is

beyond all help of man!

            Let young men, as they value their souls, beware of

these Satan-invented customs prevalent in society, which

multiply the occasions of tasting strong drink. These

habits of sipping so frequently, on every occasion of joy

or sorrow, of idle ease or excessive toil, in freezing cold

or in scorching heat—these habits of a little now and a

little then, seem to have been invented with fiendish in-

genuity, to beget at last, in the greatest possible number,

that fiery thirst which, when once awakened, will merci-

lessly drag its subject down through a dishonoured life to

an early grave.

            Leaning on the bank of the majestic river a few miles

above Niagara, a little boat was floating on a summer

day. A mother plied her industry in a neighbouring

field. Her daughter, too young yet for useful labour,

strolled from her side to the water's edge. The child

leaped into the boat. It moved with her weight The

sensation was pleasant.  Softly the boat glided down on

the smooth bosom of the waters. More and more plea-

sant were the sensations of the child. The trees on the

shore were moving past in rows. The sunbeams glittered

 


44              THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.

 

on the water, scarcely broken by the ripple of the

stream. Softly and silently, but with ever-growing speed,

the tiny vessel shot down the river with its glad uncon-

scious freight. The mother raised her bended back and

looked. She saw her child carried quickly by the current

toward the cataract. She screamed, and ran. She

plunged into the water. She ventured far, but failed.

The boat is caught in the foaming rapids—it is carried

over the precipice!  The mother's treasure is crushed to

atoms, and mingles with the spray that curls above

Niagara. This is not a fiction; it is a fact reported in

the newspapers of the day. But, though itself a sub-  

stantive event, it serves also as a mirror to see the sha-

dow of others in. The image that you see glancing in

that glass is real. It is not single. It may be seen,

thousand upon thousand, stretching away in reduplicat-

ing rows. Pleasant to the unconscious youth are the

merry cup and the merry company. Lightly and happily

he glides along. After a little, the motion becomes un-

easy. It is jolting, jumbling, sickly. He would fain

escape now. Vain effort! He is rocked awhile in the

rapids, and then sucked into the abyss.

            If many thousands of our population were annually

lost in Niagara, the people, young and old, would con-

ceive and manifest an instinctive horror of the smooth

deceitful stream above it, which drew so many to their

doom. Why, oh, why do the young madly intrust them-

selves to a more deceitful current, that is drawing a

greater number to a more fearful death?

            Such, young men, are some of your dangers. You

 


                 THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.               45

 

should be ready to consider earnestly the means of

escape. Even this brief glance at the breadth of the

battle-field, and the array of the foe, should stir us up to

"prove" both the armour that we wear, and our aptitude

in using it. If the result of such survey should be a

sense of utter weakness in presence of the adversary, and

a cry from the helpless to the Lord God of hosts, it will

be well: our labour will not be lost.

            The Defence prescribed is, "consent thou not." How

may one successfully contend against these formidable

foes? Observe the form of the Scripture injunction, "If

sinners entice thee, consent thou not." It is a blunt, per-

emptory command. Your method of defence must be

different from the adversary's mode of attack. His

strength lies in making gradual approaches; yours in a

resistance, sudden, resolute, total.  For example, let a

man who is now a drunkard look back on his course.

He will find that he came into that state by impercep-

tible, unsuspected advances. But if ever he get out

of that state, it is not by slow degrees that he will

make his escape. It is not by lessening gradually the

quantity of strong drink till he wean himself from the

poison, and creep back from madness into himself

again. The enemy can play at the graduated system

better than he. His only safety lies in an abrupt, reso-

lute refusal.

            The same method that is best suited for recovery is

also best for prevention. It is not by partial compliance

and polite excuses that you are to repel enticements to

sin. This is an adversary with whom you are not obliged

 


46             THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.

 

to keep terms. Gather from Scripture the attitude you

should assume, and the language you should hold, "Get

thee behind me, Satan!"  "Save yourselves from this

untoward generation."  "Come out from among them,

and be ye separate, and I will receive you." Much

depends on the round, blunt refusal,—the unfaltering,

undiluted, dignified "No" of one who fears God more

than the sneer of fools. Many stumble from neglect of

this principle. They intend to refuse. They will not go

all the way into sin; but they will resist politely—they

will keep terms with the enticers. They are not wining

to let it be known that they are so timid about their own

integrity. It might not be reckoned manly. They are

like those who were disciples secretly for fear of the Jews.

Your enticers are honourable men, and they would be

hurt if you should meet their invitation by a prompt

negative, and give your reasons. Well: and is it not

enough for the disciple to be "as his Lord?"  He was

in the same position; "Master, in so saying thou con-

demnest us also." Out with it unreservedly, whenever

and wherever companions would wile you into evil. If

you begin to pare away the edges of your dedinature,

lest it should bear too hardly upon your tempters—if

you make excuses that are not the real reasons, in order

that under cover of them you may glide out of the way

without the disagreeable shock of a direct collision—you

may escape for that time; but some day your excuse will

fail, and your foot will be taken. If sinners entice thee,

consent not. The shortest answer is the best.

            They speak of consecrated places. We believe there

 


                  THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.                     47

 

are consecrated spots on this earth, and desecrated spots

too. That spot is consecrated in the eye of God and all

the good, where a condemned transgressor has been born

again, and taken into the number of God's children; that

spot is desecrated which has been the turning-point where

an immortal chose death rather than life. Many such

places there are, both in rural lanes and in the city's

thoroughfares. A youth is leaving his place of business

in the evening, and making his way homewards. At a

crossing he meets a knot of companions, who hail and

stop him. They are convening to a place of danger, and

deeds of sin. They invite him to go. He replies that

he is going home. They insist—they cannot go without

him. As he hangs back and hesitates, a leading spirit

of the club suddenly cries out he knows the reason:

"Our friend is going to set up for saint—he is going

home to pray." A loud laugh runs round the ring. The

youth is not prepared for this. He desired rather to go

home, but he is not yet a good soldier of Jesus Christ.

He cannot endure hardness. He gives way at this last

thrust, and goes with them. That night he parts with a

good conscience; and it is but another step to make ship-

wreck of his faith. That spot where evil spirits embodied

formed a circle round the youth, and won him—that spot

is desecrated. The blood of a soul is there. The writer

was standing one day lately among a crowd of visitors

under the dome of St. Paul's in London, gazing upward

in silence on its grandeur, when a gentleman touched him,

and requested him to remove his, foot; he then pointed

to a small cross mark made by a mason's chisel on the

 


48               THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.

 

marble pavement, informing the bystanders that a person

who cast himself from the dome aloft, had fallen there

and died. The group of living beings who had gathered

round our informant stood instinctively back and sighed.

The living were awed in spirit when they found them-

selves, standing on the spot that had been stained by the

blood of a self-murdered man.  Oh, if there were marks

made in the ground at every place stained by the suicide

of a soul, how thickly dotted the world would be with

the startling symbols—how fearfully and tremblingly

would the living thread their way between!

            How much of the low spirits, the moody mind, the

miserable incapacity, which abound, has been induced by

violation of God's laws—both the natural marked in our

constitution, and the moral revealed in the Bible!

            Appetites indulged grow strong. Beware lest the cub

which you fondle and feed, insensibly become the lion

which devours you.

            Friendship sealed by companionship in sin will not

last long. It is not worth having. It deserves not to

be known by that noble name. Friends that are glued

together by the slime of their lusts will be torn asunder

soon; and these foul exudations that seem now to bind

them into one, will become the fuel to a flame of mutual

hate, when first a spark of disagreement falls. They will

bite and devour one another. The degree of their privacy

to each other's wickedness will be the measure of their

dislike and distrust.

            After all, above all, including all, a reason why you

should not consent to go with sinners is, you thereby

 


                    THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.                     49

 

displease God, crucify Christ, grieve the Spirit, and cast

your own soul away.

            The means of resisting.—We address those who have

obtained a religious education. We do not speak here of

the first and best means, the word of God and prayer.

We assume that you know all that we could tell you

regarding these, and only offer some suggestions on subor-

dinate topics—such as refinement  of manners, profitable

study, benevolent effort, and improving company.

            Refinement of manners.—I know well that it is the

state of the heart within that decides the outward de-

meanour; but I know also that the outward demeanour

has a reflex influence back upon the heart. I do not say

that politeness will do as a substitute for religion; but

politeness is of use as the handmaid of religion. Indeed,

rude speech and manners are both the signs of moral evil

already existing, and the causes of increasing it. In

many districts of country, and among certain classes, rude

habits are the open inlets to great crimes. To cultivate

a refined and tasteful form of speech and manners would

become a shield to protect from many prevailing tempta-

tions. Christianity, with its living power in the heart,

will produce refinement in the manners; and outward

refinement will throw a shield round inward principle,

and keep it out of harm's way. We do not mean to

encourage show and fashion. The fop is most wretched

himself, and most repulsive to an onlooker; but we would

not avoid this extreme by leaping into the extreme of

vulgar rudeness. We would not like a youth to be

gilded; but neither would we like him to be rough and

 


50               THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.

 

foul with rust. We would have him polished that is

the medium. Some people are rusty: their harsh, un-

gainly manners eat out whatever is good in their own

character, and saw the very flesh of those who come near

them. Some people, again, are gilt: a very brilliant

exterior they present, but the first brush of hard usage

rubs off the gilding and reveals the base material beneath.

A third class are polished; the polish, indeed, is on the

surface, but it is a polish on the surface of solid worth;

and, in the multifarious crosses of human life, the more it

is rubbed the brighter it grows. This is the thing: not

a gilding to hide the baseness, but a polish to set off and

make more useful the real substantial excellence of the

inner man. Even when the material is sound to the

core, a polish on the surface both fits it for use and pro-

tects it from injury. If we have two youths equal as to

strength and soundness of Christian principle within, but

unequal as to habits of refinement in intercourse with

others, he who has outward polish added to inward worth

will be more useful and more safe.

            Profitable study.—Occupation goes far as a means of

safety. Add every day something to your store of know-

ledge. Study alternately books, and men, and things,

Mere book-reading is not enough, without reflection and

observation. Again, mere observation is not enough, if

you do not enlarge your resources by the treasures which

books contain. Both are best. You have many oppor-

tunities. You need not at any time be in want of a use-

ful book. From experience we are able to say that a

book perused intelligently, and with appetite in youth,

 


                   THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.                    51

 

will retain its hold better than information acquired at

a later day. The few books to which we had access

when we were young are fresh in our memory still, both

the good and the bad. The “Pilgrim's Progress” was

greedily devoured, and indelibly impressed; but so also

were other books in which a like genius glowed, without

a like baptism of holiness The young of this generation

may always, have a book to read, and may choose a book

that is worthy. Never let the machinery of your mind

become rusty. The way to keep it sweet is to keep it

going.

            We have two opposite experiences to look back upon.

In our retrospect are times of intellectual idleness, and

times of intellectual diligence. We remember precious

hours spent by a circle of youthful companions in silly,

useless conversation, —a sort of slang which was directly

vulgarizing, and indirectly demoralizing. We remember

too, times devoted to useful study. We mean the leisure

hours of a labour-day. The writer remembers the days

when, as the dinner-hour was announced, and all gladly

threw their work aside, he satisfied a fresh appetite

during the first five minutes, and stretched beneath

the shade of a tree, occupied the remaining fifty-five

reading the wars of Caesar, and the songs of Virgil, in

the language of ancient Rome. It made his afternoon's

toil lighter. It made his neighbours respect him; and

what is more, young men, it made him respect himself.  

In virtue of that employment, the enticers did not so

frequently assail him; and he was supplied with an

auxiliary means of defence. There are many branches of

 


52               THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.

 

useful knowledge, easily accessible, from which you may

choose, each according to his taste. We earnestly counsel

young men to scour up, and keep in use all the powers of

understanding and memory which God has given them.

It will sweeten your labour. It will be something softer

to lean on between your flesh and the iron instruments of

toil. How great the privileges of youth in this country,

and at the present day! How great is the waste, if the

museums, libraries, and public reading-rooms be not turned

to good account!

            Benevolent effort.—Every one, young and old, rich and

poor, should always be trying to do some good. There is

abundant opportunity, if there be the willing mind. Try

to live in the world so that you will be missed when you

leave it.

            More especially if any young man trusts in Jesus, and

loves souls, these affections will supply the impulse, and

keep him going. Providence on God's part, and prudence

on his, will soon shape out some useful work that he is

able to do. You have not the gifts and graces to conduct

with effect missionary work among the godless and

ignorant? Well, if you have not the ten talents, are you

willing, without the shame of pride, to labour away in

the laying out of one? Will you become librarian, and

distribute a few soiled books into more soiled hands in a

needy district, at a stated hour on a Saturday evening?

You are not clever enough to teach a school of destitute

children, nor rich enough to pay another ? Well, will

you be the whipper-in of the ragged parliament for a given

lane, and see that none of the honourable members be

 


                THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.                      53

 

absent from the lesson? If there were but the willing

mind, every volunteer could be put into harness, so that

his strength would not be overtasked on the one hand,

nor wasted on the other. Over on the enemy's side all

hands are called out, and every one is made to contribute

to the mass of evil. The children of light should be wiser

than they.

            Improving company.—It is of great practical import-

ance that young men have friends who will encourage and

direct them. Union is strength. In the battle of life

the want of a sympathizing companion may be the very

point on which an otherwise brave combatant may at last

give way. In this fight as well as others, "shoulder to

shoulder" is a most potent principle, both for the defence

and the onset. Here and there in history you may read

of some hero, who single-handed has foiled an army; but,

taking the common standard of humanity, even a brave

man is easily overpowered by numbers when he stands

alone. There are some points of analogy between that

warfare and ours. To most men the sympathy of tried

friends is a substantial support in the conflict with moral

evil. Right-principled, true-hearted companions are often

"the shields of the earth," which the all-ruling God has

at his disposal, and throws around a youth to protect him

from the fiery darts of the wicked one.

            But, though the society of the good is an instrument

of protection not to be despised, it is still subordinate.

There is another Companion. There is a Friend that

sticketh closer than a brother.  "Call upon me in the

day of trouble: I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify

 


54            THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.

 

me" (Ps. 1. 1.5). That He might get into communion

with us, and we with him, God was manifested in the

flesh. The man Christ Jesus, God with us,—this is the

companion by whose side a young man will be infallibly

safe. We believe never youth could be more strongly

assailed than Joseph in Potiphar's house. A sinner enticed

him, —and oh, how many things conspired to give force

to the temptation, as if Satan had concentrated all his

strength, to break through the chain of purposed mercy

for Israel in the fall of Joseph!—a sinner enticed him,

but he consented not. How? Whence did this stripling

derive strength to defy and repel such a cunningly-devised

and well-directed onset? He was weak like another

man, but he had help at hand. He had a companion

whom he had chosen, and with whom he walked. God

was not far from Joseph; Joseph was not far from God.

His answer was, "How can I do this great evil, and sin

against God?" There—there is Joseph's strength. Young

man, you will be as strong as he was, if you lean on the

Arm that supported him.

            The best way of moving a young heart is to please it.

The surest way of turning a person from one pleasure is to

give him a greater pleasure on the opposite side. A weep-

ing willow, planted by a pond in a pleasure-garden, turns

all to one side in its growth, and that the side on which

the water lies. No dealing, either with its roots or with

its branches, will avail to change its attitude; but place

a larger expanse of water on the opposite side, and the

tree will turn spontaneously, and hang the other way.

So it is with the out-branching affections of the human

 


               THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.                    55

 

heart. Follies and vices on this side are sweet to its

depraved nature. The joys are shallow at the best, but

it knows no other, and to these it instinctively turns; to

these it grows forth. It acquires a bent in that direction

which no human hand can turn. It will never be turned

unless you can open a rival joy, wider and deeper, on the

other side. And, blessed be God, greater are those joys

that are for us, than all that are against us!  The entice-

ments on the side of holiness and safety are in themselves

greater than all that Satan can spread out; and when a

distracted mind can see, and a ladened heart can feel them

as they are, it is forthwith won. "The love of Christ

constraineth us." It is pleasure that can compete with

pleasure. When you are entangled by the allurements of

sin, and oppressed by the terror of wrath, "the joy of the

Lord is your strength."

            The lowliness of the prodigal's place, the hunger he

endured, the loathsome appearance of the husks and the

swine,—these things, doubtless, made some impression;

but, alone, they could not save him. They might have

crushed him in despair to the ground, but could not have

borne him home in hope. It was the yearning of his father's

love, it was the image of his father's open embrace, it

was the presentiment of his father's weeping welcome, that

drew the prodigal at once from his miseries and his sins.

            Even the truth of God entering the heart, and fasten-

ing on the conscience, has not power to turn a sinner

from the error of his ways, so long as it comes in simply

as a terror. What the law could not do God did by

sending his Son. What naked righteousness, with ven-

 


56                  THE FOE AND THE FIGHT.

 

geance at its back, failed to do, manifested mercy in

Christ achieved. Righteous mercy—justice satisfied by

Emmanuel's sacrifice, and divine compassion flowing free

upon the lost—this is the thing of Christ which the

Holy Spirit wields as the weapon to win a human heart.

            This heart, young man, is a space that must and will

be occupied. It is the battle-field between Satan and

Satan's manifested Destroyer. Within you this holy war

must be waged. How long halt ye between two

opinions? Who is on the Lord's side? let him come.

Unless Christ dwell in your heart by faith, the enemy

will return, or abide, in triumph. You cannot fight the

enticements of sinful pleasure in your own strength.

These iniquities, like the wind, will carry you away; but

under the Captain of your salvation you may fight and

win. The deceits and corruptions of your heart, which

your own resolutions cannot overcome—bring forth these

enemies and slay them before Him Drag forth these

enticements of sinners that seemed so fresh and sweet to

the carnal eye—drag them forth and expose them there;—

their root will become rottenness, and their blossom will

go up like dust. The faces of these tempters that beamed

with mirth in the glare of kindled passions, will, when

seen in the light of His love, appear hideous as spectres of

the night.

            His entrance into the heart will turn the tide of the

conflict; and He is willing:  "Behold I stand at the

door and knock. If any man open, I will come in."

"Even so: come, Lord Jesus!"

 


                              FILTHY LUCRE.               57

 

 

                                          VII.

 

                               FILTHY LUCRE.

 

"So are the ways of every one that is greedy of gain;

            which taketh away the life of the owners thereof."—i. 19.

 

THESE "ways," as described by Solomon in the preceding

verses, are certainly some of the very worst. We have

here literally the picture of a robber's den. The persons

described are of the baser sort: the crimes enumerated

are gross and rank:  they would be outrageously disreput-

able in any society, of any age. Yet when these apples

of Sodom are traced to their sustaining root, it turns out

to be greed of gain. The love of money can bear all these.

            This scripture is not out of date in our day, or out of

place in our community. The word of God is not left

behind obsolete by the progress of events. "All flesh is as

grass, and all the glory of man as the flower of grass. The

grass withereth, and the flower thereof falleth away: but

the word of the Lord endureth for ever." —1 Peter i. 21,

25. The Scripture traces sin to its fountain, and deposits

the sentence of condemnation there, a sentence that fol-

lows actual evil through all its diverging paths. A spring

of poisonous water may in one part of its course run over

a rough rocky bed, and in another glide silent and smooth

through a verdant meadow; but, alike when chafed into

foam by obstructing rocks, and when reflecting the flowers

from its glassy breast, it is the same lethal stream. So

 

 


58                        FILTHY LUCRE.

 

from greed of gain—from covetousness which is idolatry,

the issue is evil, whether it run riot in murder and rapine

in Solomon's days, or crawl sleek and slimy through cun-

ning tricks of trade in our own. God seeth not as man

seeth. He judges by the character of the life stream that

flows from the fountain of thought, and not by the form

of the channel which accident may have hollowed out to

receive it.

            When this greed of gain is generated, like a thirst in

the soul, it imperiously demands satisfaction: and it takes

satisfaction wherever it can be most readily found. In

some countries of the world still it retains the old-fashioned

iniquity which Solomon has described: it turns freebooter,

and leagues with a band of kindred spirits, for the prose-

cution of the business on a larger scale. In our country,

though the same passion domineer in a man's heart, it

will not adopt the same method, because it has cunning

enough to know that by this method it could not succeed.

Dishonesty is diluted, and coloured, and moulded into

shapes of respectability to suit the taste of the times. We

are not hazarding an estimate whether there be as much

of dishonesty under all our privileges as prevailed in a

darker day: we affirm only that wherever dishonesty is,

its nature remains the same, although its form may be

more refined. He who will judge both mean men and

merchant princes requires truth in the inward parts.

There is no respect of persons with Him. Fashions do

not change about the throne of the Eternal. With Him

a thousand years are as one day. The ancient and

modern evil doers are reckoned brethren in iniquity.

 


                      FILTHY LUCRE.                                59

 

despite the difference in the costume of their crimes.

Two men are alike greedy of gain. One of them being

expert in accounts, defrauds his creditors, and thereafter

drives his carriage: the other, being robust of limb, robs

a traveller on the highway, and then holds midnight revel

on the spoil. Found fellow sinners, they will be left fellow

sufferers. Refined dishonesty is as displeasing to God, as

hurtful to society, and as unfit for heaven, as the coarsest

crime.

            This greed, when full grown, is coarse and cruel. It

is not restrained by any delicate sense of what is right or

seemly. It has no bowels. It marches right to its mark,

treading on everything that lies in the way. If necessary

in order to clutch the coveted gain, "it taketh away the

life of the owners thereof." Covetousness is idolatry. The

idol delights in blood. He demands and gets a hecatomb

of human sacrifices.

            Among the labourers employed in a certain district to

construct a railway was one thick-necked, bushy, sensual,

ignorant, brutalized man, who lodged in the cottage of a

lone old woman. This woman was in the habit of laying

up her weekly earnings in a certain chest, of which she

carefully kept the key. The lodger observed where the

money lay. After the works were completed and the work-

men dispersed, this man was seen in the grey dawn of a

Sabbath morning stealthily approaching the cottage. That

day, for a wonder among the neighbours, the dame did

not appear at church. They went to her house, and

learned the cause. Her dead body lay on the cottage-

floor: the treasure-chest was robbed of its few pounds

 


60                       FILTHY LUCRE.

 

and odd shillings; and the murderer had fled. Afterwards

they caught and hanged him.

            Shocking crime!  To murder a helpless woman in her

own house, in order to reach and rifle her little hoard,

laid up against the winter and the rent! The criminal

is of a low, gross, bestial nature. Be it so. He was a

pest to society, and society flung the troubler off the earth.

But what of those who are far above him in education and

social position, and as far beyond him in the measure of

their guilt? How many human lives is the greed of gain

even now taking away, in the various processes of slavery?

Men who hold a high place, and bear a good name in the

world, have in this form taken away the life of thousands

for filthy lucre's sake. Murder on a large scale has been,

and is done upon the African tribes by civilized men for

money.

            The opium traffic, forced upon China by the military

power of Britain, and maintained by our merchants in

India, is murder done for money on a mighty scale.

Opium spreads immorality, imbecility, and death, through

the teeming ranks of the Chinese populations. No

opium is cultivated on their own soil. The governments,

alike the Tartar dynasty and the patriot chiefs, have

prohibited the introduction of the deadly drug. Our

merchants brought it to their shores in ship-loads not-

withstanding, and the thunder of our cannon opened a

way for its entrance through the feeble ranks that lined

the shore. Every law of political economy, and every

sentiment of Christian charity, cries aloud against nur-

turing on our soil, and letting loose among our neigh-

 


                                FILTHY LUCRE.                             61

 

bours, that grim angel of death. The greed of gain alone

suggests, commands, compels it.  At this hour the patriot

army in China, who, with all their faults and their igno-

rance, certainly do circulate the Bible, and worship God,

oppose the introduction of opium, with all their moral

influence and all their military force. How can we

expect them to accept the Bible from us, while we

compel them to take our opium? British Christians

might bear to China that life for which the Chinese seem

to be thirsting, were it not that British merchants are

bearing to China that death which the Chinese patriots

loathe. It is an instance of the strong coveting the

money of the weak, and, in order to reach it, taking

"away the life of the owners thereof"

            A bloated, filthy, half naked labourer, hanging on at

the harbour, has gotten a shilling for a stray job. As

soon as he has wiped his brow, and fingered the coin, he

walks into a shop and asks for whisky. The shopkeeper

knows the man—knows that his mind and body are

damaged by strong drink—knows that his family are

starved by the father's drunkenness. The shopkeeper

eyes the squalid wretch. The shilling tinkles on the

counter. With one band the dealer supplies the glass,

and with the other mechanically rakes the shilling into

the till among the rest.  It is the price of blood. Life is

taken there for money. The gain is filthy. Feeling its

stain eating like rust into his conscience, the man who

takes it, reasons eagerly with himself thus;—"He was

determined to have it; and if I wont, another will."  So

he settles the case that occurred in the market-place on

 


62                      FILTHY LUCRE.

 

earth; but he has not done with it yet. How will it

sound as an answer to the question, “where is thy bro-

ther” when it comes in thunder from the judgment-

seat of God?

            Oh that men's eyes were opened to know this sin

beneath all its coverings, and loathe it in all its disguises!

Other people may do the same, and we may never have

thought seriously of the matter. But these reasons, and

a thousand others, will not cover sin. All men should

think of the character and consequences of their actions.

God will weigh our deeds. We should ourselves weigh

them beforehand in his balances. It is not what that

man has said, or this man has done; but what Christ

is, and his members should be. The question for every

man through life is, not what is the practice of earth, but

what is preparation for heaven. There would not be

much difficulty in judging what gain is right, and what

is wrong, if we would take Christ into our counsels. If

people look unto Jesus, when they think of being saved,

and look hard away from him when they are planning

how to make money, they will miss their mark for both

worlds. When a man gives his heart to gain, he is an

idolater. Money has become his god. He would rather

that the Omniscient should not be the witness of his

worship. While he is sacrificing in this idol's temple, he

would prefer that Christ should reside high in heaven,

out of sight, and out of mind. He would like Christ to

be in heaven, ready to open its gates to him, when death

at last drives him off the earth; but he will not open for

Christ now that other dwelling-place which he loves—a

 


                           FILTHY LUCRE.                              63

 

humble and contrite heart. "Christ in you, the hope of

glory;" there is the cure of covetousness! That blessed

Indweller, when he enters, will drive out—with a scourge,

if need be—such buyers and sellers as defiled his temple.

His still small voice within would flow forth, and print

itself on all your traffic,—"love one another, as I have

loved you."

            On this point the Christian Church is very low. The

living child has lain so close to the world's bosom, that

she has overlaid it in the night, and stifled its troublesome

cry. After all our familiarity with the Catechism, we

need yet to learn "what is the chief end of man" and 

what should be compelled to stand aside as a secondary

thing. We need from all who fear the Lord, a long, loud

testimony against the practice of heartlessly subordinating

human bodies and souls to the accumulation of material

wealth.

 


64                      THE CRY OF WISDOM.

 

 

                                          VIII.

 

 

                           THE CRY OF WISDOM.

 

 

"Wisdom crieth without; she uttereth her voice in the streets she crieth in

the chief place of concourse, in the openings of the gates: in the city she

uttereth her words, saying, How long, ye simple ones, will ye love simplicity?

and the scorners delight in their scorning, and fools hate knowledge?"—

i. 20-22.

 

THE evil doers are not left without a warning. The

warning is loud, public, authoritative. But who is this

monitor that claims the submissive regard of men? WIS-

DOMS. —Wisdom from above is the teacher: the lesson

that follows is not after the manner of men. We recog-

nise already the style of that Prophet who came in the

fulness of time, speaking as never man spake. It was in

this manner that Jesus, in the days of his flesh, stood

and cried to the multitude—to the simple who loved

simplicity, and the scorners who loved scorning—"if any

man thirst, let him come unto me and drink." Before

He was manifested to Israel, His delights were with the

sons of men. In the provisions of the well ordered cove-

nant, He had the means of sounding an alarm in human

ears before He became incarnate. He found and used a

willing messenger to preach righteousness to rebellious

spirits in Noah's days. Neither did He leave Himself

without a witness in the time of Solomon. The eternal

Son of God is not only wisdom in himself, He is "made

unto us wisdom." He who was seen by Abraham afar

 


                       THE CRY OF WISDOM.                       65

 

off, was heard by Abraham's seed in later days. In the

beginning was the Word, and the Word was God. The

Word and Wisdom of God made Himself known to men

at sundry times, and in divers manners, before He took

flesh and dwelt among us.

            In the Scriptures, Wisdom cried to men. "They tes-

tify of me," said Jesus. The prophets all spake of his

coming, and prepared his way. The sacrifices offered

year by year, and day by day continually, proclaimed

aloud to each generation the guilt of men, and the way

of mercy. The history of Israel, all the days of old, was

itself Wisdom's perennial articulate cry of warning to the

rebellious. The plains of Egypt and the Red Sea, Sinai

and the Jordan, each had a voice, and all proclaimed in con-

cert the righteousness and mercy that kissed each other

in the counsels of God. The things that happened to

them, happened for ensamples; and the things were not

done in a corner. In the opening of the gates, in the

city's busiest haunts, the proclamation was made to

unwilling listeners. The cry of Wisdom, in those days

of old, if it did not turn the impenitent, was sufficient to

condemn them. It was so manifestly from God, and so

intelligible to men, that it must have either led them

out of condemnation, or left them under it, without

excuse.

            But the wisdom of God is a manifold wisdom. While

it centres bodily in Christ, and thence issues as from its

source, it is reflected and re-echoed from every object, and

every event. There is a challenge in the prophets, "Oh,

earth, earth, earth, hear the word of the Lord!"  The

 


66                THE CRY OF WISDOM.

 

receptive earth has taken in that word, and obediently

repeats it from age to age. The stars of heaven, and the

flowers of earth, facing each other like the opposite ranks

of a choral band, hymn, alternate and responsive, the

wisdom of God. He hath made all things for Himself.  

He serves Himself of criminals and their crimes. From

many a ruined fortune, Wisdom cries, "Remember the

Sabbath-day, to keep it holy." From many an outcast

in his agonies, as when the eagles of the valley are picking

out his eyes, Wisdom cries, "Honour thy father and

mother that thy days may be long." From many a

gloomy scaffold Wisdom cries, "Thou shalt not kill."

Every law of nature, and every event in history, has a

tongue by which Wisdom proclaims God's holiness, and

rebukes man's sin.

            But is there any prophet of the Lord besides these?

Is there any other organ by which Wisdom cries to men?

There is one. Giving force to all other intimations there

is a prophet of the Lord within every man—his own

conscience. We are fearfully made. That witness within

us is often feared and shunned, more than armed men,

more than gates and bars, more sometimes than the

dungeon, the scaffold, and the drop. It is the case of the

ancient king over again. He is a prophet of the Lord,

"but I hate him because he never prophesies good con-

cerning me."

            But it is not conscience proclaiming God's anger against

the man's evil, that has power to make the man good.

All the instincts of the transgressor's nature are leagued

in an effort to smother the disturber, and they generally

 


                     THE CRY OF WISDOM.                         67

 

succeed. It is the conscience sprinkled with the blood

of Christ that at once speaks peace, and works purity.

            Three classes of persons seem to be singled out here,

and to each is administered an appropriate reproof:

1. The simple who love simplicity; 2. The scorners who

delight in scorning; 3. The fools who hate knowledge.

            1. The simple who love simplicity.  Probably we

would not be far from the truth if we should accept this

term in the Proverbs as intended to indicate that class of

sinners whose leading characteristic is the absence of good,

rather than positive activity in evil. The root of bitter-

ness has not shot forth in any form of outrageous vice,

but it remains destitute of righteousness, They do not

blaspheme God indeed, but they neglect his salvation,

and they cannot escape. Their hearts by a law of

inherent evil depart from Him; He in judgment lets them

go, and gives them over.

            The simple for time are always a numerous class.

They cannot be intrusted with money, for it will all go

into the hands of the first sharper whom they meet.

They will let the day pass, with no provision for the

night, and never think it needful until the darkness has

fallen down. They will let the summer come and go

without laying up a store for the time to come. When

the winter arrives they have neither house nor clothing,

neither money nor food. Somehow they did not think

of these things. The sunshine was pleasant while it

lasted; they basked in its rays; and it did not occur to

them that a cloud might soon darken the face of the

sky.

 


68                  THE CRY OF WISDOM.

 

            But the simple for eternity are more numerous still.

While they have food and raiment they pass the time

pleasantly and never think of sin. As for righteousness,

they do not feel the want of it, and form no high estimate

of its worth. As to the judgment-seat of God, they have

lived a long time, and have never seen it yet; they don't

trouble themselves with anticipations of evil. The great

white throne has always kept out of their sight, and they

keep out of its sight. How many simple ones are going

fast forward to death, with no life to triumph over it!

How many are drawing near the border in utter listless-

ness, as if there were no sin, and no judgment—no God,

no Heaven, no Hell!

            2. The scorners who love scorning. This is another

feature of the fallen—another phase of the great rebellion.

This class meet the threatening realities of eternity not

by an easy indifference, but by a hardy resistance. They

have a bold word ever ready to ward solemn thought

away,—a sneer at the silliness of a saint, an oath to

manifest courage, or a witty allusion to Scripture which

will make the circle ring again with laughter.

            There have been scorners in every age. There are

not a few amongst us at the present day. They may be

found on both the edges of society. Poverty and riches

become by turns a temptation to the same sin. It is not

only the shop of the artizan that resounds with frequent

scoffs: the same sound is familiar in the halls of the

rich. Many of the young men who have been educated

in affluence, belong to this class. They have large pos-

sessions, and larger prospects; they wish to enjoy what

 


                        THE CRY OF WISDOM.                   69

 

they have. The triumph of grace in their hearts would

dethrone the god of this world, and spoil his goods. The

running fire of profane jests proceeds from advanced

earth-works which Satan has thrown up around his

citadel, in his earnestness not only to keep his goods in

safety from the overthrowing power of conversion, but in

peace from the troublesome assaults of conviction.

            Scorners love scorning. The habit grows by indulgence.

It becomes a second nature. It becomes the element in

which they live. And what gives them confidence? Have

they by searching found out that there is no God? Or

have they ascertained that He has no punishment in store

for the wicked? No they have not settled these ques-

tions at all, either to the satisfaction of mankind, or their

own. These scoffs are generally parrying strokes to keep

convictions away. These smart sayings are the fence to

turn aside certain arrows which might otherwise fix their

tormenting barbs in the conscience. The scorner is

generally not so bold a man as he appears to be. He

keeps the truth at arms length. He strikes at it

vehemently before it gets near him. All this be-

trays a secret sense of weakness. He cannot afford to

come into close contact with the sword of the Spirit.

These violent gesticulations against the truth indicate the

unerring instinct of the old man resisting that which

advances to destroy him. "What have we to do with

thee thou Jesus, art thou come to torment us before the

time?”

            3. The fools who hate knowledge. By a comparison

of various scriptures in which the term occurs, it appears

 


70                  THE CRY OF WISDOM.

 

that fools are those who have reached the very highest

degrees of evil.  Here it is intimated that they hate

knowledge; and knowledge has its beginning in the fear

of God. All the branches springing from that root, and

all the sweet fruit they bear, are hateful to fools. The

knowledge has come to men, in so far as to be presented

to their minds, and pressed on their acceptance. Some,

the simple, never think of it at all; and others, the

scorners, bar its faintest approaches; but these fools,

after it has made its way into the conscience, exclude it

from their hearts. They have not been able to keep

Truth's heavenly form out of their minds, but they hate it

when it comes in. Others only live without Christ,

keeping Him at a distance; but these are against Him,

after He has been revealed in majesty divine. The

emphatic "No God" of the Fourteenth Psalm indicates,

not the despair of a seeker who is unable to find truth,

but the anger of an enemy who does not like to retain

it. It is not a judgment formed in the fool's under-

standing, but a passion rankling in his heart.

How long is all this to last?

            "How long, ye simple ones, will ye love simplicity?"

God is weary of your indifference; how long will it

cleave to you? How long will a man continue to be

regardless of his soul? Till death? It will certainly be

no longer. He who would not cry in hope for mercy to

pardon his sin, did cry without hope for a drop of water

to cool his tongue.

            "How long will the scorners delight in their scorning?"

Will they not cease from blaspheming God, until God,

 


                        THE CRY OF WISDOM.                      71

 

ceasing to be gracious, stop their breath, and take them

away?  If you continue this scorning till your dying

day, do you expect to continue it longer?  Will you

make merry with the judgment-seat?  Will you be able

to argue against the wrath of the Lamb?  Depart from

me, ye cursed—that word will crush the scorning out of

the boldest blasphemer.  Would that the profane might

make the discovery now; for it will be too late to make

it when the day is spent.

            “How long shall fools hate knowledge?”  Unless

they learn to love it soon, they will hate it for ever.

They might learn to love it now; for the same word

that rebukes sin reveals mercy.  Well might the fool

learn to love the knowledge which presents Christ cruci-

fied as the way of a sinner’s return; but if a man do not

love knowledge revealing mercy, how shall he love it

denouncing wrath?  The only knowledge that can reach

the lost is the knowledge that the door is shut.  How

long will they hate that knowledge?  Evermore.
72                                A REVIVAL.

 

 

                                               IX.

 

 

                                     A REVIVAL.

 

 

"Turn  you at my reproof: behold, I will pour out my Spirit unto you."—i. 28.

 

"TURN you at my reproof: behold, I will pour out my

Spirit;"—the command and the promise joined, and con-

stituting one harmonious whole. How strictly in con-

cord are the several intimations of the Scriptures!  "Work

out your own salvation; for it is God that worketh in

you" (Phil. ii. 12). To him that hath shall be given,

and he shall have abundance. It is to those who turn

that the promise of the Spirit is addressed. These two

reciprocate. The Spirit poured out arrests a sinner, and

turns him; then, as he turns, he gets more of the Spirit

poured out. The sovereignty of God, and the duty of

men, are both alike real, and each has its own place in

the well ordered covenant. It is true, that unless a man

turn, he will not get God's Spirit poured out; and it is

also true, that unless he get God's Spirit poured out, he

will not turn. When the dead is recalled to life, the

blood, sent circling through the system, sets the valves of

the heart a-beating, and the valves of the heart, by their

beating, send the life-blood circling throughout the frame.

It would be in vain to inquire what was the point in the

reciprocating series to which the life-giving impulse was

first applied. The mysteries of the human spirit are

 


                             A REVIVAL.                                73

 

deeper still than those of the body. The way of God, in

the regeneration of man, is past finding out. One, part

of it He keeps near himself, concealed by the clouds

and darkness that surround his throne; another part

of it He has clearly revealed to our understandings, and

pressed on our hearts. His immediate part is to pour

out the Spirit; our immediate part is to turn at his

reproof if, instead of simply doing our part, we pre-

sumptuously intrude into his, we shall attain neither. If

we reverently regard the promise, and diligently obey

the command, we shall get and do—we shall do and get.

We shall get the Spirit, enabling us to turn; and turn,

in order to get more of the Spirit. The command is

given, not to make the promise unnecessary, but to send

us to it for help. The promise is given, not to super-

sede the command, but to encourage us in the effort to

obey. Turn at his reproof and hope in his promise;

hope in his promise, and turn at his reproof

            Religion, when it is real, is altogether a practical

thing. It disappoints Satan; it crucifies the flesh; it

sanctifies the character; it glorifies God. It is a thing

that acts, and acts mightily. It is a thing, not of words,

but of deeds. There is an enormous amount of mere

imitation religion amongst us. If there were as great a

proportion of counterfeit coin circulating in the kingdom,

we would be all on the alert to detect and destroy it.

We would feel the danger of being ourselves deceived,

and losing the riches for which we care. There ought to

be greater jealousy of a spiritless form, a gilded word

religion, passing current in the Church; for he who is

 


74                           A REVIVAL.

 

taken in by this "name to live," though he should gain

the whole world, will lose his own soul.

            A valorous hand to hand struggle with inherent cor-

ruptions is distressingly rare, in the wide spread religious

profession of the day. You read and pray, and worship

in the assembly, and complain that, notwithstanding,

your souls do not prosper; you have not comfort; you

are not sensible of growth in grace.  But all this is mere

hypocrisy, if you be not "turning"—tearing yourself

asunder from besetting sins, as from a right arm or a

right eye. The evil speaking, watch it, catch it on your

lips, crush it as it swells and germinates in the seed-bed

of your thoughts within. The equivocations, the half-

untruths, down with them. Out with the very truth,

although it should break off the nearly completed bar-

gain—although it should freeze the friendship that seems

necessary to your success. Anger, malice, envy,—seize

these vipers, that twist and hiss in your bosom; strangle

them outright there. Your religion is nothing better

than a cheat, if you are not busy with the work of ceas-

ing to do evil. "Herein do I exercise myself:" said

Paul, "that I may have a conscience void of offence."

How can the feeblest learners of the truth attain, by an

idle wish, that actual progressive purification, which its

greatest human teacher only strove after by incessant

exercise?

            In the manifold diversities of sin, there is such a

thing as the pride of self-righteousness. You fall into

this error when you pretend to turn from evil without

trusting in God. You fall into the opposite snare of

 


                              A REVIVAL.                                 75

 

hypocrisy, when you pretend to trust in God, and do

not turn at his command. Getting freely and doing faith-

fully, together constitute true religion. Get and do, do

and get. Nor is it a partitioning of salvation be-

tween God and man, as if a part of it were his gift,

and a part of it man's act. The turning which consti-

tutes salvation is, supremely, all God's gift, and, subordi-

nately, all the doing of the man. From the spring-

head in the heart, to the outermost streams of life, He

makes all things new; and yet the man himself must, at

God's bidding, turn from all iniquity.

            We speak of a revival; we pray for it; perhaps we

long for it. But all this, and an hundredfold more in

the same direction, will not bring it about. God's arm

is not shortened: his ear is not heavy. Our iniquities

separate between us and Him. The way to invite his

presence is to put away the evil of our doings: for He

cannot dwell with sin. And if any one, conscious of his

knowledge and jealous of orthodoxy, should say in oppo-

sition, it is God's presence, sovereignly vouchsafed, that

makes the visited man put away his evil, we answer, that

is a glorious truth, but is not an argument against our

injunction. That is the upper end of a revealed truth

which reaches from earth to heaven. It is too high for

us. If you put forth your hand to touch it at the top,

it will consume you. That high thing is for God to

handle, and not man. The end that leans on earth and

lies to your band is—turn, you at my reproof.  The

only safe way of moving the heaven-high extreme of the

divine sovereignty for revival, is by throwing ourselves


76                              A REVIVAL.

 

with our whole weight on this which is the visible, tan-

gible, lower end of that incomprehensible mystery—this

turning from our own evil in obedience to the command

of God.

            The grand hinderance to a revival by the Spirit poured

out is the general conformity of Christians to the fashion

of the world. The short road to a revival is to turn

from the error of our ways. If there were more of the

doing which religion demands, there would be more of

the getting which it promises.

            Turn at my reproof.  God looketh on the heart. He

measures the motive as well as the deed. There is such

a thing as a proud atheistic morality, which is as offen-

sive to God as more vulgar vice. To abstain from com-

mon and gross transgressions, is not holiness. It is a

partial process. It is to diminish the bulk of wickedness

on one side, by directing all the stream of internal cor-

ruption to the other side. When a man turns from

wickedness because God hates it, he will turn alike from

every sin. If we reform ourselves, we will select despised

and shameful lusts of the flesh to be sacrificed, but retain

and cherish certain favourite lusts of the mind. If we

permit God's word to search, and God's authority to rule,

idols alike of high and low degree will be driven forth of

the temple. If the turning be at His reproof, it will be

a turning both complete in its comprehension and true in

its character—a turning without partiality and without

hypocrisy.

            When we turn at his reproof, He will pour out his

Spirit: when He pours out his Spirit we will turn at

 


                              A REVIVAL.                             77

 

his reproof.  Blessed circle for saints to reason in. He

formed the channel wherein grace and duty chase each

other round. He supplied the material alike of the get-  

ting and the doing. He set the stream in motion, and

He will keep it going, until every good work begun shall

be perfect in the day of Christ Jesus.

            Hear that voice from heaven, "I will pour out." Yea,

Lord; then we must draw away. We are placed at the

open orifice in the lowest extremity of the outbranching

channel: the fountain head is with God on high. When

He pours out, we draw forth: when we draw forth, He

pours out.  It is because there is a pressure constant and

strong from that upper spring of grace, that we can draw

any here below for the exercises of obedience; but the

covenant is ordered so that, if we do not draw for the

supply of actual effort, none will gravitate toward us from

the fountain head. It is the still stagnant dead mass of

inert profession, sticking in the lower lips of the channel,

that checks the flow of grace, and practically seals for us

its unfathomable fountain. If there were a turning, a

movement, an effort, an expenditure, a need, a vacancy,

at our extremity below, there would be a flow of the

divine compassion to make up the want, and charge every

vessel anew with fresh and full supply. Prove Him

now herewith; exert and expend in his service, and see

whether He will not open the windows of heaven and

pour out a blessing, greater than the room made vacant 

to receive it.

 

 


78      SOWING DISOBEDIENCE, REAPING JUDGMENT.

 

 

                                           X.

 

 

           SOWING DISOBEDIENCE, REAPING JUDGMENT.

 

 

"Because I have called, and ye refused; I have stretched out my hand, and no

man regarded; but ye have set at nought all my counsel, and would none of

my reproof: I also will laugh at your calamity; I will mock when your fear

cometh; when your fear cometh as desolation, and your destruction cometh as

a whirlwind; when distress and anguish cometh upon you. Then shall they

call upon me, but I will not answer; they shall seek me early, but they shall

not find me."—i. 2 4-28.

 

 

AT sundry times and in divers manners, the Omniscient

Witness of men's wickedness has invited the evil doers to

draw near, ere yet the judgment should be set and the

books opened, that He may "reason together" with them

on their state and prospects. One of those marvellous rea-

sonings of the Judge with the criminal is recorded here.

 

            I. God in mercy visits a rebellious generation.—There

are four terms employed to describe this visit, and although  

they are arranged to suit the exigencies of Hebrew poetry,

they follow each other in natural order and issue in a

climax. He calls, stretches out His hands, gives counsel,

and administers reproof.

            1. The call. Men with one consent were departing

from the living God. They had turned the back on Him,

and not the face. He does not leave Himself without a

witness. He has many ways of uttering His voice. It

is in the earthquake and in the storm. Day unto day

 


SOWING DISOBEDIENCE, REAPING JUDGMENT.       79

 

proclaims it, and night unto night. There is no speech

nor language where it is not heard. Even where its only

effect is to drive the scared culprit to superstitious ob-

servances, it has been heard, and the superstitious are

accountable. The call has come with more distinct arti-

culation from the lips of prophets and apostles. It sounds

with authority in a human conscience. Whether men

obey the call or disobey it, they are secretly conscious that

the call has reached them, and are left without excuse.

            2. The hands stretched out.—When the call has come

and startled the prodigal; when the prodigal, aroused,

looks toward the quarter whence the voice proceeds, lo, a

Father whom he has offended is opening his arms wide

to clasp the outcast in the embrace of an everlasting love.

Is. lxv. 1, 2. When busy men lift up their heads from

the dust to which their souls are cleaving, and listen to

the voice of God, they find out that He is not yet against

them a consuming fire. His hands are outstretched:

there is a way, and the way is open unto the Father.

There is no obstruction: there is no forbidding: there is

no upbraiding. Chief sinners are even now entering. in.

Behold, they are arising and going to the Father. They

are converging frequent and swift, as doves to their win-

dows, They are neither kept back, nor thrust down

among hired servants. They are welcomed as sons and

daughters. They are made heirs of God, and joint-heirs

with Christ. Their sins are remembered no more.

            3. The counsel.—Some who have heard the call and

lifted up their heads and looked, and seen the door of

mercy open, are glad, and take encouragement to continue

 

 


80        SOWING DISOBEDIENCE, REAPING JUDGMENT.

 

a little longer far from God and righteousness. They see

the arms of mercy stretched out all day long, although a

people continue disobedient.  Seeing this, they secretly

feel, if they do not venture to say, that there is no cause

for alarm. The door will remain open to-day, and, to-

morrow, and the next day: we shall run in before it be

shut. What does God do for these deceivers? He does

not let them alone. He counsels them. "Flee to the

stronghold, prisoners of hope." "Wherefore spend ye your

money for that which is not bread?"  "Come unto me, ye

that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest"

If they resist still, will He shut the door now, and shut

them out? No, not yet: He will administer,

            4. Reproof—Mercy interposes with the plea, let them

alone yet this once. There is One yearning over the cal-

lous, who have no mercy on their own souls. "How can

I give thee up?" He remembers mercy, and makes

judgment stand back. He makes judgment his strange

work, not permitting it to appear early or often to strike

the decisive blow. He has yet another resource. When

counsel is despised, He will bring forward reproof.  If they

will not be enticed by the promise of heaven, He will

threaten them with the fear of hell. "The wicked shall

be turned into hell, and all the nations that forget God."

"Except ye repent, ye shall perish." "Except a man be born

again, he cannot see the kingdom of God." Inconceivably

great is the weight of that wrath which is treasured up

against the day of wrath, to be poured all on the impeni-

tent then. But that reserved wrath is not left meantime

lying useless in its treasure-house. Everlasting love needs

 


   SOWING DISOBEDIENCE, REAPING JUDGMENT.      81

 

a strong hard instrument wherewith to work out her

blessed purposes on an unpliant race. Mercy, in this the

day of her reign, sovereignly seizes judgment before its

time, and works that mighty lever to move mankind.

The terrors of the Lord are not permitted to sleep un-

noticed and unknown, till the day when they shall over-

flow and overwhelm all his enemies: they are summoned

forth in the interval, and numbered among the all things

that work together for good. Though kept like it reserve

in the rear, their grim hosts are exposed to view, in order

that they may co-operate with kindlier agencies in per-

suading men to yield, and fight against God no more.

"Him that cometh to me, I will in no wise cast out"

Kindly plies the sweet promise next to a wounded heart:

but the gentle promise is backed by a terrible reproof.

Cast out—there it is; judgment looming in reserve;

serving meantime by its blackness to make the invitation

more winning, but there, unchangeable, omnipotent, to

receive on its awful edge, the crowds that rush reckless

over the intervening day of grace, and fall into the hands

of the living God.

            He suffers long, and pleads: but even in Him compas-

sions will not, cannot farther flow. He calls, stretches

out his hands, counsels, and, when men still refuse, He

makes the threat of wrath mercy's instrument to compass

them about, and compel them to come in: but He stops

there. God will not put forth a hand to lift a man to

heaven in his sleep; or drag him in against his will.  

When counsel and reproof are rejected, then "there re-

maineth nothing but a fearful looking for of judgment

 


82    SOWING DISOBEDIENCE, REAPING JUDGMENT.

 

and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversary."

Those who withstand all these means and messages, will

be left like Esau without the blessing. "He cried with

an exceeding great and bitter cry, and said unto his

father, Bless me, even me also, oh, my father:" but the

time was past, and the door was shut.

 

            II.  A rebellious generation neglect or resist the gracious

visitation of God.  "I have called, and ye refused: I have

stretched out my hand, and no man regarded: Ye have

set at nought all my counsel; and would none of my re-

proof." This is an appalling indictment uttered by the

God of truth. Who are the guilty? "Lord, is it I? Lord,

is it I?"

            “He that hath an ear to hear let him hear what the Spirit

saith.” Men have ears and stop them. The Lord made

the ear of man, and a wonderful work it is. Strange that

it should be open to every voice but the entreaty of its

Maker. In times when vile men held the high places

of this land, a roll of drums was employed to drown

the martyr's voice, lest the testimony of truth from the

scaffold should reach the people. Thus they closed the

ears of the multitude against the voice of the servants.

Not by a roll of drums at a single tyrant's bidding, but

by a strong deep hum of business, kept up through com-

mon consent, is the ear closed now against the Master's

own word. So constant is the noise of mammon, hum-

ming day and night, that the partial silence of the Sab-

bath is felt an unwelcome pause. As arts advance, and

more is crammed into the six days, so much the more

 


  SOWING DISOBEDIENCE, REAPING JUDGMENT.        83

 

eager are mammon's worshippers to fill the Sabbath with

the same confused noise. The word says, "Be still and

know that I am God:" those who don't want this know-

ledge are afraid to be still, lest it should steal in and dis-

turb their peace. God's mighty hand sometimes inter-

feres to quiet this hubbub in a heart, or a house. It is

when the inmates are compelled to go about the house

with whispers, that his voice is best heard. I know of

nothing more fitted to touch a conscience than this ten-

der complaint from our Judge. He stretched out his

hands: no man regarded. What then? He complains

of the neglect, and addresses his complaint to the ne-

glecters. Here is mercy full, pressed down, and run-

ning over. He whom men reject, pleads with men for

rejecting him. When he so stretched out himself to us,

how shall we answer if we turn our back on Him?

 

            III. They shall eat the fruit of their own ways, and be

filled with their own devices.

            This life is the spring time of our immortal being; the

harvest is eternity. Harvest is not the time for sowing.

We shall reap then what we sow now. This law is of

God. It is like the laws by which He regulates all nature.

If a man sow tares or thistles in his field in spring, it is

probable that a bitter regret will seize upon him in the

harvest day. He will loathe the worthless crop that he

gets to fill his bosom. But he cannot, by a sudden and

energetic wish, change all the laws of nature, and make

his field wave with ripened grain. As certainly as a hus-

bandman in harvest reaps only what he sowed in spring,

 


84   SOWING DISOBEDIENCE, REAPING JUDGMENT.

 

shall they who in life sow sin, reap wrath in the judg-

ment. The provisions of his covenant are steadfast as

the laws of his world. His promises are sure as the ordi-

nances of heaven, and his threatenings too.

            It is true that God destroys his enemies: but it is also

true that they destroy themselves. They throw themselves

into the fire, and by his laws they are burned. He has

laws that are everlasting and unchangeable. He has not

hidden them from men. He has plainly declared them.

"The soul that sinneth, it shall die." Those who cast them-

selves on revealed wrath are their own destroyers. These

outstretched hands of his are clear of a sinner's blood.

            Judgment will be an exact answer to disobedience, as

fruit answers the seed, or an echo the sound. The

stictness of retribution at last will correspond to the

freeness of mercy now. There would be no glory in God's

present compassion, if it had not the full terror of immut-

able justice behind it to lean upon. Even the divine long-

suffering would lose its loveliness if it did not stand in

front of divine wrath. You cannot paint an angel upon

light: so mercy could not be represented—mercy could not

be, unless there were judgment without mercy, a ground of

deep darkness lying beneath, to sustain and reveal it.

That there may be a day of grace pushed forward within

the reach of men on earth, there must be a throne of judg-

ment as its base in eternity. When the day of grace is

past, the throne of judgment stands alone, and the impeni-

tent must meet it.

            The anguish comes first within the conscience of the

ungodly, when the life course is drawing near its close.

 


  SOWING DISOBEDIENCE, REAPING JUDGMENT.        85

 

Desolation comes like a whirlwind. The body is drooping:

the grave is opening: the judgment is preparing. He has no

righteousness, and no hope. Behold now the prospect be-

fore the immortal, when death, like a rising wave, has blot-

ted out the beams of mercy that lingered to the last. It is

now the blackness of darkness. Hope, that flickered long,

has gone out at length. And how rigidly strict must the

retribution be. They would not hear God in the day of

mercy: in the day of vengeance God will not hear them.

They laughed at His threatenings: He will mock their cry.

This reciprocity is the law of his kingdom. It cannot be

changed.

            Let those who live without God in the world mark

what it is that He counts the heaviest retribution upon

sin. It is this--"They shall call upon me, but I will not

answer." When, groping darkling on the shore of eternity,

they cry in terror, "O God, where art Thou?" only their

own voice, mocking, will return from, the abyss, "Where

art thou?" A man's life has a language which the Judge

understands. The life utterance of the carnal, when

divested of all its pretences, and gathered into one, is

"No God!" That concentrated intensified expression,

issuing forth from time, has generated an echo in the

receptive expanse of eternity. That echo meets the

entrant on the border, and conscience, not clouded now,

is constrained to acknowledge it a truthful answer to the

essence of his life. It is a fruit exactly after the kind of

the seed which he had sown. "No God!" was the mean-

ing of his course in time: "No God!" rebounding from

the judgment-seat, at once fixes his place for eternity,

 


86     SOWING DISOBEDIENCE, REAPING JUDGMENT.

 

and proclaims that it is the fruit of his own doing

Consider this all ye who live for your own pleasure,

and leave the long-suffering Saviour stretching out his

hands to you all day in vain: your life, thrown up, a

sullen, bold, defiant no, from you to God in the day of

his mercy, will rebound from the throne a no unchange-

able, eternal, from God to you in the day of your need.

Reciprocity runs through. When mercy was sovereign,

mercy used judgment for carrying out mercy's ends.

When mercy's reign is over, and judgment's reign begins,

then judgment will sovereignly take mercy past and

wield it to give weight to the vengeance stroke.

            This terror of the Lord in eternity is clearly set forth

in time with the gracious design of persuading men to flee

to the hope set before them.

            At the close of this line of terrors there is a sweet and

gentle word. It is a Father's voice, this still small voice

that speaks when the storm and the thunders have passed

by. "Whoso hearkeneth unto me shall dwell safely, and

shall be quiet from the fear of evil." A safe dwelling-place!

There is now no condemnation to them that are in Christ

Jesus. No plague shall come nigh them there. One

would think this is enough. Himself our everlasting por-

tion, if now we yield unto Him; and a rest remaineth for

the people of God. Enough indeed: sinners saved could

not of themselves expect more: but He provides and pro-

mises more. He will give them not only deliverance from

death at last, but freedom from fear now; safety from

evil to come, and safety from the apprehension of its

coming; justification at the throne of God, and peace

 


   SOWING DISOBEDIENCE, REAPING JUDGMENT.     87

 

within the conscience. When Christ came to work de-

liverance for all his own, he expressly provided both these

blessings. It is not only to deliver them from death by

receiving himself its sting; but also to deliver them from

that fear of death, which otherwise would have held them

all their lifetime subject to bondage (Heb. ii. 15). "Godli-

ness is profitable unto all things." Eternal life secure in the

world to come casts a beam of bright hope across, sufficient

to quiet the anxieties of a fainting fluttering heart, in all

the dangers of the journey through. For his Redeemed

Israel, who have already passed over the divided sea, he

has provided a safe dwelling-place beyond the Jordan;

and under the shade of the Almighty, the pilgrims, even

in the wilderness, will be quiet from the fear of evil.

 


88                       SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND.

 

 

                                                 XI.

 

 

                           SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND.

 

"If thou seekest her as silver . . . thou shalt find the knowledge of God."—

                                               ii. 4, 5.

 

WISDOM continues still to cry unto men with the affec-

tionate authority of a parent. The incarnation of the Son

is God's grand utterance to mankind. The Word was made

flesh, and dwelt among us. He came to make known the

Father. "No man hath seen God at any time: the only

begotten Son who is in the bosom of the Father, He hath

declared him."

            Such is the speaker, and such the theme. Wisdom

cries, "Incline thine ear unto wisdom." Christ calls on

men to come unto Christ. It was He who opened the

Scriptures; and He taught from them the things concern-

ing Himself He is Prophet and Priest. He gives the

invitation; and the invitation is "Come unto me." It is

Christ offering Christ to sinners; the teacher and the lesson

alike divine. The preacher and the sermon are the same.

He is the beginning and the ending. He is all in all.

            The matter of the whole passage, ii. 1-9, consists in a

command to seek, and a promise to bestow. The same

speaker, at a later day, condensed his own discourse into

the few emphatic words, "Seek, and ye shall find." In

this passage there is a needful expansion and profitable

repetition of these two great pillar thoughts.

 


                      SEER AND YE SHALL FIND.                   89

 

            The seeking is in verses 1-4; the finding in verses 5-9.

A Father speaks, and He speaks as unto children. He

demands a reasonable service, and promises a rich reward.

            In the fourfold repetition of the command there seems

an order of succession; and the order, when observed, is

both comely and instructive. It combines the beauty of

the blossom and the profit of the fruit

 

            1. Receive my words,            and hide my command-

                                                                        ments.

            2. Incline thine ear,               and apply thine heart

            3. Cry after knowledge:        lift up thy voice for un-

                                                                        derstanding.

            4. Seek her as silver:             search for her as for hid

                                                                        treasure.

 

            1. "Receive my words.” This is the first thing. Prac-

tical instruction must ever begin here. The basis of all

religion and morality is the word of the Lord, taken into

the understanding and heart When the sower went

forth to sow, some fell by the wayside, and the fowls

came and devoured it. This is the first danger to which

the published truth is exposed. It does not enter the

ground at all.  It tinkles on the surface of the mind,

like seed on a beaten path, and next moment it is off, no

one knows whither. It never penetrated the soil; it

was never received. Corresponding to that first danger

is the first counsel, "My son receive my words;" and if

there should be any doubt about the meaning of the

precept, the clause which balances it on the other side

supplies the comment, "hide my commandments with

 


90                SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND.

 

thee." Our adversary the devil goeth about like a roar-

ing lion, or ravening bird, seeking whom he may devour.

He carries off the word from the surface of listless minds

as birds carry away the seed that lies on the surface of

unbroken ground. The word of God is a vital seed, but

it will not germinate unless it be hidden in a softened

receptive heart. It is here that Providence so often

strikes in with effect as an instrument in the work of

the Spirit. Especially, at this point, bereaving provi-

dences work together for good. Even these, however,

precious though they have been in the experience of all

the saved, are only secondary and subordinate agencies.

Sorrow is not seed. A field that is thoroughly and

deeply broken may be as barren in the harvest as the

beaten pathway. The place and use of providential visi-

tation in the divine administration of Christ's kingdom, is

to break up the way of the word through the incrustations

of worldliness and vanity that encase a human heart and

keep the word lying hard and dry upon the surface.

            Every one is capable of perceiving the difference, be-

tween merely hearing the word and receiving it. It is

a blessed thing to have that word dwelling richly within

you; felt in all its freshness touching your conscience

and enlightening your mind, during the busy day and in

the silent night, giving tone to your spirit within, and

direction to your course through life.

            The Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us. Be-

hold, He stands at the door and knocks; if any man

open, He will come in. To as many as receive Him,

He gives power to become the sons of God.

 

 


                       SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND.                  91

 

            2. "Incline thine ear." The entrance of the word

has an immediate effect on the attitude of the mind and

the course of the life. The incoming of the word makes

the ear incline to wisdom; and the inclining of the ear

to wisdom lets in and lays up greater treasures of the

word.

            In practice it will be found that those who hide the

word within them, feeding on it as daily bread, acquire

a habitual bent of mind towards things spiritual. On

the other hand, when the truth touches, and glances

off again, like sunlight from polar snows, it is both a

symptom and a cause of an inclination of the mind away

from God and goodness. The great obstacle to the power

and spread of the gospel lies in the averted attitude of

human hearts. The mind is turned in another direction,

and the faculties occupied in other pursuits. How hope-

ful the work of preaching becomes when the lie and the

liking of the listener's soul is towards saving truth.

When the heart is applied to it, some portion of the

word goes in, and that which has obtained an entrance

prepares the way for more. To him that hath that little

will be given much, and he shall have abundance. A man

inclines his ear to those sounds which already his heart

desires; again to turn the ear, by an exercise of will at

God's high command, to the word of wisdom, is the very

way to innoculate the heart with a love to that word

passing the love of earthly things. The lean of the

disciples' hearts in the days of old drew them to Jesus;

and Jesus near, made their hearts burn with a keener

glow. The ear and the heart!—precious gifts.  He

 


92             SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND.

 

that hath an ear to hear, let him hear what the Spirit

saith. He that hath a heart to love, let him love with

it the altogether Lovely. The ear inclined to divine wis-

dom will draw the heart; the heart drawn will incline

the ear. Behold one of the circles in which God, for his

own glory, makes his unnumbered worlds go round.

            3. "Cry after knowledge." The preceding verse ex-

pressed the bent heavenward of the heart within and the

senses without: this verse represents the same process at

a more advanced stage. The longing for God's salvation

already begotten in the heart, bursts forth now into an

irrepressible cry. It is not any longer a Nicodemus

inclined toward Jesus, he cannot tell how, and silently

stealing into his presence under cloud of night; it is the

jailor of Philippi springing in, and crying with a loud

voice, "What must I do to be saved?" While the man

was musing, the fire burned; and now it no longer

smoulders within, it bursts forth into a flame. He who

gave Himself for his people loves to feel them kindling

thus in his hands. Men may be offended with the fer-

vour of an earnest soul—God never. "Hold thy peace,"

the prudent will still say to the enthusiastic follower of

Jesus: but he feels his want, and hopes for help; he

heeds them not: he cries out all the more, "Jesus, thou

son of David, have mercy on me." Even disciples, appa-

rently more alarmed by what seem irregularities in the

action of the living than they were by the silence of the

stiffened dead, may interpose with a frown and a re-

buke; but compression will only increase the strength of

the emotion struggling within. That word hidden in

 


                  SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND.                   93

 

the heart will swell and burst and break forth in strong

crying and tears, "Whom have I in heaven but Thee?

and there is none upon earth that I desire besides Thee.

My flesh and my heart faileth, but God is the strength

of my heart, and my portion for ever." Psalm lxxiii.

25, 26.

            4. "Seek her as silver."  Another and a higher step.

The last was the earnest cry; this is the persevering

endeavour. The strong cry is not enough: it is a step

in the process, but the end is not yet. It might be

Balaam's cry, "Let me die the death of the righteous,"

while in life he loved and laboured for the wages of ini-

quity. Fervent prayer must be tested by persevering

pains.

            Seek wisdom. Not only be inclined to spiritual things,

and earnestly desire salvation, but set about it.  Strive

to enter in; lay hold on eternal life. Work out the sal-

vation. "The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence, and

the violent take it by force." The Christian life is a

battle to be fought: the reward at last is a crown to

be won.

            More particularly, the search for wisdom is compared

to another search with which we are more familiar. Seek

her as silver. Those who seek the treasures that are at

God's right hand are referred to their neighbours who are

seeking treasures that perish in the using, and told to go

and do likewise. The zeal of mammon's worshippers

rebukes the servants of the living God. We are invited

to take a leaf from the book of the fortune-seeker.

Besides the pursuit of money in the various walks of

 


94               SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND.

 

merchandise, there is, in our day, much of a direct and

literal search for treasures hid in the earth. A prominent

part of our daily public news, for years past, has been the

stream of emigration from the settled countries of Europe

to the western shores of America, and the great Australian

Continent in search of hid treasure. The details are most

instructive. Multitudes of young and old, from every

occupation, and every rank, have left their homes, and tra-

versed stormy seas, and desert continents, to the place

where the treasure lies. Not a few have perished on

the way. Others sink under privations on the spot.

The scorching sun by day, and the chill dews at night;

labour all day among water, and sleeping under the im-

perfect shelter of a tent; the danger of attack by uncivil-

ized natives on the one hand, and by desperately wicked

Europeans on the other,—all these, and a countless mul-

titude more, are unable to deter from the enterprise, or

drive off those who are already engaged. To these re-

gions men flock in thousands, and tens of thousands.

Those shores lately desolate are in motion now with a

teeming population.

            Search for her as for hid treasure! He knows what

is in man. He who made the human heart, and feels

every desire that throbs within it, takes the measure

of men's earnestness in their search for silver. He pro-

nounces it sufficient for the object which he has at heart,

the salvation of sinners. He points to it as a fit measure

of the zeal with which a being, destitute by sin, should

set out in the search for the salvation by grace. He

intimates this will do—this earnestness, if directed upon

 


                  SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND.                  95

 

the right object.  How all this puts to shame the languid

efforts of those who do seek the true riches! There

may be an inclination on the whole rather to the im-

perishable riches—a wish to be with Christ rather than

left with a passing world for a portion. There may be

the desire in that direction, but another question comes

in, what is the strength of that desire? That blessed

portion in Christ is what you desire; well, but how much

do you desire it? Will not the far reaching plans, and

heroic sacrifices, and long enduring toil of Californian

and Australian gold diggers rise up and condemn us who

have tasted and known the grace of God? Their zeal is

the standard by which the Lord stimulates us now, and

will measure us yet. Two things are required in our

search—the right direction, and the sufficient impulse.

The Scriptures point out the right way; the avarice of

mankind marks the quantum of forcefulness, wherewith

the seeker must press on.

            But the search for hid treasure, which reads a lesson

to the Church, is not confined to the gold regions, and

the gold diggers. They dig as hard at home. It cannot

be told how much of plan and effort, of head and hand,

are expended in making money. It is no business of ours

here to draw the nice distinctions between the rightful

industry of a Christian merchant, and the passage through

the fire of mammon's child. This is not our present

theme at all. What we want is to get our slackness

in seeking a Saviour rebuked and quickened by the

parallel movement of a more energetic search. Our

question here is not how much is gold worth? but is

 


96              SEEK AND YE SHALL FIND.

 

gold worth as much as the grace of God in Christ to a

sinner? You answer, No. This is our unanimous reply.

It is true in its own nature; and sincerely it is uttered

by our lips. Out of our own mouths then will we be

condemned, if He who compasseth us about like air in all

our ways, feels that we strive with our might for the less,

and but languidly wish for the greater. Seek first the

kingdom.

            Those who seek thus shall not seek in vain; we have

the word of the true God for it in many promises. Among

the gathered multitudes in the great day, it will not be

possible to find one who has sought in the right place

for the right thing, as other men seek money, and who

has nevertheless been disappointed. No doubt there are

some who seek after a fashion, and gain nothing by it;

who vent a wish to die the death of the righteous, and

never attain to the object of their desire. But none fail

who seek according to the prescription of the word, and

after the example of the world.

            Many people proceed upon a principle the very reverse

of that which the word inculcates. They search for

money as if it were saving truth, instead of searching

for saving truth as if it were money. These must be

turned upside down ere they begin to prosper. There

is no promise to indolence. The hand of the diligent

maketh rich. As to what ye should seek, hear what the

Lord says: as to the earnestness of the search, observe

how the world does. Those who keep between these

two lines are sure to gain in godliness.

 


                        PERILS. IN THE DEEP.                         97

 

 

                                          XII.

 

                          PERILS IN THE DEEP.

 

"To deliver thee from the way of the evil [man], from the man that speaketh

froward things; who leave the paths of uprightness, to walk in the ways of

darkness; who rejoice to do evil, and delight in the frowardness of the wicked;

whose ways are crooked, and they froward in their paths: to deliver thee

from the strange woman, even from the stranger which flattereth with her

words; which forsaketh the guide of her youth, and forgetteth the covenant of

her God: for her house inclineth unto death, and her paths unto the dead.

None that go unto her return again, neither take they hold of the paths of

life."--ii. 12-19.

 

"THE wicked are like the troubled sea when it cannot

rest." Here an arm of that sea is spread out before us,

and we are led to an eminence whence we may behold

its raging. We must one by one go down into these

great waters. We see many of our comrades sinking

beneath the surge. It is good to count the number, and

measure the height of these ranks of raging waves, that

we may be induced to hold faster by the anchor of the

soul, which is sure and steadfast

            The dangers are delineated here in exact order, con-

tinuous succession, and increasing power. They come as

the waves come when the tide is flowing; they gradually

gain in strength until they reach their height; then, when

Satan has done his worst, he retires sullenly, leaving all

who have not been overwhelmed, high, and safe, and

triumphing..

            1. "The way of the evil." Whether they be persons or

 


98                    PERILS IN THE DEEP.

 

principles, whether they be men or devils, the word does

not expressly say. The announcement, in the first place,

is couched in terms the most general; the particulars are

enumerated in the verses following. The way of the

evil is the way which Satan trod, and by which all his

servants follow. It is the way whereon all the wicked

travel to their doom.

            2. But more specifically, the first item of the evil is "the

man that speaketh froward things."  "The tongue can no

man tame, it is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison"

This little fire kindles a flame which spreads and licks

up all that is lovely and of good report in a wide circle

of companionship. The man who speaks froward things

is one of the foremost dangers to which the young are

exposed at their first start in life. In a workshop, or

warehouse, or circle of private friendship, there is one

who has a foul tongue. It is difficult to conceive how

quickly and how deeply it contaminates all around.

There may be much specific variety in the forms of fro-

wardness. In one case the pollution assumes the shape

of profane swearing. In another it is the frequent in-

jection of obscenities amidst the conversation of the day,

feathered with wit to make them fly. In a third it is

infidel insinuation. In a fourth it is one huge mass of

silliness, a shapeless conglomorate of idle words, injuring

not so much by the infliction of positive evil, as by occu-

pying a man's heart and his day with vanity, to the ex-

clusion of all that is substantial either for this world or

the next.

            It is hardly possible that one who is much in con-

 


                       PERILS IN THE DEEP.                          99

 

tact with these froward words should come off unscathed.

Even when a person does not sympathize with the evil,

and imitate it, his conscience gets a wound. Only one

has ever appeared on earth who was entirely safe under

the fiery darts of the wicked. "The prince of this

world cometh, and hath nothing in Me" (John xiv. 30).

If there were perfect purity within, these onsets from

without would leave no stain. But upon our impure

hearts, even when the temptation in the main is resisted,

and the tempter put to flight, the marks are left behind.

Some of the filth sticks, and will not off, to the dying

day. For us even in our best estate it is not good, in

that experimental way, to know evil. The foul tongue

of the froward is one grand cause of dread to godly

parents in sending their youths to a business, and even

in sending their children to school.

            How good are pure words! Set a watch upon your

mouth. "Let your speech be always with grace, seasoned

with salt." Bad as it is to hear froward words, it is in-

conceivably worse to speak them. It is more cursed to

give temptation than to receive it

            3. "Who leave the paths of righteousness." When

the imagination is polluted, and the tongue let loose, the

feet cannot keep on the path of righteousness. Thinking,  

and hearing, and speaking evil, will soon be followed by

doing it. The world is startled from time to time by

the report of some daring crime. But if the history

of the criminal were known, however much grief there

might be, there would be no surprise at the culmination

of his wickedness. When you see a mighty tree in the

 


100                  PERILS IN THE DEEP.

 

forest, you assume that it did not leap into maturity in a

day, although you saw not its gradual growth. You may

as confidently count that full-sized crime did not attain

its stature in a day. In all of us are the seeds of it, and in

many the seedlings are growing apace. The ways fol-

low the thoughts and words, as trees spring from seeds.

He who would be kept from the path of the destroyer,

must crucify the flesh with its affections and lusts. Out

of the heart proceed evil thoughts, and soon after mur-

ders and adulteries follow. In the matter of watching

for one's soul, as in all other matters, the true wisdom is

to take care of the beginnings.

            4. "To walk in the ways of darkness." There is a,

strictly causal and reciprocal relation between unrighteous

deeds and moral darkness. The doing of evil produces

darkness, and darkness produces the evil-doing.  Indulged

lusts put out the eye-sight of the conscience; and under

the darkened conscience the lusts revel unchecked.

"From him that hath not, shall be taken away."

            5. "Who rejoice to do evil." This is a more advanced

step in guilt. At first the backslider is ashamed of his

fall. He palliates, alleges the strength of the temptation,

and promises amendment. As the hardening process

goes on, however, he begins to feel more easy. He

ceases to make excuses, and at last he glories in his

shame. "Were they ashamed when they had committed

abomination?  Nay, they were not at all ashamed,

neither could they blush" (Jer. vi. 15). This is a mea-

sure of evil which should make even the wicked tremble.

He has become the very essence of antichrist, when it

 

 


                         PERILS IN THE DEEP.               101

 

is his meat and his drink to oppose the will of our

Father who is in heaven.

            6. Profligacy can yet one step farther go. They who

"delight in the frowardness of the wicked," are more

abandoned than the wicked themselves. To take plea-

sure in sin is a characteristic of fallen humanity; to de-

light in seeing others sinning is altogether devilish.

Some monsters in human form have presided over the

process of torture, and drunk in delight from a brother's

pain; but it is. a still clearer evidence that a man is of

his father the Devil, when he lays snares for a brother's

soul, and laughs at his own success. There are not a

few amongst us who have reached this stage of depravity,

and yet have no suspicion that they are in any way

more guilty than others. They have so drunk into the

spirit, and been changed into the image of the first

tempter, that they relish as dainty food the pollution of

a neighbour, and let never perceive that there is any-

thing out of the way. “Blessed are they that hunger

and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled.”

Cursed are they that hunger and thirst after wickedness,

for they shall be filled too. They shall be filled with

food convenient for them. It is the Lord's way both in

mercy and judgment to provide for every creature abun-

dance of that which it loves and longs for. This prin-

ciple is announced with terrific distinctness in the pro-

phet Habakkuk (ii. 15, 16). Those who have a relish

for the sin of others, will be filled with the food they

have chosen; and although the horrid sweet pall upon

the taste by reason of its abundance, there is no variety,

 


102                 PERILS IN THE DEEP.

 

and no diluting of sin by fragments of good in the place

of the lost. The same—the same that they loved on

earth, the lost must abide for ever; sin—nothing but

sin, within and around them.

            To complete the picture of the danger, one other peril

of the world's deep is marked on the chart which is mer-

cifully placed in the voyager's hands—it is "the strange

woman." Thanks be to God for his tender care in kind-

ling these beacon-lights on the rock to scare the coming

passenger away from the quicksands of doom.

            The deceiver is called a "strange" woman. Whore-

dom is distinguished from marriage, which God appointed

and approves. When man and woman are given to

each other as helps meet from the Lord, they become

"one flesh." They are not only known to each other,

but, in an important sense, they lose their individual

personality, and are merged into one. "A man shall

leave father and mother and cleave unto his wife." To

follow the "strange woman" is the Satanic reversal

of this divine ordinance. There is no love, no holy

union, no mutual helpfulness; but wild, selfish passions,

followed by visible marks of God's vengeance. For it is

not his word only; with equal clearness his providence

frowns on licentiousness. That vice eats in like a fester-

ing sore on the body of society. If all should act as

libertines do, the very nation would dwindle away. We

are fearfully and wonderfully made; we are fearfully

and wonderfully governed. It is in vain that the pot-

sherds of the earth strive with their Maker. His anger

will track lust through all its secret doublings. He

 


                     PERILS IN THE DEEP.                       103

 

makes sin generate its own punishment. Vengeance

against that evil thing circulates through the veins, and

dries up the marrow in the heart of the bones. Verily,

there is a God that judgeth in the earth. Of the strange

woman, it is said, "Her house inclineth unto death, and

her paths unto the dead." Mark well this description,

ye simple ones who are enticed to follow her. There is

an "incline on the path. It goes down. She leads the

way, you follow. It is easy to go down—down a slip-

pery, slimy path; but its issue is death. What death?

The death of the soul, and the body too. It leads to

"the dead." It brings you to the society of libertines,

and they are dead while they live. This lust is a canker-

worm that quickly withers the greenness of spring in the

soul of youth. We have no trust in the patriotism, the

truth, the honesty, the friendship of a licentious man.

When you get down into their company, you are among

the dead. They move about like men in outward

appearance, but the best attributes of humanity have dis-

appeared—the best affections of nature have been drained

away from their hearts.

 


104                       THE MEANS OF SAFETY.

 

 

                                               XIII.

 

 

                              THE MEANS OF SAFETY.

 

 

"When wisdom entereth into thine heart, and knowledge is pleasant unto thy

soul; discretion shall preserve thee, understanding shall keep thee."—ii.

10, 11.

 

CHRIST'S prayer for his disciples was not that they should

be taken out of the world, but that they should be pre-

served from the evil that is in it. Life is a voyage on

the deep: there are perils which we must pass; how

shall we pass them safely? The grand specific is the

entrance of wisdom into the heart. As already ex-

plained, you may understand by Wisdom either the Sal-

vation or the Saviour. The entrance of the word giveth

light, and chases away the darkness. If the truth as it

is in Jesus come in through the understanding, and make

its home in the heart, it will be a purifier and preserver.

"Sanctify them through the truth." The word of God

and the way of the wicked are like fire and water; they

cannot be together in the same place. Either the flood

of wickedness will extinguish the word, or the word will

burn and dry up the wickedness.

            If we understand the Word personally of Christ, the

same holds good. Where He dwells, the lusts of the flesh

cannot reign. Evil cannot dwell with Him. When the

Light of the world gets entrance into the heart, the foul

spirits that swarmed in the darkness disappear. His

coming shall be like the morning.

 


                 THE MEANS OF SAFETY.                    105

 

            The other strand of the two-fold cord which keeps a

voyager in safety amid all these perils is, "when know-

ledge is pleasant to thy soul." The pleasantness of the

knowledge that comes in, is a feature of essential importance.

Even the truth entering the mind, and fastening on the

conscience, has no effect in delivering from the power of

evil, while it comes only as a terror; what the law could

not do by all its fears, God did by sending his Son. The

love of Christ constraineth us, when all other appliances

have been tried in vain. The Spirit employs terror in

his preparatory work; but it is only when the redemp-

tion of Christ begins to be felt sweeter than the pleasures

of sin that the soul is allured, and yields, and follows on

to know the Lord. It is pleasure that can compete with

pleasure.  It is "joy and peace in believing" that can

overcome the pleasure of sin. Felix trembled under Paul's

preaching, yet offered to sell justice for money, and, to curry

favour with the multitude, kept the innocent in bonds.

The word of God, though it ran through him like a sword

in his bones, left him wholly in the power of his lusts.

A human soul, by its very constitution, cannot be fright-

ened into holiness. It is made for being won; and won it

will be, by the drawing on this side, or the drawing on that.

The power on God's side is greater than all on the side of

sin. As long as that power is felt to be repelling, the

sinner creeps still farther and farther from the consum-

ing fire. But whenever the love of God in the face of

Jesus becomes "pleasant" to his soul, that love keeps

and carries him, as the central sun holds up a tributary

world.

 


106                        A GOOD MEMORY.

 

 

                                             XIV.

 

 

                              A GOOD MEMORY.

 

 

"My son, forget not my law; but let thine heart keep my commandments."—

                                                iii. 1.

 

 

WISDOM—the wisdom from above—continues still to cry.

How gentle and winsome is the voice of this monitor!

"My son, forget not." Such pity as a father hath, like

pity shows the Lord. Throughout his dispensations, the

Eternal wears the aspect of a Father to his creature

man. In the Bible, the parental regard is seen glancing

through at every opening. When Jesus taught his dis-

ciples how to pray, Father was the foremost word of the

inspired liturgy. With this tender name is the arrow

pointed that is to penetrate the heavens. Those who

have skill to read the hieroglyphs of nature, will find many

a parallel text in earth and sea. The world is full of his

goodness. The fatherliness of the Creator is graven on all

his works.

            The matter thus tenderly commended to the pupil's

regard is nothing less than "my law." He who made

us knows what is good for us. Submission to his will is

the best condition for humanity. What shall be the

guide of our life—our own depraved liking, or the holy

will of God? Our own will leads to sin and misery.

The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul, and

making wise the simple. The two rival rules are set

 


                           A GOOD MEMORY.                             107

 

before us. Choose ye whom ye shall serve. His servants

ye are whom ye obey, whether of sin unto death, or of

obedience unto righteousness.

            "Forget not my law;" another evidence that the In-

spirer of the word knows what is in man. Silently to

forget God's law is amongst us a much more common

thing than blasphemously to reject it. To renounce God's

law because your reason condemns it, is the infidelity that

slays its thousands: to forget God's law because your

heart does not like it, is the ungodliness that slays its ten

thousands. The deceitfulness of the heart is a form of

sin's disease much more widely spread and much more

fatal than the hostility of the understanding. In the Bible,

God displays more of jealousy than of wrath. He can-

not endure that any idol should possess the dwelling-

place which He has made for Himself.  The very key-

note of the Scriptures is, "My son, give Me thine heart."

            "Let thine heart keep my commandments;" another

step in the same direction—another stage in the process

of dissecting the spirit, in order to reach the seat of sin.

What the heart cleaves to is not readily forgotten. As a

general rule it may be safely laid down, that what you

habitually forget you do not care for. So true is it, that  

love is the fulfilling of the law. If you do not love it,

so far from obeying it, you will not even remember that

there is such a thing. It is often given as an excuse for

evil doing, that it was done without thought—that the

evil of it was not present to the mind. If you had ob-

served at the time the real character of your action, you

would have done otherwise. What is this but to tell

 


108                  A GOOD MEMORY.

 

that your heart does not keep God's commandment? If

that law had been at hand, in God's name forbidding the

word or the deed, you would have refrained. No thanks

to you. That is as much as to say you would not of set

purpose oppose the Almighty to his face. But you did

what He complains of; you forgot Him and his law.

You had extruded these from your heart as unwelcome

visitors, and now you say, if they had been within, the

mischief would not have happened. But why were they

not within? Why was the word not dwelling richly in

you? Why was your heart not its hidden home? The

house was full of the company that you liked. The law

of the Lord, weary waiting on outside, had slipt away

unnoticed. It was not there—it was not in sight, with

its holy frown, when the temptation pressed suddenly;

and prevailed. If it had been there, the enemy would

not have gained an advantage over you; and this is an

excuse or palliation!  What you put forward as an ex-

cuse, God marks as the very essence of the sin. The

heart keeps what it loves; what it dislikes it lets go.

The very soul of sin is here; "an evil heart of unbelief

in departing from the living God."

            One ever-ready excuse of those who live without God

in the world is "a bad memory." Where there is real

imbecility in the nature, the excuse is good; but then it

is never pleaded as an excuse. The skill which can plead

a treacherous memory as an excuse for not knowing the

truth, would have charged the memory with the truth if

it had been so applied. Those who intend to plead a

short memory at the judgment-seat of God, would need

 


                         A GOOD MEMORY.                        109

 

to see to it that other things should slip as quickly and

as cleanly off from the mind as the word of Christ.

When Saul averred to Samuel "I have performed the

commandment of the Lord, I have destroyed all that be-

longed to Amalek," Samuel replied, "What meaneth,

then, this bleating of the sheep in mine ears, and this low-

ing of the oxen which I hear?" The king was con-

founded when his pretence was laid bare. What con-

fusion must cover those who pass through life with scarce-

ly a conception of how a sinner may be saved, when they

put in the plea, "We had a treacherous memory," and

are met by the question, "What mean, then, all these

rules, and numbers, and events concerning the world,

that crowded your memory through life, and clung there

undefaced in your old age?"

            Let us not deceive ourselves. When there is a hun-

gering for the truth, the mind takes it in; when the

heart loves divine truth, the memory retains it. Turn

the excuse into an aggravation, while yet there is time.

Plead no more a feeble memory; begin to grieve over an

evil heart.

 


110                        THE ART OF PRINTING.

 

 

                                              XV.

 

 

                               THE ART OF PRINTING.

 

 

"Let not mercy and truth forsake thee: bind them about thy neck;

                 write them upon the table of thine heart."—iii. 3.

 

THE matter to be recorded is "mercy and truth:" the

tablet for receiving it is the human heart; and here we

have some instructions on the art of printing it in.

            Look first to the legend itself—"mercy and truth."

These two, meeting and kissing in the Mediator, consti-

tute the revealed character of God himself; and He de-

sires to see, as it were, a miniature of his own likeness

impressed upon his children. As we cannot have any

printing without a type, we cannot have mercy and truth

in holy union raised on the life of a human being, unless

we get the exemplar brought from above, and transferred

to man.

            What God desires to see in man, he showed to man.

He who dwelleth between the cherubim, merciful and

true, shone forth upon his creatures, that those who look

might be transformed into the same image, as by the

Spirit of the Lord.

            It is only in Christ that we can know God. As mani-

fested there, He is just and forgiving. Mercy and truth

meet in the person and sacrifice of the Son. With-

out the Saviour, we can conceive of mercy or truth

being displayed by God to the rebellious. We could at

 

 


                     THE ART OF PRINTING.                             111

 

least conceive of mercy without truth; but then it would

let the unclean into heaven: we could also conceive of

truth without mercy; but then it would cast mankind

without exception into hell. In order that there might

be mercy and truth from the judge to the sinful, Christ

obeyed, and died, and rose again. "God so loved the

world, that He gave his only-begotten Son;" but God so

hated sin, that He gave Him up to die as an expiation to

justice. Mercy reigns, not over righteousness, but through

righteousness.

            "Be ye followers [imitators] of God as dear children"

(Ephesians v. 1). If we receive grace reigning through

righteousness, they will be seen upon us in their union.

The reception of these into the heart is, as it were, the

sowing of the seed; and that seed will bring forth fruit

after its kind. If, conscious of guilt and condemnation,

you accept and rejoice in free grace from God, this

doctrine will not lie barren within you. It will burst

forth in meekness, gentleness, pity, love, to all the needy.

If you mark, as you get pardon, how it comes—pardon

through Christ crucified—if you take it as it comes,

bought by His blood, you will never make light of sin,

either in yourselves or others. In all religions, true and

false, there are an original and a copy. Either God

manifested leaves the impress of his own character on the

receptive heart of a believing man, or man unbelieving

transfers his own likeness to the gods whom he makes in his

imagination or by his hands. "Mercy and truth"—there

is the type let down from God out of heaven. Are our

hearts open, soft, receptive, to take the impression on?

 


112               THE ART OF PRINTING.

 

            "Let them not forsake thee: bind them about thy

neck." These injunctions indicate that there is a fickle-

ness which makes the printing difficult, and the impres-

sion indistinct at the best. This command to bind them

about the neck (Deuteronomy vi. 8) was adopted by the

Jews in the letter, and neglected in spirit. It degene-

rated into a superstition; and hence the phylacteries, the

amulets worn by the Pharisees. The command here is

more specific—"Write them upon the table of thine

heart" The reference obviously is to the writing of the

law on tables of stone. These tables were intended to be

not a book only, but also a type. From them we may

read the law indeed; but off them also an impress should

be taken on our own hearts, that we may always have

the will of God bidden within us. This idea is with

marvellous fulness expressed by Paul—"The epistle of

Christ, written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the

living God: not in tables of stone, but in fleshly tables

of the heart" (2 Corinthians iii. 3). Men can easily read

the word from the old table of stone; but they are slow

to learn "the art of printing" it on their own nature, so

that it may be legible in all their life. This impression

can be effectually taken only in the melting down of the

regeneration, as Paul expresses it, Romans vi. 17—"Ye

have obeyed from the heart that mould of doctrine into

which ye were delivered."

            This fleshly table of the heart lies open, and it is con-

tinually receiving impressions of some kind. It seems to

harden after youth has passed, so that what it has pre-

viously received it tenaciously keeps; what is afterwards

 


                   THE ART OF PRINTING.                       113

 

applied, it does not so readily take on. Of great moment

it is, therefore, that right impressions should go deeply

in, while the mind is still in a receptive state. But in

this promiscuous life, the table of a young man's heart

lies open for all comers; it is often seen indented deeply

and crowded all over with "divers lusts and pleasures,"

so that no room is left, whereon the things of God may

mark themselves.

            At places of public resort, such as the summit of a lofty

mountain, or the site of some famous monument, you may

see tables of wood or stone or level turf.  All over them

inscriptions have been chiselled so thickly, that you could

not now find an unoccupied spot to plant a letter on.

The characters are various: some old, some new, some

well-formed, some irregular scrawls, some mere scratches on

the surface, which a winter's storms will wash out, some

so deep that they will be legible for ages. As to matter,

some are records of personal ambition, others a spurt of

thoughtless jollity, others the date of some great event;

some are profane, and some obscene. The table lies

there, the helpless recipient of ideas, good or bad, that

stray corners may choose to impress on it.

            I have thought, as I looked on the Babel-like confu-

sion, that the heart of a man, which the Bible calls a

"table," is like one of these common public receptacles. In

youth it is peculiarly soft, and affords an inviting material

for every adventurous sculptor to try his hand upon. It

often lies exposed, and receives the accidental impressions

of every passer by. Many legends of mere emptiness

have been written on it, and were thought innocent; but

 


114             THE ART OF PRINTING.

 

there they are, at life's latest day, taking up room, and

doing no good. Some impure lines have been early

carved in, and now they will not out, even where the

possessor has been renewed, and learned to loathe them.

Parents, set a fence round your children; youth, set a

fence round yourselves. Perhaps you may have seen one of

these monumental tablets suddenly enclosed, and a notice

exhibited over the gateway, doing all men to wit, that

"whereas some evil disposed persons have imprinted vain

and wicked words on this table, it has been surrounded

by a strong fence, and henceforth no person shall be ad-

mitted to write thereon except the owner and his friends."

Go thou and do likewise. Warn, ward the intruders off.

Reserve that precious tablet for the use of the King its

owner, and those who will help to occupy it with His cha-

racter and laws.

            Take these three in the form of practical observations.

            1. The duty of parents is clear, and their encourage-

ments great. Watch the young. Stand beside that soft

receptive tablet. Keep trespassers away more zealously

than ever hereditary magnate kept the vulgar from his

pleasure-grounds. Insert many truths. Busily fill the

space with good, and that too in attractive forms. This

is the work laid to your hand. Work in your own sub-

ordinate place, and the Lord from above will send you

the blessing down.

            2. Afflictive providences generally have a bearing on

this printing process. God sends what will break the

heart; nay, sometimes a fire to melt it like water within

you; and this, in wise mercy, to make it take on the

 


                THE ART OF PRINTING.                    115

 

truth. When the pilgrims compare notes in Zion at

length, it will be found that most of them learned this

art of printing in the furnace of affliction. "Before I

was afflicted I went astray, but now have I kept thy

word" (Psalm csix. 67). The heart, in contact with a

busy world, was rubbed smooth and slippery. The type,

when it touched, glided off the surface, and left no mark

behind. This bruising and breaking opened the crust, and

let the lesson in.

            3. Whether in youth or in age, whether in sickness or

in health, it is not an effort from within or a Providence

from without that will make the heart new and the life

holy. It is the type, by the Spirit's ministry impressed

on the prepared page; it is the mercy and truth united in

Christ crucified for sin, embodied love let down from

heaven and touching the earth; it is Christ clasped to a

softened heart, that will reimprint the image of God upon

a sinful man.

 


116                                   TRUST.

 

 

                                             XVI.

 

 

                                          TRUST.

 

 

"Trust in the Lord with all thine heart;

        and lean not unto thine own understanding."—iii. 5.

 

FAITH is not fear, and fear is not faith. The terrors of

the Lord beaming in upon the conscience, using guilt as

fuel for the flame of a premature torment—this is not

religion. Christianity is not a dark ground, with here

and there a quivering streak of light thrown in. Blessed

hope is the very basis of it all.  Many spots of darkness

daub it over at the best; but the ground is a bright

ground. It is a positive and not a negative thing. It

has many diseases and pains, but it is in its nature

a life, and not a death. It flies to God, not from him.

It is not a slave's struggle to escape from divine ven-

geance: it is a dear child's confidence in a Father's love.

Christ is the way; but it is unto the Father that the pro-

digal returns. The only method of reconciliation is the

looking unto Jesus, and looking on until confiding faith

spring up; but the religious act of a soul saved is a trust

in God.

            This is an unseen thing, and it is misunderstood by

those who look toward it from without. The reason why

those who are wedded to their pleasures count religion to

be dull and painful seems to be this. They see religious

people really renouncing the pleasures of sin and sense

 


                                   TRUST.                                          117

 

They know, they feel what that renunciation would be to

themselves; but they do not know, they cannot conceive

the consolation which the peace of God gives even now to

a human heart. They see what a religious man lets go;

but they do not see in that other region the worth of the

equivalent which a religious man gets; for it is spiritually

discerned, and they are not spiritual.  In their conception

religion is a grim tyrant, who snatches every delight from

the grasp of a youth, and gives him nothing in return.

The servant of the man of God sees on the one side an

host of enemies pressing round, and on the other side no

help at hand. "Alas, my master!" he cried, "how shall

we do?" (2 Kings vi. 16, 17). "Fear not," said Elisha,

but it was not until the young man's eyes were opened to

see the mountain full of horses and chariots of fire round

about Elisha that he could be confident, or even composed.

We need the same re-creating Spirit to open the blind eyes

of the carnal, ere they can see that the joys which God in

grace gives are more than the pleasures of sin, which his

presence drives away. The green apple does not like to

be twisted and torn from the tree; but the ripened fruit,

that has no more need for the root's sap, drops easily off.

Trust in the Lord, when a soul attains it, loosens every

other bond, and makes it easy to let go all which the

world gives. When you feel your footing firm in the

peace of God, you will not be afraid though the very earth

should sink away from beneath you.

            Trust is natural to the creature, although trust in the

Lord be against the grain to the guilty. It is our nature

to be dependent. It is our instinct to lean. In regard

 


118                             TRUST.

 

to the unseen, man has an innate consciousness of his own

frailty, and in general it is not difficult to persuade him

to lean on something beyond himself.  Ever since sin

began, gods many and lords many have invited men's

confidence, and offered them aid.  It is easy to persuade

Papists to lean on priests and saints, on old rags and

painted pictures—on any idol; but it is hard to get a

Protestant really to trust in the living God. It is a com-

mon remark that Papists have more devotion in their way

than we have in ours. The fact is obvious: the reason

of it is not always seen. Popery sails with the stream

when it bids men trust, for this falls in with a tendency

of nature; but it puts forward to receive the confiding

soul a dead idol, whose presence is no rebuke to indulged

sin. Among Papists you will find real devotion in all who

are conscious of nature's weakness, and willing to trust;

but among Protestants you can find real devotion only in

those who are prepared to crucify the flesh--who, at

enmity with their own sins, bound forward to meet the

offered embrace of "our God," and so plunge their bosom

lusts into a consuming fire.

            "With all thine heart." God complains as much of a

divided allegiance as of none. A double-minded man is

unstable in all his ways. In cleaving to Christ the effort

to reserve a little spoils all. It endangers ultimate safety,

and destroys present peace. The soul should grow into

Christ, as grows the branch on the vine; but the reserved

part is dead matter lying between the two liven prevent-

ing them from coalescing into one. The somewhat which.

the soul refuses to surrender sticks in between, so that you

 


                                   TRUST.                                   119

 

cannot have your life hid in Christ; Christ cannot live in

you. Your hope cannot find way into his heart, his peace

cannot flow into yours. "Except ye be converted and

become as a little child, ye cannot enter into the kingdom."

            "In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall

direct thy paths." Observe the universality of the com-

mand. There is no hardship in this. The commandment

is holy and just and good. If we keep back any of the

conditions, we lose all the promised return. This injunc-

tion is aimed, not at the speculative atheism which

denies that there is a God, but at the much more common

practical ungodliness which keeps Him at a distance

from human affairs. Few will refuse to acknowledge

a superintending Providence at certain times, and in

certain operations that are counted great.  If the com-

mandment had been, "Acknowledge God in the uncertain

and difficult ways of life," it would have met with a more

ready compliance. To uphold the world and direct its

movements, to appoint the birth and the death of men,

to provide redemption from sin, and open the way into

glory—in these grand and all comprehensive operations

men would be content to acknowledge God, provided

they were allowed to retain all minor matters under their

own management.  They will treat God as subjects treat

a king, but not as a wife treats her husband. The large,

and the formal, and the public, they will submit to his

decision; but the little, and close, and kindly, they will

keep to themselves. Let Him compass you about, as

the atmosphere embraces the earth, going into every

interstice, and taking the measure of every movement




120                              TRUST.

 

"Trust in the Lord at all times; pour ye out your

hearts before him:"   

            The command is encouraging as well as reproving. It,

is not merely the promise that is encouraging, but also

the command which precedes it. Does God claim to be

acknowledged in all my ways? May I trouble the Master

about everything, great or small, that troubles me?

May I lay before the Almighty Ruler every care of my

heart, every step of my path? Yes, everything. The

great and glorious sun shines down from heaven upon

the daisy; and the feeble daisy sweetly opens its breast?

and looks up from earth upon the sun. God is the

maker of them both. Both equally enjoy His care, and

equally speak His praise.  The genuine spirit of adoption

may be best observed in little things. The distant and

unconflding will come on occasion of state formalities to

the sovereign; but the dear child will leap forward with  

everything. The Queen of England is the mother of a  

family. At one time her ministers of state come gravely

into her presence to converse on the policy of nations;

at another her infant runs into her arms for protection,  

frightened at the buzzing of a fly. Will she love less

this last appeal, because it is a little thing?  We have

had fathers of our flesh who delighted when we came to

them with our minutest ailments:  How much more should

we bring all our, ways to the Father of our spirits, and

live by simple faith on Him?

 


                 THE HEALTH OF HOLINESS.                        121

 

 

                                        XVII.

 

 

                    THE HEALTH OF HOLINESS.

 

 

"Fear the Lord, and depart from evil. It shall he health to thy navel, and

                     marrow to thy bones."—iii. 7, 8.

 

By a striking and strongly figurative expression, which

can be perfectly comprehended by readers of any age or

clime, it is intimated that a religious rectitude preserves

mental and physical health, and gives fullest play to

all the human faculties. All God's laws come from one

source, and conspire for one end. They favour righte-

ousness and frown on sin. The law set in nature runs

parallel, as far as it goes, to the law written in the word.

It is glory to God in the highest, as governor of the world.

Vice saps the health both of body and mind. Every

one of us has seen monuments of this awful law, almost

as deeply blighted as the warning pillar on the plain of

Sodom, only they stalk about, and so publish their lesson

more widely. When the brain has been dried, and the

eye dimmed, and the countenance bleared, and the limbs

palsied, and the tongue thickened by drunkenness, and

other vices that march in its company or follow in its

train, what remains of the man should be to us as dread

a warning against his course, as if he had been turned

into a salt statue, and stood upon the wayside to scare

the solitary passenger. It behoves us to walk circum-

spectly, and not as fools. All around us, sin is withering

 


122          THE HEALTH OF HOLINESS.

 

the bloom of youth, and wasting manhood's strength--

is shrivelling the skin upon the surface, and drying up

the marrow in the heart of the bones. Verily we are in

the hands of the living God. In Him we live, and move,

and have our being. We cannot elude His observation,

or break from His grasp.

            Dreadful though its results be, I rejoice in these provi-

dential arrangements.  The law by which disease and

imbecility closely track the path of lust, is of God's own

making, and behold it is very good. It is righteous, and

merciful too. The link which connects the suffering with

the sin, I would not break though I could. Even so,

Father! for so it seemed good in thy sight.  These wast-  

ings of the marrow are the terrors of the Lord set in

array against evil. If they were awanting„ human govern-

ments could not withstand the tide of universal anarchy.

These providential arrangements clog the wheels of evil,

and so secure for the world a course of probation. If the

Creator had not fixed in nature these make-weights on

the side of good, the tide of evil that set in with sin

would have soon wrought the extinction of the race. It

is especially those sins that human governments cannot

or will not touch, that God takes into his own hands,

and checks by the stroke of his judgment He has

bowed his heavens and come down. He concerns Him-

self with the details of human history. He who does

the great things, neglects not the less. He who makes

holiness happy in heaven, makes holiness healthful on

earth. Gather up the fragments of his, goodness, that

none of them be lost. Set them all in the song of praise.

 


                         CAPITAL AND PROFIT.                         123

 

 

                                        XVIII.

 

 

                          CAPITAL AND PROFIT.

 

 

"Honour the Lord with thy substance,

          and with the first fruits of all thine increase."—iii. 9.

 

THE two terms, substance and increase, exist, and are

understood in all nations and all times. They correspond

to capital and profit in a commercial community, or land

and crop in an agricultural district. Although the direct

and chief lesson of this verse be another thing, we take

occasion, from the occurrence of these terms, first of all,

to indicate and estimate a grievous malady that infests

mercantile life in the present day. It manifests itself in

in these two kindred features: (1), A morbid forwardness

to commence business without capital; that is an effort

to reap an increase while you have no substance to reap

it from; and (2), A morbid forwardness to prosecute

business to an enormous extent, upon a very limited

capital; that is an effort to reap more increase than your

substance can fairly bear.

            In former, and, commercially speaking, healthier times,

those who had no money were content to work for wages

until they had saved some, and then they laid out to the

best advantage the money which they had. This practice

is honourable to the individual, and safe to society. An

unfair and unsafe standard of estimating men has been

surreptitiously foisted upon this community. Practically

 


124                   CAPITAL AND PROFIT.

 

by all classes, the chief honour should be given, not to

the great merchant, but to the honest man. A man who

has only five pounds in the world, and carries all his

merchandise in a pack on his shoulder, is more worthy of

honour than the man who, having as little money of his

own, drives his carriage, and drinks champagne at the  

risk of other people. A full discussion of mercantile

morality under this text would be unsuitable, and there-

fore we now refrain; but a note of warning was demanded

here on the one point which has been brought up. We

must have truth and righteousness at the bottom as a

foundation, if we would have a permanently successful

commerce. Let men exert all their ingenuity in extracting

the largest possible increase from their substance; but let

them beware of galvanic efforts to extract annual returns

at other people's risk, from shadows which have no body

of substance behind. This is the epidemic disease of

commerce. This is the chief cause of its disastrous fluctua-

tions.  This is the foul humour in its veins that bursts

out periodically in wide spread bankruptcy. If all

merchants would conscientiously, as in God's sight, confine

their gains to a legitimate increase of their realized sub-

stance, the commerce of the nation would circulate in

perennial health.

            When the increase is honestly obtained, honour the

Lord with its first fruits. To devote a portion of our

substance directly to the worship of God, and the good of

men, is a duty strictly binding, and plainly enjoined in

the Scriptures. It is not a thing that a man may do or

not do as he pleases. There is this difference, however,

 


                   CAPITAL AND PROFIT.                            125

 

between it and the common relative duties of life, that

whereas for these we are under law to man, for that we

are accountable to God only. For the neglect of it no

infliction comes from a human hand. God will not have

the dregs that are squeezed out by pressure poured into

his treasury. He depends not, like earthly rulers; on the

magnitude of the tribute. He loveth a cheerful giver.

He can work without our wealth, but He does not work

without our willing service. The silver and the gold are

His already; what He claims and cares for is the cheer-

fulness of the giver's heart.

 

 

 

 


126       A FATHERLY WORD ON FATHERLY CORRECTION.

 

 

                                                     XIX.

 

 

                      A FATHERLY WORD ON FATHERLY

                                             CORRECTION.

 

 

"My son, despise not thou the chastening of the Lord; neither be weary of his

correction: for whom the Lord loveth He correcteth; even as a father the son

in whom he delighteth."--iii. 11, 12.

 

This passage is taken entire out of the Old Testament,

and inserted in the New (Heb. xii, 5, 6).

            I have seen the crown of our present sovereign. It is

studded all over with jewels, bright jewels of various hue.

The eye can scarcely rest upon it for radiance. Some of

these jewels have been found and fashioned in our own

day; others have been taken from the crowns which

English monarchs wore in ancient times. But the gems

that have been taken from an ancient crown, and inserted

in the newest, are as bright and as precious as those that

were never used before. Jewels are neither dimmed by,

time, nor superseded by fashion. A prince will wear an

old one as proudly as a new.

            Such are these words, these tried and pure words,

spoken of old by the Spirit in Solomon, and recalled for

use by the same Spirit in Paul. This word of God liveth

and abideth for ever. The king who uttered it at first

has passed away with all his glory like the grass. The

kingdom which he swayed is blotted out from the map of

the nations. The temple where they may have been read

 


A FATHERLY WORD ON FATHERLY CORRECTION.    127

 

to the great congregation has been cast down. Jerusalem

became a heap. But these words of Solomon remain at

this day bright and pure like the jewels on the crown he

wore. The very gems that sparkled in the diadem of

David's son, appear again reset in a circlet of glory round

the head of David's Lord. Heaven and earth shall pass

away, but none of these precious words shall fail.

            In quoting the words from the Old Testament, Paul

perceived, and pointed out a tender meaning in the form

of the expression, "my son." That formula occurs often

in the Proverbs, and a careless reader would pass it as a

thing of course. Not so this inspired student of the

Scripture. He gathers a meaning from the form of the

word before he begins to deal with its substance. The

exhortation, he says, "speaketh unto you as unto

children." Incidentally we obtain here a lesson on the

interpretation of Scripture. Some would confine them-

selves to the leading facts and principles, setting aside, as

unimportant, whatever pertains merely to the manner of

the communication. By this method much is lost. It

is not a thrifty way of managing the bread that cometh

down from heaven. Gather up the fragments that none

of them be lost. We give no license to the practice of

building precious doctrines upon conceits and fancies,

while there are solid foundations at hand laid there for

the purpose of bearing them. We do not want any of

your word; but we must have all that is the Lord's, great

and small alike. We need every word that proceedeth

out of the mouth of God to live upon. Take and use all

that is in the word, but nothing more.

 


128       A FATHERLY WORD ON FATHERLY CORRECTION.

 

            "My son." The Spirit in Paul recognised this as a

mark of God's paternal tenderness, and used it as a ground

of glad encouragement to desponding believers. Of de-

sign, and not by accident, was the word thrown into that

form, as it issued at first from the lips of Solomon. God

intended thereby to reveal Himself as a Father, and to

grave that view of his character in the Scripture as with

a pen of iron and the point of a diamond, that the most

distant nations and the latest times might know that as

a Father pitieth his children, so the Lord pitieth them

that fear Him.

            Some men raise a debate about inspiration, whether

every word be inspired, or only some. There was no

such idea in Paul's mind. Not only the main propositions,

but the incidental tone and cast of the language is under-

stood to express the mind of God. We should not allow

one jot or tittle of this word to pass away through our

hands as we are using it

            Turning now to the matter of this text; understand by

chastening in the meantime, any affliction, whatever its

form or measure may be. The stroke may fall upon your

own person, your body, your spirit, or your good name;

it may fall on those who are dearest to you, and so wound

you in the tenderest spot; it may fall upon your sub-

stance to sweep it away, or on your country to waste it.

Whatever the Providence may be that turns your joy

into grief, it is a chastening from the Lord. Taking, in

the first place, this more general view of chastening or re-

buke, the command regarding it is twofold:  1. Do not

despise it;  2. Do not faint under it. There are two

 


A FATHERLY WORD ON FATHERLY CORRECTION.    129

 

opposite extremes of error in this thing, as in most others;

and these two commands are set like hedges, one on the

right hand, and another on the left, to keep the traveller

from wandering out of the way. The Lord from heaven

beholds all the children of men. He sees that some, when

afflicted, err on this side, and some on that. The stroke

affects those too little, and these too much.

            1. "Despise not." It means to make light of any-

thing; to cast it aside as if it had no meaning and no

power. The affliction comes on, and the sufferer looks

to the immediate cause only. He refuses to look up to

the higher links of the chain; he refuses to make it the

occasion of communion with God. The disease comes

upon him; it is a cold or a bruise; it has been neglected,

and so aggravated; but the doctor has prescribed such

a remedy, and he expects it will soon give way. The

loss in business comes: he feels the uneasiness—it may

be, the affront. He has grief for his own loss, and

indignation against others. But he was in a fair way,

and might have succeeded, if such an article had not sud-

denly fallen, or such a man had not become bankrupt.

The bereavement comes; nature sheds bitter tears a while,

and nature by degrees grows easy again. All this, what

is it, and what is the degree of its guilt? It is specifi-

cally atheism. It is to be "without God in the world."

The Father of our spirits touches us by certain instru-

ments which are at his command; and we refuse to look

up and learn from the signs on his countenance.

            We forbid not the consideration of instruments and

secondary causes. Let them be observed, and the reme-

 


30   A FATHERLY WORD ON FATHERLY CORRECTION.

 

dies which they suggest applied; but do not stop there.

Do not finish off with these dumb messengers whom the

Lord sends. They are sent for the very purpose of in-

viting you to a conference, secret and personal, with Him-

self.  When you smart under the chastening, acknow-

ledge the Lord. He is not far from every one of us.

He speaks to us as to children. He means thereby to

represent Himself as a Father. In that character he

alternately visits us with mercy and judgment. He gives

us life, and breath, and all things; He also at other times

rebukes and bereaves. He takes it ill to be overlooked

in either capacity. He is a jealous God. He will not

allow idols to intercept the homage of his creatures; so

also he is jealous, and his jealousy will burn like fire, if

you give to his servants, whether diseases, or stormy

winds, or mercantile convulsions, the regard which is due

to Himself—your regard when success makes you happy,

or when grief weighs you down: Do not meet sorrow by

a mere hardihood of nature. Let your heart flow down

under trouble, for this is human: let it rise up also to

God, for this is divine.

            2. "Faint not." This is the opposite extreme. Do

not be dissolved, as it were—taken down and taken to

pieces by the stroke. Do not sink into despondency and

despair. You should retain presence of mind, and exer-

cise all your faculties. Both extremes, when traced to

their fountain-head, spring from the same cause—a want

of looking to God in the time of trouble. If the bold

would see God in his afflictions, he would not despise; if

the timid would see God in them, he would not faint

 


A FATHERLY WORD ON FATHERLY CORRECTION.    131

 

As in other cases, the two opposite errors branch off

originally from the same path, and converge upon it

again. Truth goes straight over the hill Difficulty be-

tween. Godliness is profitable unto all things: it humbles

the proud, and lifts up the lowly. It softens the hard,

and gives firmness to the feeble.

            The middle way is the path of safety. Be impressed

by the stroke of the Lord's hand, but not crushed under

it. Let your own confidence go, but lay hold on the arm

of the Lord, that you may be kept from falling. Let the

affliction shut you out from other helps, and up to the

help that is laid on the Mighty One.

            "Whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth." We must

not suppose from this that the trouble which a man endures

on earth is the mark and measure of God's love. It is

not a law of the kingdom of heaven that those who suffer

most from God's hand are farthest advanced in his favour.

Hitherto we have considered the afflictive stroke simply

as a suffering; but it is specifically in "chastening" that

the love lies, and all suffering is not chastening. It means

fatherly correction for the child's good. The word indeed

signifies "education."

            God, the ruler of the universe, permits suffering to fall

on all men indiscriminately: But the God of mercy stands

by to make the suffering love's instrument in training

every dear child. The same stroke may fall on two men,

and be in the one case judgment, in the other love. "In

vain have I smitten your children: they received no cor-

rection" (Jer. ii. 30). All were "smitten," but they only

obtained paternal correction who in the spirit of adoption

 


132     A FATHERLY WORD ON FATHERLY CORRECTION.

 

"received" it as such. You may prune branches lying

withered on the ground, and also branches living in the

vine. In the two cases the operation and instrument are

precisely alike; but the operation on this branch has no re-

sult, and the operation on that branch produces fruitful-

ness, because of a difference in the place and condition of

the branches operated on.

            In his comment on this text, Paul charges the Hebrew

Christians with having "forgotten" it. He lays it ex-

pressly at their door as a fault, that this word of God

was not hidden in their hearts, and ready in their

memories. It is expected of Christians, in New Testa-

ment times, that they know, and remember, and apply the

Old Testament Scriptures. When they forgot it, He who

spoke it at first, repeated it again, accompanied with a

complaint that their forgetfulness made the repetition

necessary.

            The warning has often been given, and it is needed

yet, that terror in time of trouble may be no true repent-

ance. The profligate, the vain, or the worldly has been

laid low on a sick bed. So near has death come, that

the very shadow of the judgment seat fell cold and dark

over his heart, and took all the light out of his former

joys. He grieves now that he has sinned so much. He

resolves that if he recover he will fear God, and seek a

Saviour. After quivering for a time, between death and

life, he gets the turn toward the side of time, and enters

on another lease of life. The breezes of slimmer, and the

exercise of returning strength, refresh again his pallid

cheek, and rekindle his sunken eye. The affliction is

 


A FATHERLY WORD ON FATHERLY CORRECTION.     133

 

over. The fear of death departs, and with it the repent-

ance which it had brought. He returns to his pleasures

again. He brings disgrace upon the holy name of Jesus,

and provokes God to give him over. He deals by the

Almighty as little children do by ghosts—cower down in

breathless terror of them at night, and laugh at them

when the daylight returns. He "will mock when their

fear cometh!"

            But unspeakably precious to dear children are the

corrections of a Father's love, all these abuses notwith-

standing. It is one of the finest triumphs of faith, when,

in time of affliction, a Christian gets fresh confidence in a

Saviour's love. How sweet, it is to lay your besetting sins

and characteristic shortcomings beneath the descending

stroke, and count it so much gain when they are crushed!

It may well encourage a believer to be patient in the

furnace, to see that some of the dross is separating, and

coming away. Not a drop too much will fall into the

cup of the redeemed, and it will all be over soon. Lord,

pity our weakness! Lord, increase our faith!

 


134           TREASURES FOR THE TAKING.

 

 

                                           XX.

 

 

                   TREASURES FOR THE TAKING.

 

 

"Happy is the man that findeth wisdom,
        and the man that getteth understanding."—iii. 13.

 

WISDOM and understanding are to be received here in the

same sense as that in which they occurred and were ex-

pounded in the second chapter. It is wisdom in its

highest view; wisdom in regard to all the parts of man's

being, and all the periods of his destiny. This wisdom

is embodied in the person of Christ, as light is treasured

in the sun, but thence it streams forth in all directions,

and glances back from every object that it falls upon.

He is the Wisdom of God, and by the Spirit in the Scrip-

tures, He is made unto us wisdom. In Him the glory

that excelleth is, and when our eyes are opened we shall

behold it there, as the glory of the only-begotten of the

Father, full of grace and truth.

            Saving wisdom is to be "found" and "gotten." It is

not required of us that we create it. We could not plan,

we could not execute a way of righteous redemption for

sinners. We could, not bring God's favour down to com-

pass men about, and yet leave His holiness untainted as

it is in heaven. This is all His own doing; and it is all

done. All things are now ready. When we are saved,

it is by "finding" a salvation, already complete, and

being ourselves "complete in him." But while we are

 


                  TREASURES FOR THE TAKING.                   135

 

not required to make a salvation, we are expected to

seek the salvation which has been provided and brought

near. The command of God is attached to his promise,

and together they constitute his blessed invitation, "seek

and ye shall find." It will be a fearful thing to come

short of eternal life, thus completed and offered, from

sheer want of willingness to seek. "How shall we

escape if we neglect so great salvation?"

            Understanding is a thing to be gotten. It comes not

in sparks from our own intellect in collision with other

human minds. It is a light from heaven, above the

brightness of this world's sun. The gift is free, and an

unspeakable gift it is. Bear in mind that religion is not

all and only an anxious fearful seeking: it is a getting

too, and a glad enjoying. It is blessed even to hunger

for righteousness; but a greater blessing awaits the hun-

gerer, he shall be filled. The seeker may be anxious,

but the finder is glad. "Happy is the man that find-

eth." It is a great glory to God, and a great benefit to

a careless world, when a follower of Christ so finds salva-

tion, as to rejoice in the treasure. When the new song

comes from the mouth of the delighted possessor, many

shall observe the change, and shall fear, and trust in

the Lord (Psalm xl. 3). The joy of the Lord becomes a

disciple's strength, both to resist evil and to do good.

Those who, by finding a Saviour, have been themselves

delivered from fear and let into joy, have the firmest

foothold, and the strongest arm, to "save with fear"

when it becomes needful to pull a neighbour out of the

very fire (Jude 23).

 


136              A GAINFUL MERCHANDISE.

 

 

                                         XXI.

 

 

                    A GAINFUL MERCHANDISE.

 

 

"For the merchandise of it is better than the merchandise of silver, and the gain

thereof than fine gold. She is more precious than rubies: and all the things

thou canst desire are not to be compared unto her."—iii. 14, 15.

 

WISDOM is compared and contrasted with other posses-

sions. It is merchandise. There is a most pleasant ex-

citement in the prosecution of mercantile enterprise. It

gives full play to all the faculties. Those who prosecute

it as a class have their wits more sharpened than other

sections of the community. The plans are contrived,

and the calculations made. The goods are selected,

purchased, loaded, and dispatched. Then there is a

watching for favourable winds. After all is clear at the

custom-house, and the ship beyond his view, the owner

left on shore, may be seen to turn frequently round as he

walks leisurely in the evening from his counting-house to

his dwelling. He is looking at the vane on the steeple,

or the smoke from the chimneys, or any object that will

indicate the direction of the wind. His mind is fixed on

the probable position of the ship, and his imagination

vividly pictures its progress down the channel. He

strains mentally at it, as if he could thereby aid its

speed. If a photograph of his soul could be taken at the

moment, it would be found that his spirit bent after the

distant ship, as the keen curler seems by his attitude to

 


                 A GAINFUL MERCHANDISE.                       137

 

direct the course of the stone that he has launched until

it reach the mark. Next day he scans the newspapers to

learn whether similar exports are flowing to the same

market. Every succeeding day some new aspect of the

object presents itself, until the result of the adventure is

known. He makes much of it, and so he should; what-

ever a man does, he should do well.

            But meantime, what of the merchandise for a more

distant country than that to which his goods are going—

what of the traffic for eternity? Are there no careful

calculations, no instinctive longings, no vivid imaginings, 

as to its condition and progress? Are your minds never

filled with glad anticipations of its success, or anxious

fear of its miscarriage!  Do you watch those symptoms

which indicate its prosperity or decay? This merchan-

dise is better and more gainful than any other. The

world contains not any such promising field for specula-

tion. It opens up a richer and surer market than any

port of Time. In that region there is never any glut.

He to whom you make consignment is ever faithful.

What you commit to Him He will keep until that day.

He is wise that winneth souls; his own first, and then

others. There is no gain to be compared with this. It

is a treasure that cannot be taken away. Thieves can-

not penetrate its storehouse; moth and rust do not cor-

rupt the goods of those who are rich towards God.

It often happens that a merchant amasses a large for-

tune by the labour of many years, and then loses all by

a single unfortunate speculation. Some dark tales hang

on these catastrophes—too dark for telling here. When

 


138          A GAINFUL MERCHANDISE.

 

such a crash comes, the wonder of the neighbourhood,

passing from mouth to mouth, is, why did he not lay up

his fortune, when it was realized, in some place of safety?

But, alas, where is that place? It lies not within the

horizon of time. All the riches that can be laid up here

will soon take wings and fly away. If we do not invest

in heaven, we shall soon be poor; for the earth, and the

things therein, will be burnt up. The prosperous mer-

chant must soon put on "the robe which is made without

pockets;" and he is destitute indeed, if he have not the

true riches in eternity before him, for all the others will

be left behind.

            By our own lips, and our own deeds shall we be con-

demned; if, being all energy for time, we be all indolence

for eternity—if we fill our memory with mammon, and

forget God.

 


   LENGTH OF DAYS IN THE HAND OF WISDOM.           139

 

 

                                       XXII.

 

 

LENGTH OF DAYS IN THE HAND OF WISDOM.

 

 

          "Length of days is in her right hand."—iii. 16.

 

IT is certainly not a uniform experience, that a man lives

long, in proportion as he lives well.  Such a rule would

obviously not be suitable to the present dispensation. It

is true that all wickedness acts as a shortener of life, and

all goodness as its lengthener; but other elements enter,

and complicate the result, and slightly veil the interior

law. If the law were according to a simple calculation

in arithmetic, "the holiest liver, the longest liver," and

conversely, "the more wicked the life the earlier its

close;" if this, unmixed, unmodified were the law, the

moral government of God would be greatly impeded, if

not altogether subverted. Wickedness shortens life; but

God's government is moral; it is not a lump of mere

materialism. He will have men to choose goodness, for

His sake and its own; therefore, a slight veil is cast

over its present profitableness. Some power is allowed

to the devil, whereby to try them that are upon the

earth. Here is one way in which it is used. A stray

drunkard lives to a great age. All the neighbourhood

know it. It is trumpeted at every carousal. The hoary

debauchee, who has survived all the saints of a parish, is

triumphantly pointed to by younger bacchanals, as evi-

dence that a merry life will keep death long at bay. On

 


140    LENGTH OF DAYS IN THE HAND OF WISDOM.

 

the supposition that a certain measure of power were

conceded to Satan, he could not lay it out in any way

that would secure a greater revenue to his kingdom, than

to give a long term of life to one profligate in every

county. By means of that one decoy, he might lure a

hundred youths to an early grave and a lost eternity.

Individual cases of long life in wickedness are observed,

and fastened on, and exaggerated by the vicious, to prove

to themselves that their course is not a shorter road to

the grave; and yet it is a law—a law of God, in con-

stant operation, that every violation of moral law saps, so

far, the foundations of the natural life.

            It is most interesting, and at the same time unspeak-

ably sad, to observe how much more easily satisfied men

are with evidence when they are about to risk their souls,

than when they propose to risk their money. Investiga-

tions have been made of late years into the effect of in-

temperate habits on the length of life, not with a view to

moral lessons at all, but simply in search of material for

pecuniary transactions. It is expressly intimated that

occasional drinkers are included in the calculations as

well as habitual drunkards, and the tables exhibit among

them a frightfully high rate of mortality. Out of a given

number of persons, and in a given number of years, where

110 of the general population would have died, there died

of the drinkers 357. Of persons between the ages of

twenty-one and thirty, the mortality among drinkers was

five times greater than that of the general community.*

These views are acted on by Life Assurance Societies. A

_____________________________________________

 

            * Paper by Mr. Nelson, in " Athenaeum."

 

 


     LENGTH OF DAYS IN THE HAND OF WISDOM.      141

 

young man will lean his life and his soul on the lie that

his fast life is consistent with a long life; but let him try

to effect a life assurance on himself, and he will find that

the capitalist will not entrust his money on such a frail

security.

            Drunkenness is selected by the agents of assurance

societies for their calculations, and mentioned here for

illustration, not that it is more sinful before God, or more

hurtful to life than other vices, but simply because it is of

such a palpable character that, it can be more easily ob-

served and accurately estimated. Others, if human eyes

could trace them, would give the same result; but they

are trackless, like a serpent on the rock, or an eagle in

the air.

 


142                         A PLEASANT PATH.

 

 

                                           XXIII.

 

 

                              A PLEASANT PATH.

 

 

"Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace."—iii. 17.

 

WE are accustomed to the idea that the end of a good

man's course is happy. We are well aware that when

the pilgrim gets home he will have no more sorrow. But

does not the journey lie through a wilderness from the

moment when the captive bursts his bonds till he reach

the overflowing Jordan, and, in the track of the High

Priest, passing through the parted flood, plant his foot finely

on the promised land? It does. It traverses the desert

all its length, and yet the path is pleasant notwithstand-

ing. To the honour of the Lord be it spoken, and for the

comfort of his people, not the home only, but also the way

thither, is pleasantness and peace. Those who have not

trod it count it dreary. Those who see what it wants,

and have not tasted what it is, naturally think that how-

ever safe the home to which it leads the traveller at last,

it must make him in the meantime of all men most miser-

able. Those who abide in Egypt, by its flesh-pots and its

river, may pity the host of Israel marching through a land

not sown; but Israel, in the desert though they be, get their

bread and their water sure from day to day; all the more

sweet to their taste that the water leaps in their sight at

the Father's bidding from a barren rock, and the bread is

rained from heaven around their tents. The pilgrim who

 


                         A PLEASANT PATH.                           143

 

flees from Egypt at God's command, and closely follows

then the guiding pillar, will go safe and sweetly over.

The young lion may suffer hunger, but they who wait

upon the Lord shall not lack any good. In the keeping

of His commandments there is great reward, The path

is peace, although storms rage all around it, if there be

peace in the heart of the traveller. The peace of God

keeping the heart within will beam out on the untrodden

way, and gild its jagged sides with gladness. The path

of the justified is like the shining light: from the first

struggling twilight it grows in beauty until it culminate

in day. The path is peace: eye hath not seen, nor ear

heard, what the home will be.

 


144    WISDOM MAKING AND MANAGING WORLDS.

 

 

                                              XXIV.

 

 

            WISDOM MAKING AND MANAGING WORLDS.

 

 

"The Lord by wisdom hath founded the earth; by understanding hath he estab-

lished the heavens. By his knowledge the depths are broken up, and the clouds

drop down the dew."—iii. 19, 20.

 

THESE are specimens of Wisdom's mighty work on worlds.

These are the well known tracks of God's goings in crea-

tion. There is a closer connection between creation and

redemption than human philosophy is able to discover, or

unbelieving philosophy is willing to own. The breach

that sin has made in the moral hemisphere of the dupli-

cate universe hides from our view the grand unity of the

Creator's work. It is one plan from the beginning. The

physical and the moral departments are the constituent

parts of the completed whole. Throughout the present

week (a thousand years is with the Lord as one day,)

creation labours painfully, by reason of a rent that runs

through its spiritual side: provision has been made for

healing it; and even now the process is going on.  These

labour days sprung from a preceding holy rest, and they

will issue in another Sabbath soon. Creation is groaning

now for its promised rest.  When it comes, the material

world will again be a perfect platform for the display of

its Maker's goodness. When the earth is made new, it

will be the dwelling-place of righteousness. The material

and the spiritual, like body and soul, each fearfully made,

 


WISDOM MAKING AND MANAGING WORLDS.          145

 

and together wonderfully united, will be the perfect mani-

festation of divine wisdom and love.

            A glance is gotten here into the circulation of the

world. "The depths are broken up, and the clouds drop

down dew!" He has instituted laws whereby the deep

is divided. One portion rises to the sky, and thence drops

down again to refresh the earth. "How wonderful, O

Lord, are thy works; in wisdom hast thou made them

all!"

            By his knowledge, too, another depth is broken up.

The wicked, a whole worldful, lie outspread beneath his

eye, "like the troubled sea, when it cannot rest" (Isaiah

lvii. 20). What wisdom can separate the pure from the

impure, and draw from that unholy mass a multitude,

whom no man can number, to be fit inhabitants of hea-

ven? God's wisdom has done this. Christ, set in the

firmament of revelation, lets his beams of love fall upon

the lost, and thereby wins them out from their impurity,

and upward unto Himself.  There is a double upbreaking

of these depths, and a double separation of the pure from

the vile; the one is personal, the other public.

            In an individual there is a great sea of sin. When

the love of Christ comes in power, it dissolves the terrible

cementing by which the soul and sin were run into one.

Forthwith there is a breaking up and a separation. The

man throws off himself; the new man puts off the old,

and the old man lets on the new. The ransomed soul is

severed from what seemed its very being, sin, and tends

upward toward the Head. Sins trouble him still, and

keep him low, but he is delivered from the law of sin.

 


146    WISDOM MAKING AND MANAGING WORLDS.

 

            In the whole community of the fallen there is a break-

ing up. The wisdom of God is rending asunder things

that sin had pressed into one. The word of invitation is,

"Come out of her my people," and there is power with

the word. A separating process is going on over all the

surface of sin's sea. This kingdom cometh not with

observation. It is now an unseen thing within the sepa-

rated; but a time is coming when the separation shall

be as manifest, and the distance as wide, as that which

now divides these raging waves of the sea from the white

sunlit clouds of glory that have been lifted up, and now

congregate and culminate in majestic beauty, as if around

the throne of God. The white-robed multitude that do

in very deed stand round it, were drawn from a sea of

sorrow and sin, for they came out of great tribulation,

and their robes were not white until they were washed

in the blood of the Lamb.

 


                     CONFIDENCE IN GOD, ETC.                 147

 

 

                                        XXV.

 

 

      CONFIDENCE IN GOD THE TRUE SAFEGUARD

                             FROM TEMPTATION.

 

 

"The Lord shall be thy confidence, and shall keep thy foot from being taken."—

                                           iii. 26.

 

BEWARE of mistakes here. Let us not deceive ourselves  

by words without meaning. Do not say God is your

confidence, if he be only your dread. An appalling

amount of hypocrisy exists in Christendom, and passes

current for devotion. He who is in Himself most worthy,

and has done most for us, is often more disliked than any

other being; and, as if this ingratitude were not enough,

men double the sin by professing that they have their

confidence in Him.

            I have observed that seagoing ships do not trust to

themselves in the windings of a river. Where they are

hemmed in between rock and quicksand, grazing now

the one and now the other, they take care to have a

steam-tug, both to bear them forward and guide them

aright. They hang implicitly upon its power. They

make no attempt at independent action. But I have

also observed, that as soon as they get clear of the nar-

rows—as soon as they have attained a good offing and

an open sea, they heave off, and hoist their own sails.

They never want a steamer until they come to narrow

waters again.

 


148              CONFIDENCE IN GOD

 

            Such is the trust in God which the unreconciled expe-

rience. In distress they are fain to lean on the Almighty.

While they are in the narrows, death seeming near on

every side, conscious that they have no power and no

skill, they would hang on the help of a Deliverer. "My

God, we know thee" (Hosea viii. 2), is then their cry.

Most devout they are, and most earnest. At every hour

of their day and night they are exercised in spirit about

pleasing God, and gaining his help in their need. The

line of their dependence seems ever tight by their constant

leaning. But when they begin to creep out of these shoals

of life—when the path opens up wide and clear and safe

again, they heave off, and throw themselves on their own

resources. They become a God unto themselves, when-  

ever dangers are out of sight. Forthwith and henceforth

they live without God in the world, until they are driven

into straits again. Then they remember God and pray,

as a distressed ship makes signals for help when she is

entering a tortuous channel (Isa. xxvi. 16; Ps. lxxviii.

34-37). This is not to have confidence in God. This

is to provoke Him to anger. He deserves a soul's con-  

fidence, and desires it.

            Confidence in God is not to be attained by a wish

whenever you please. You may, when you like, say,

"Lord, I trust in Thee," but to make the just Judge his

confidence, does not lie in the power of a sinner's will.

There is a way of reaching it; and the way is open, and all

are welcome, but no man can reach it except by that way.

Coming through Christ, and being accepted in the beloved,

you will indeed confide in God; but this is to be turned

 


    THE TRUE SAFEGUARD FROM TEMPTATION.     149

 

from darkness to light, to pass from death unto life.

When any man enters by this way into grace, he will be

ready to confess that it is the Lord's doing, and marvel-

lous in his eyes.

            It is this confidence that has power for good on the

life. It is not terror, but trust, that becomes a safeguard

from the dominion of sin. It is a peculiar and touching

promise that God, when He becomes your confidence,

"will keep your foot from being taken." Here inci-

dentally the terrible truth glances out, that snares are

laid for the traveller's feet in all the paths of life, in all

the haunts of men. Our adversary, like a roaring lion,

goeth about seeking whom he may devour. Alas, multi-

tudes are entrapped, like birds in the fowler's snare. Many

who set forth hopefully in the morning of life are caught ere

they have gone far in some of these pit-falls, and bound

over unto the second death. It is a fearful thing to pass

by and hear their screaming, and have no power to help.

            In my childhood, I sometimes saw rabbits that damaged

the corn-fields, caught in snares. My first experience of

the process melted me, and the scene is not effaced from my

memory yet. The creature was caught by the foot.  It

was a captive, but living. Oh the agonized look it cast on

us when we approached it! The scared, helpless, despair-

ing look of that living creature sank deep in the sensitive

powers of my nature. As a child, I could not conceive

of any more touching thrilling appeal than the soft roll-

ing eyes of that dumb captive; but "when I became a

man," and entered both on the experience of the world

and the ministry of the word, I met with scenes that cast

 


150                CONFIDENCE IN GOD

 

these earlier emotions down into the place of "childish

things." Soon after I began to go my rounds as a watch-

man on my allotted field, I fell upon a youth (and the same

experience has been several times repeated since) who but

lately was bounding hopefully along, bidding fair for the

better land, and seeming to lead others on, caught by the

foot in a snare. I went up to him, surprised to find him

halting so; but, ah, the look, the glare from his eyes, soon

told that the immortal was fast in the devil's toils. He

lived; but he was held. All his companions passed on,

and soon were out of sight, while he lay beating himself

on the ground. He lives; but it is in chains. The

chains have sunk into his flesh. They run through the

marrow of his bones, and are wrapped around his soul,

filthy as firm, firm as filthy. Oh, wretched man, who

shall deliver him? Not I; not any man. We must pass

on, and leave him. The same voice that wrenched from

Death his prisoner is needed to give liberty to this cap-

tive. Only one word can we utter in presence of such a

case:  "Nothing is impossible with God." Having uttered

it, we pass on with a sigh.

            Cure in such a case is difficult—is all but impossible.

Is there any method of prevention? Yes: the Lord thy

confidence will keep thy foot from being taken. The

Lord your dread will not do it, almighty though He be.

Many who have an agonizing fear of a just God in their

conscience, plunge deeper even than others into abominable

sins. It is the peace of God in the heart that has power

to keep the feet out of evil in the path of life. "He

that hath this hope in Him, purifieth himself even as

 

 


   THE TRUE SAFEGUARD FROM TEMPTATION.      151

 

He is pure." "Sin shall not have dominion over you;"

and the reason is added—"for ye are not under the law,

but under grace" (Rom. vi. 14). A son has wantonly

offended an affectionate father, and fled from his face.

After many days of sullen distance, the prodigal returns,

and at nightfall approaches his father's dwelling. He is

standing outside, shivering in the blast, yet afraid to

enter, and meet the frown of an injured parent. Some

abandoned youths, companions of his guilt, pass by, and

hail him. By a little coaxing, they break his resolution

of repentance, and carry him off to their haunts of vice.

It was easy to sweep him off when they found him trem-

bling in terror outside. He was like chaff; and iniqui-

ties, like the wind, carried him away. But if the youth

had entered before the tempters came up, and the father,

instead of frowning or upbraiding, had fallen on his neck

and kissed him, setting him in the circle of brothers and

sisters, and showering on him the manifold affections of a

united family and a happy home and if the same god-

less band had been passing then, and had beckoned him

to join their revelry, they would not have succeeded so

easily. The soul of this youth is like a ship at anchor

now, and the current does not carry him away. Specifi-

cally, it is "the God of peace" who will bruise Satan

under our feet (Rom. xvi. 20). Those who stand outside,

with just as much religion as makes them afraid, are

easily taken in the tempter's snare: the reconciled whom

the Father has welcomed back with weeping, has now

another joy, and that joy becomes his strength: "his

heart is fixed, trusting in the Lord" (Ps. cxii. 7).

 


152    THE RIGHT THING DONE AT THE RIGHT TIME

 

 

                                             XXVI.

 

 

         THE RIGHT THING DONE AT THE RIGHT TIME.

 

 

"Withhold not good from them to whom it is due, when it is in the power of

thine hand to do it. Say not unto thy neighbour, Go, and come again, and to-

morrow I will give; when thou hast it by thee."—iii. 27, 28.

 

IT is in general the law of righteousness between man and

man. Do justly to all, and do so now. Pay your debts,

and pay them to-day, lest you should lack the means to-

morrow.

            But it is probable that the precept has special reference

to the law of love. Every possessor of the good things,

either of this life or the next, is bound by the command

of the giver to distribute a portion to those who have none.

To withhold from any one that which is due to him, is

plainly dishonest. But here an interesting inquiry occurs;

how far and in what sense the poor have a right to main-

tenance out of the labour and wealth of the community?

The answer is, the really poor have a right to support by

the law of God, and the debt is binding on the conscience

of all who have the means; but it is not, and ought not

to be, a right which the poor as such can make good at

a human tribunal against the rich. The possessors of this

world's good are not at liberty to withhold the portion of

the poor. It is not left to their choice. It is a matter

settled by law. Disobedience is a direct offence against the

great Law-giver. But the poor have not a right which they

 


THE RIGHT THING DONE AT THE RIGHT TIME.      153

 

can plead and enforce at a human tribunal. The acknow-

ledgement of such a right would tend to anarchy. The

poor are placed in the power of the rich, and the rich are

under law to God. It is true that in heathen and other de-

graded countries the poor perish, but it does not follow that

any other principle would place them in a better condition.

Whatever may be the law, the possessors in every country

must administer it; and so there cannot in the nature of

things be any other law laid upon them than the law of

love. They are made answerable to God in their own

conscience for their conduct to the poor; and if that do

not prevail to secure kindness, nothing else will. If they

make light of a duty that may be pleaded at the judgment-

seat of God, much more will they make light of it as

against the poor who cannot enforce their own demands.

The assessment for the poor, in a highly artificial state of

society, is not the concession of their right to maintenance

exigible against the rich by the laws of men. It is a mere

expedient by those who give, to equalize and systematize

the disbursement of charity.

            It seems to be the purpose of God in the present dis-

pensation to do good to his creatures, by the inequality of

their condition. The design of the providential arrange-

ment is to produce gentle, humble, contented thankfulness

on the one side, and open-hearted, open-handed liberality

on the other. If God had not intended to exercise these

graces, he probably would have made and kept men, as to

external comforts, all in a state of equality. But this

would not have been the best condition for human beings,

or for any portion of them. Absolute equality of condi-

 


154    THE RIGHT THING DONE AT THE RIGHT TIME.

 

tion may do for cattle, but not for men. It appears that

the same all-wise Disposer has arranged that there shall

be great and manifold diversities of elevation in the sur-

face of the material earth, and in the condition of its

intelligent inhabitants. For similar purposes of wisdom

and goodness have both classes of inequalities been intro-

duced and maintained. Levellers, who should propose to

improve upon this globe, by bringing down every high

place and exalting every low, so that no spot of all its sur-

face should remain higher than another, would certainly

destroy it as a habitation for man. The waters would

cover it. In attempting to make a level earth, they

would make a universal sea, The grand comfort is that

the mischief cannot be done. The mountains are too

firmly rooted to be removed by any power but that of the

world's Maker.

            We suspect the other class of levellers aim at a change

as perilous; and our consolation is, that it is equally im-

possible. We believe that for the present dispensation,

the inequalities in the condition of individuals and fami-

lies is as needful to the general prosperity of the whole,

as the diversity of hill and valley in the surface of the

globe. We believe, also, that the arrangement is as firmly

fixed. It would be as easy to level the world as its in-

habitants. What may be in store for the earth and man

in the future we know not; there may be a time when

the globe shall be smooth like an ivory ball, but then

there must be no more sea: and if ever there come a

time when all men shall be and abide equal, it must be

that time when there shall be no more sea of sin to over-

 


     THE RIGHT THING DONE AT THE RIGHT TIME.     155

 

flow them. If ever there come a time when there shall be

no more master and servants, it must be the time when all

shall serve one Lord.

            In many ways society is consolidated and

strengthened by inequalities.  He who made man, male

and female, receptive weakness on one side and protecting

strength on the other, welding both by the glow of love

into a completer one, has thereby made the mass of humanity

hold more firmly together. He has also provided diagonal

girders running in a different direction—the relations of

rich and poor, master and servant, in order to interlace the

several portions of humanity more firmly into each other,

and so make society as a whole strong enough to ride out

the hurricanes of a tempestuous time.

            “When it is in the power of thine hand to do it;” a

touching memorial this.  Many who have cherished

sound principles, and desired to do good, have permitted

the time irrevocably to pass.  When they had it in their

power to do good they procrastinated, and now the means

have fled.  This is a bitter reflection in old age.  There is

only one way by which any man may make sure that such

a bitterness shall not be his, and that is by doing now

what his hand finds to do.  If it is in the power of your

hand this year to do good, it may not be so next year. 

The abundance may be taken from you, or you taken

from your abundance,.  The secret of a happy life is

to set the house in order, and keep it in order. Above

all, keep as few good intentions hovering about as

possible.  They are like ghosts haunting a dwelling.  The

way to lay them is to find bodies for them.  When they are


156    THE RIGHT THING DONE AT THE RIGHT TIME.

 

embodied in substantial deeds they are no longer dan-

gerous.

            But there is yet another way in which it may be be-

yond the power of thine hand to do a duty to-morrow

which has been deferred to-day. The hand has much

power and skill, but it cannot move except at the com-

mand of the will. If the willingness of the heart were

conclusively frozen up within, the hand, which is merely

the heart's servant, can do nothing. When the rich re-

fuse to do the duties of the day with their means, they

are in danger of falling into the miser's madness. When

you have contracted a diseased love of money which

you do not use, it is not in the power of the hand to do

the plainest duty. The man who loves money cannot

part with it. He has let his opportunity pass. On the

one side, there may be lavishness without generosity—

the mere habit of letting money run out like water: on

the other hand, there may be close carefulness without

the virtue of frugality—the mere habit of holding the

grip. Both conditions are most dismal. There is a ten-

dency to fall into the one snare or the other, The way

in the midst is a strait way. It is not easy to walk in

it. It is necessary to exercise our faculties in that opera-

tion. If we begin early, and keep going, the work will

become easy at length.

            Observe how remarkably specific is the command not

to postpone a gift. We ought to make up our minds,

and act. Those who have the means of doing good in the

community at the present day, are much tried, and should

look well to their path. There are many good objects

 


THE RIGHT THING DONE AT THE RIGHT TIME.        157

 

pressing, and as in all such cases, the very multitude of

the good notes suggests and makes room for the circula-

tion of bad ones, caution and discrimination are not only

permitted; they are peremptorily required.

            The injunction of the text is a most useful rule in one

department of this difficulty. If we have not the means,

or if the object be unworthy, there ought to be a distinct

declinature. A clear unnmbiguous negative is, in many

transactions, of incalculable worth. It is no man's duty

to give to every one who asks, or to any all that he asks.

There is such a thing as giving when you should not, from

lack of courage to say No. Farther, when the object is

not worthy, and your mind is clear, and you determine to

do nothing, it would be profitable both to yourself and

others to say so at once. It is not altogether straight-

forward to another, or safe for yourself, to announce a

postponement if you have resolved on a refusal. Soft-

ness may lead to sin. But the worst of all is when the

cause is good, when you are convinced of its goodness,

when the means are in your power, and yet you put the

pleader off. Even though you should afterwards give,

you have lost the blessing. God loves a cheerful giver,

and though you have given, you gave with a grudge.

When the fruit needs a violent pulling to wrench it from

the tree, the tree itself is torn in the process.

 


158    THE CURSE AND THE BLESSING UPON THE HOUSE.

 

 

                                                    XXVII.

 

 

                   THE CURSE AND THE BLESSING UPON THE

                                                    HOUSE.

 

 

"The curse of the Lord is in the house of the wicked:
            but He blesseth the habitation of the just.—iii. 33.

 

WE have often, in the course of these expositions, had

occasion to point out the effects of sin upon the person

who sins. Here is yet another of its bitter fruits: it

brings a curse on the house. Our interests are more

closely connected with each other than we are able to

observe, or willing to allow. The welfare of one is largely

dependent on the well-doing of another. Let every wicked

man learn here, that over and above the ruin of his own

soul, his sins bring a curse on his wife and children, his

neighbours and friends. Such is God's government, that

you cannot live in sin, any more than in small pox or the

plague, without involving others in the danger. For wise

purposes, it has been so ordained. This law is calculated

to lay an additional restraint upon a wayward spirit. A

man, reckless of his own character and fate, might be

ready to act out the daring maxim, "Let us eat and

drink, for to-morrow we die." When pity for himself

did not arrest him, he might be arrested when he saw

that his own abandoned life would curse his dwelling.

Doubtless this law of the Lord has been bit and bridle to

hold in a man, who would have burst through all other

 


THE CURSE AND THE BLESSING UPON THE HOUSE.     159

 

restraints. In blind despairing rage, he might pull down

the pillars upon his own unhappy head. Yet when he

feels his little ones clinging to his knees, and his wife

leaning on his breast, he may stand in awe, and turn and

live. "Fear and sin not." The providence of God gives

terrible momentum to that sharp word. In addition to

the weight of divine authority upon the conscience, all

the force of nature's instincts is applied to drive it home.

When the fear of perdition to himself has not power

enough, the laws of Providence throw in all his house as

a make-weight to increase the motive. He is held back

from evil by all that he ever felt of tenderness in his

youth, or feels of compassion still. And if in the last

resort these weights avail not to keep him from sinning,

they will be effectual in adding to his punishment,

            This dark curse hanging over the dwelling of the wicked,

is balanced by the blessing that falls on the habitation of

the just. Here is pleasant work, and plenty of wages.

Trust in Christ, and serve Him besides the saving of

your own soul, you will be a blessing to your habitation.

How sweet the privilege of being the parents of your chil-

dren both for this life and the life to come! And not

only the parents every one in the house may become the

channel of blessing from on high. If God has a child in

a family, he will have many an errand there. You who

are fathers know how frequently you find occasion to

visit the house where your own dear child is boarded out

for education. Our Father in heaven so visits his own,

in whatever habitation their education is going on, and

all the house will get the benefit.  The disciples of Jesus

 


160    THE CURSE AND THE BLESSING UPON THE HOUSE.

 

are a preserving salt, even when the mass preserved by

their presence are unconscious of the boon. To be good

is the shortest and surest way to do good. Jonathan in

his lifetime was dear to David; and therefore Jonathan's

son, an orphan and a cripple, sat daily at the royal table.

If you be the king's friend, your children will get the

benefit in some hour of need. It is a noble position, and

should encourage one to bear trials with patience, to be

the channel between a house and heaven, bearing them up

to God, and getting down from Him the blessing.

 


                          PRECEPT AND EXAMPLE.                       161

 

 

                                            XXVIII.

 

 

                           PRECEPT AND EXAMPLE.

 

 

"Hear, O my son, and receive my sayings. . . . I have taught thee in the

         way of wisdom: I have led thee in right paths."—iv. 10, 11.

 

IT is a great matter for a parent, if he is able to say to

his grown son, "I have taught thee in the way of wis-

dom; I have led thee in right paths." Teaching and

leading are closely allied, but not identical. It is pos-

sible, and common, to have the first in large measure,

where the second is wanting. They are two elements

which together make up a whole. With both, education

in a family will go prosperously on: where one is want-

ing, it will be halting and ineffectual. Many a parent

who acquits himself well in the department of teaching

his children, fails miserably in the department of leading

them in the right path. It is easier to tell another the

right way, than to walk in it yourself.  To lead your

child in right paths implies that you go in them before

him. Here lies the reason why so many parents prac-

tically fail to give their children a good education. Only

a godly man can bring up his child for God. It is not

uncommon to find men who are themselves vicious, de-

siring to have their children educated in virtue. Infidels

sometimes take measures to have Christianity taught to

their children. Many will do evil; few dare to teach it

to their own offspring. This is the unwilling homage

which the evil are constrained to pay to goodness.

 


162             PRECEPT AND EXAMPLE

 

            Great is the effect when parents consistently and stead-

fastly go before their children, giving them a daily ex-

ample of their daily precepts; but to teach the family

spiritual things, while the life of the teacher is carnal,

is both painful and fruitless. A man cannot walk with

one leg, although the limb be in robust health; more

especially if the other limb, instead of being altogether

wanting, is hanging on him, and trailing after him dead.

In this case it is impossible to get quit of the impediment

It will not off.  The only way of getting relief from its

weight is to get it made alive. An example of some kind,

parents must exhibit in their families. If it be not such

as to help, it will certainly hinder the education of the

young, God, in the providential laws, permits no neu-

trality in the family. There, you must either be for or

against Him.

            One of the broadest and best defined experiences that

passed under my observation, and was imprinted on my

memory in early youth, was that of a family whose father

stood high above all his neighbours in religious profession

and gifts, and yet returned from market drunk as often as

he had the means; and whose sons turned out graceless

vagabonds. Nothing is impossible with God; but it

would have been indeed a miracle of mercy if these young

men, who were accustomed from childhood to see in their

own father a lofty spiritual profession wedded to the vilest

vice, had themselves, as they grew up, lived soberly, and

righteously, and godly in the world.

 


                              HOLD FAST.                   163

 

 

                                    XXIX.

 

 

                              HOLD FAST.

 

 

"Take fast hold of instruction;

            let her not go keep her, for she is thy life."—iv. 13.

 

OFTEN a ship's crew at sea are obliged suddenly to betake

themselves to their boats, and abandon the sinking ship.

Such a case was lately reported, of an American whale

ship in the South Seas. The huge leviathan of the deep,

wounded by the art of man, ran out the distance of a

mile by way of getting a run-race, and thence came on

with incredible velocity against the devoted ship. Such

was the shock that she instantly began to fill, and was

gradually settling down. The sea was calm: there was

opportunity for effort, but not time for delay. They

were not only far from land, but far from the usual track

of ships on the sea. In the dreary region of the antarctic

circle, they might wander a whole year, and see no sail

on the desolate horizon. There was little probability of

rescue until they should regain those latitudes through

which the thoroughfare of nations runs. The word was

given. All hands went to work, and soon all the sea-

worthy boats were loaded to the gunwale with the prime

necessaries of life. The deck was now nearly level with

the water, and the boats shoved off for safety. After

they had pulled a hundred yards away, two resolute men

leaped from one of the boats into the sea, and made

 

 


164                         HOLD FAST.

 

towards the ship. They reached it while still afloat

They disappear down a hatchway. In a minute they

emerge again, bearing something in their hands. As

they leap into the water the ship goes, down; the men

are separated from each other and their burden, in the

whirlpool that gathers over the sinking hull. They do

not seem to consult their own safety. They remain in

that dangerous eddy, until they grasp again the object

which they had carried over the ship's side. Holding it

fast, they are seen at length bearing away to their com-

rades in the boat. What do these strong swimmers carry,

for they seem to value it more than life? It is the com-

pass! It had been left behind, and was remembered

almost too late. Now they have taken fast hold of it,

and will not let it go. Whatever they lose, they will at

all hazards keep it, for "it is their life."

            When shall we see souls, shipwrecked on the sea of

time, take and keep such hold of the Truth as it is in

Jesus, because it is their life? When will men learn to

count that the soul's danger in the flood of wrath is as

real, as the body's danger on a material ocean? When

will men begin to make real effort for the Eternal life,

such as they make to preserve the present life when it is

in danger? There is not an atom of hypocrisy about a

man, when he is in instant danger of drowning or starva-

tion. He lays about him with an energy and a reality

that brook no delay, and regard no appearances. If we

could truly believe that the life of our souls is forfeited

by sin, that they must be saved now or lost for ever,

and that there is, none other name given under heaven

 


                                 HOLD FAST.                              165

 

among men to save them, than the name of Jesus; then

there would be a corresponding reality in our cleaving

to the Saviour. Although, in a sense, we seek the right

things, all may be lost by reversing the order in which,

by divine prescription, they should be sought. The rule

is, Seek first the kingdom of God, and then it is inti-

mated that other things may be innocently "added."

Those who seek first these other things as their heart's

portion, may also strive earnestly to attain the kingdom;

but their labour is lost, because they do not "strive law-

fully." "Lord, what wouldst thou have me to do," and

how wouldst thou have me to do it? "Send out thy

light and thy truth: let them lead me."

 

 

 


166                         THE PATH OF THE JUST.

 

 

                                                 XXX.

 

 

                               THE PATH OF THE JUST.

 

 

"The path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more and more unto

the perfect day. The way of the wicked is as darkness: they know not at

what they stumble."—iv. 18, 19.

 

 

THE essentials of a just man's character have been in all

ages the same. The just in every dispensation have

lived by faith, and walked with God: they have hoped

for his salvation, and done his commandments (Psalm cix,

166): they believe, and obey; they are bought with a

price, and glorify God.

            The path, the life course of such a man, is like the

shining light. I do not think that the path of the jus-

tified is compared to the course of the sun, from the

period of his appearance in the morning to the time of

his meridian height. The sun is an emblem, not of the

justified, but of the Justifier. I have always felt uneasy

in hearing the life of a believer likened to the sun's

course from horizon to zenith. The comparison does not

fit. An effort to adjust the analogy either spoils its

beauty, or gives a glory to man which is not his due.

That grandest object in the visible creation is used as an

emblem of the Highest One, and for his service it should

be reserved. Christ alone is the Light of the world:

Christians are the enlightened. The just are those whom

the Sun of Righteousness shines upon. When they come

 


                      THE PATH OF THE JUST.                        167

 

beneath his healing beams, their darkness flies away. They

who once were darkness are light now, but it is "in the

Lord."

            The new life of the converted is like the morning light.

At first, it seems an uncertain struggle between the dark-

ness and the dawn. It quivers long in the balance. At

one moment the watcher thinks, surely yonder is a streak

of light: the next, he says with a sigh, it was an illusion:

night yet reigns over all. When the contest begins, how-

ever, the result is not doubtful, although it may for a

time appear so. The first and feeblest streaks of light

that come mingling with the darkness, have issued from

the sun; and the sun that sent these harbingers, though

distant yet, is steadily advancing. Ere long the doubt

will vanish, and morning will be unequivocally declared.

Once begun, it shineth more and more unto the perfect

day; and it is perfect day when the sun has risen, as

compared with the sweet but feeble tints of earliest

dawning. Sometimes there are irregularities and back-

goings. Clouds deep and dark creep in between the sun

and the world's surface. After the morning has so far

advanced, the darkness may increase again; but, even in

this case, the source of light is coming near without any

faltering. The impediment which has partially inter-

cepted his rays, is moveable, and will soon be taken out

of the way. There are similar irregularities in the pro-

gress of a just man's course. Sometimes he halts, or

even recedes. After experiencing the light of life, and

exulting in a blessed hope, he again comes under a cloud,

and complains of darkness. But the Source of his light

 


168             THE PATH OF THE JUST.

 

and life will not fail.  He changeth not; and therefore

that seed of Jacob, though distressed, will not be con-

sumed (Malachi iii. 6). The breath of His Spirit will

drive the intercepting clouds away, and the law of the

kingdom, relieved from hindering exceptions, will yet

have free course: the path of the just will be like the

morning; it will increase until dawn break into day. If

a thousand years may in the Lord's sight be accounted

one day, much more may the life course of a disciple

from the first throes of the new birth, to the moment

when faith is lost in sight. That day is an high day in

the eternal life of the saved. It is a day much to be

remembered in the circle of victors that surround the

throne. Now that the Lord God and the Lamb are their

light, they will think of the time when the earliest dawn

began to struggle faintly in their breasts. The remem-

brance of its mysterious birth out of primeval darkness,

and its gradual growth into perfect light, will make them

say and sing of that day, in adoring wonder, What hath

the Lord wrought!     

            The analogy holds good more exactly still, if we take

into view the actually ascertained motions of the plane-  

tary system. When any portion of the earth's surface

begins to experience a dawn diminishing its darkness, it

is because that portion is gradually turning round to-

ward the sun, the centre of light fixed in the heavens.

While any part of the earth lies away from the sun, and

in proportion to the measure of its aversion, it is dark

and cold: in proportion as it turns to him again, its

atmosphere grows clearer, until, in its gradual progress,

 


                        THE PATH OF THE JUST.               169

 

it comes in sight of the sun, and its day is perfect then.

The path of the just is precisely like this. Arrested in

his darkness by a love in Christ, which he does not un-

derstand as yet, he is secretly drawn toward Him in whom

that love in infinite measure is treasured up. As he is

drawn nearer, his light increases until at last he finds

himself in the presence of the Lord. Day is not perfect

here in a believer's heart, and yet the light of the know-

ledge of God from the face Jesus shines into a believer's

heart while he sojourns here. The dark get light, the

dead get life from the Lord—in the Lord before his glo-

rious appearing. They who thus get light from a Saviour

unseen, shall, at his appearing, be like Him, and see Him

as He is. The machinery of the everlasting covenant is

meantime going, softly and silently, as the motion of the

spheres; and they that are Christ's here, whatever clouds

may dim their present prospect, are wearing every mo-

ment farther from the night and nearer to the day.

            There follows a counterpart intimation fitted to over-

awe the boldest heart "The way of the wicked is as

darkness; they know not at what they stumble" (iv,

19).  "If the light that is in thee bh darkness, how

great is that darkness?" (Matthew vi. 23.) Its greatness

consists chiefly in this, that it is "in you." A dark place

on the path might be got over; but darkness in his own.

heart, the traveller carries with him wherever he goes.  

To the blind, every place and every time is alike dark.

It is an evil heart of unbelief.  Because of this they

stumble upon that very Rock which has been laid in Zion

to sustain a sinner's hope. He who is a sanctuary to

 


170                THE PATH OF THE JUST.

 

others, is a rock of offence to them. "He shall be for a

sanctuary: but for a stone of stumbling and for a rock of

offence to both the houses of Israel" (Isa viii. 14). Even

when they fall they know not at what they stumble.

Dreadful thought! to be crushed against Him, who has

been given as a Refuge and a Rest to weary souls escaping

from a sea of sin. The way to get light is to turn from

evil.  The pure in heart shall see God."

 


                 THE FOUNTAIN AND ITS STREAMS.         171

 

 

                                           XXXI.

 

 

                  THE FOUNTAIN AND ITS STREAMS.

 

 

"Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life. Put

away from thee a froward mouth, and perverse lips put far from thee. Let

thine eyes look right on, and let thine eyelids look straight before thee.

Ponder the path of thy feet, and let all thy ways be established. Turn not to

the right hand nor to the left: remove thy foot from evil."—iv. 23-27.

 

 

FIRST the fountain, then the streams: first the heart, and

then the life-coarse. The issues of life are manifold: three

of their main channels are mapped out here—the "lips,"

the "eyes," and the "feet."

            The corruption of the heart, the pollution of the spring-

head, where all life's currents rise, is a very frequent topic

in the Scriptures. It occurs in many places, and in many

forms. In proportion to the opposition which it is fitted

to excite, is the doctrine reiterated and enforced. The

imaginations of man's heart are only evil, and that con-

tinually. The heart is deceitful above all things, and

desperately wicked. As a fountain casteth out her waters,

Jerusalem casteth out her wickedness. God foreknew

that a deceitful heart would be unwilling to own its

deceitfulness, and therefore the truth is fortified beyond

most others in the word.

            "Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are

the issues of life." This precept of the Proverbs sounds

very like some of the sayings of Jesus. His ear caught

prophetically before the time, what we have heard his-

 


172      THE FOUNTAIN AND ITS STREAMS

 

torically after it, as if the word had echoed either way.

You may stand in the morning on a height so great

that you see the sun's disc emerging from the eastern

horizon sometime before he has risen upon the plain.

Solomon, as a teacher of righteousness, was elevated far

above the common level of humanity. By special gift,

and by the Spirit's intervention, he was exalted much

above other men in all knowledge, and especially the

knowledge of divine truth. So high was the mountain-

top he stood upon, that, like Abraham, he saw Christ's

day afar off, and felt a beam from the Sun of Righteous-

ness long before he had personally arisen upon the world.

            A greater than Solomon has said, "Out of the heart

proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries." Keep there-

fore according to Solomon's precept; keep with all dili-

gence that prolific spring. Here, as in all other cases,

prayer and pains must go together. We cry to God in

the words of David, Create in me a clean heart; and He

answers back by the mouth of David's son, Keep thy

heart. We must keep it, otherwise it will run wild.

The Almighty Lord will bruise Satan; but it is "under

your feet:" yourselves must tread on his writhing folds.

            "Keep it with all keepings" is the word. Leave no

means untried. Out of our own conduct will we be con-

demned if we do not effectually keep our own hearts. We

keep other things with success as often as we set about it

in earnest—good things from getting, and bad things from

doing, harm. One who loves his garden, keeps it so well

that travellers pause as they pass and look admiring on.

You keep your family, your house, your money, and you

 


              THE FOUNTAIN AND ITS STREAMS.              173

 

keep them well. Even your clothes are kept, so that no

stain shall be seen upon them. On the other side, dan-

gerous creatures are kept with a firm hand and a watch-

ful eye from doing evil.  We keep in the horse or mule

with bit and bridle. Even the raging sea is kept back

by the skill of men, and ripening fields bask safely in the

autumn sun below the level of its waters, and within

hearing of its roar. In other keepings man is skilful and

powerful too; but in keeping his own heart, unstable as

water, he does not excel.

            Keep it with all keepings. Keep it from getting evil,

as a garden is kept; keep it from doing evil, as the sea is

kept at bay from reclaimed netherlands. Keep it with

the keeping of heaven above, and of the earth beneath--

God's keeping bespoken in prayer, and man's keeping

applied in watchful effort. Keep it with all keepings, for

out of it are the issues of life. The true principle on which

an effectual' restraint can be put upon the issues of the

heart is indicated in the 21st verse—"Keep" my words

"in the midst of thine heart." The same prescription

for the same disease occurs in that great hymn of the He-

brews (Psalm cxix. 11)—"Thy word have I hid in mine

heart, that I might not sin against thee." The word of life,

—this is the salt that must be cast into these bitter springs

of Jericho, to save the surrounding land from barrenness,

            1. The first of the three streams marked on this map

as issuing from an ill-kept heart is "a froward mouth."

The form of the precept, put it away, reveals a secret

of our birth. The evil is there at the first in every one:

He who is free of it was not born free. We have not a

 


174          THE FOUNTAIN AND ITS STREAMS.

 

clear ground to begin upon. When a man would erect a

temple to God within his own body, the first effort of the

builder is to clear the rubbish away. Of the things from

the heart that need to be put away, the first in the order

of nature is the froward mouth. Words offer the first

and readiest egress for evil.

            The power of speech is one of the grand peculiarities

which distinguish man. It is a wonderful and precious

gift. Wanting it, and all that depends on it, man would

scarcely be man. While we use the gift, we should re-

member the Giver, and the purpose for which he bestowed

it. While we speak, we should never forget that God is one

of the listeners. Men sin in comfort when they forget God,

and forget God that they may sin in comfort.  If the Queen

were present, hearing every word, on a given day, in a

given company, a restraint would be put upon every tongue;

gravity and gentleness would breathe in every sentence.

Yet that same company is not refined and sobered by the

presence of the Bing Eternal. Like Israel, in a backslid-

ing time (Mal. i. 8), we bring unto God the blind and the

lame, sacrifices that we would not offer to our sovereign

and that she would not accept at our hands. He who has

a tongue to speak should remember that the bestower of

the gift is listening, and keep back whatever would dis-

please Him. Take the principle of Hagar's simple and

sublime confession, accommodated in form to the case in

hand, "Thou God, hearest me." If our words were all

poured through that strainer, how much fewer and purer

they would be!  If all the words of our week were

gathered and set before us at its close, the boldest head

 


         THE FOUNTAIN AND ITS STREAM.               175

 

would hang down at the sight. When all the words this

tongue has uttered are written and opened in His sight

on that day, how shall I appear, if the dark record re-

mains still mine? While for that reckoning we must

trust all and only in the blood of Christ, that taketh sin

away, we should diligently set about the business of

watching and restraining the perverseness of our own lips.

The work is hopeful. They who try it in the right way

will be encouraged by seen progress. A vain, a biting, an

untruthful, a polluted, a profane tongue cannot be in the

family of God, when the family are at home in the Father's

presence. The evil must be put away; the tongue must

be cleansed; and now is the day for such exercises: that

which remaineth for the people of God is a Sabbath on

which no such work is done, in a heaven where no such

work is needed.

            2. The next outlet from the fountain is by the "eyes."

The precept is quaint in its cast—"let thine eyes look

right on;" and yet its meaning is not difficult. Let the

heart's aim be simple and righteous. No secret longings

and side glances after forbidden things: no crooked bye-

ends and hypocritical pretences. Both in appearance and

reality let your path be a straightforward one. In a

mercantile community especially this is the quality that

should be chiefly in request. Much mischief is done when

men begin to look aside instead of straight before them.

A manufacturer glances to the side one day, and sees a

neighbour making as much by a lucky speculation in an

hour as he has won by the regular prosecution of his busi-

ness in a twelvemonth. He throws for a prize, and draws

 

 


176      THE FOUNTAIN AND ITS STREAMS.

 

a blank. In the speculation the capital which sustained

his business has disappeared: his legitimate creditors are

defrauded, and his family ruined.

            Deviations from the straight line have become so many

and so great, that the deviators, keeping each other in

countenance, begin to defend their own course, and whis-

per a desire to establish a new code of laws which may

coincide with their practice. We have here and there

met with an appalling measure of obtuseness in compre-

hending the first principles of justice, which should regu-

late all commercial transactions. Men may be found

amongst us holding their heads high, and conducting

business on a large scale, who have not gotten the alpha-

bet of honesty yet.  It is ground of thankfulness, indeed,

that these are the exceptions. The body politic of com-

merce is in a much sounder state than it appears to a

superficial observer, judging from instances whose abnor-

mal criminality has thrust them more prominently into

view. If the life were not on the whole robust, it could

not bear diseased tumours so many and so great; but the

body whose beauty they mar, and whose strength they

waste, should, for its own health's sake, be ashamed of

the deformities, and intolerant of their growth. With

this view, let every man, besides joining in the general

condemnation of full-grown detected dishonesties in other

people's transactions, search for and crush incipient secret

aberrations in his own.

            When the eye is single, the whole body will be full of

light. Straightforwardness is the fairest jewel of our

commercial crown. Those who spend their life in traffic

 


                THE FOUNTAIN AND ITS STREAM.           177

 

should be jealous of themselves, and lean hard over from

the side on which sly, sinister selfishness lies, Anything

on the right side; uprightness, even downrightness, if

you will; but let us keep far away from every form and

shade of duplicity. It is true that mercantile pursuits

tend to develop some noble qualities of humanity; but

let it not be forgotten that some noxious weeds can

thrive in the riches of its soil. Love and cultivate, by

all means, the generous plants; but carefully watch the

weeds, and resolutely cast them away.

            3. The last of these issues is by the "feet."  Ponder,

therefore, their path. The best time to ponder any path,

is not at the end, not even at the middle, but at the

beginning of it. The right place for weighing the worth

of any course, is on this side of its beginning. Those

who ponder after they have entered it, are not in a posi-

tion either to obtain the truth or to profit by it Those

who rush headlong into a path of conduct because they

like it, and then begin to consider whether it is a right

one, will probably either induce themselves to believe

a lie, or refuse to follow discovered truth.

            The injunction applies to every step in life, great and

small. Ponder well what family you will be a servant

in, what trade you will learn, what business you will

engage in, what colony you will emigrate to. Every

step is great, because it affects the destiny of an immor-

tal soul More particularly, by way of example, ponder

your path at that great step which binds you for life to

another human being as one flesh. God has made mar-

riage a weighty matter—let not man make it a light

 


178         THE FOUNTAIN AND ITS STREAMS.

 

one. Weigh well itself and all its accessories. Those

who take this leap in the dark, may expect to find them-

selves in a miry pit. Those who weigh at it, until they

find the burden all too heavy for their strength, and cast

it therefore on the Lord, will be led out of their tempta-

tions, and through their difficulties. Most true it is that

"marriages are made in heaven;" for the dear children

refer the matter implicitly to their Father there, and he

undertakes for them.

            But the value of weighing anything depends all on

the justness of the balance and the weights. Many

shamefully false balances are in use and in vogue for

weighing paths and actions. "Fashion," and "use and

wont," are the scales that most people cast their intentions

into, before carrying them out into fact. These are the

instruments which quacks supply, and fools employ. They

are mean and contemptible cheats; and yet the multi-

tude trust them. If nothing valuable were risked, one

might be content to smile at their silliness, and pass on;

but the path which these false balances induce their dupes

to take, leads to perdition. Although the acts be transpa-

rent folly, we cannot afford to turn them into mirth. We

dare not laugh at the stupidity of the entrance whose

issue is in woe. These false balances are ruin to men,

and abomination to the Lord!  Cast them away. Here

is a standard weight stamped as true by the imperial seal

of heaven. By the word of God paths and actions will

be weighed in the judgment.  By the word of God, there-

fore, let paths and actions, great and small, be pondered

now.

 


                                   FAMILY JOYS.                     179

 

 

                                          X.XXII.

 

 

                                    FAMILY JOYS.

 

 

"Drink waters out of thine own cistern,
            and running waters out of thine own well."—v. 15.

 

 

A PAINTER lays down a dark ground to lean his picture

on, and thereby bring its beauty out. Such is the method

adopted in this portion of the word. The pure delights

of the family are about to be represented in the sweetest

colours that nature yields,—wedded love mirrored in run-

ning waters; surely we have apples of gold in pictures of

silver here. And in all the earlier part of the chapter

the Spirit has stained the canvass deep with Satan's dark

antithesis, to the holy appointment of God. An instance

of the same high art you may see in the work of another

master. Paul sets forth, in Eph. v. 2, his favourite theme,

the love of Christ, in terms of even more than his usual

winsomeness; and you may see, in the verse that follows,

how dark a ground he filled in behind it. Such fearful

contrasts, under the immediate direction of the Spirit,

make the beauty of holiness come more visibly out. But

it is only at a great distance, and with extremest caution,

that we dare to imitate this style in our expositions. The

danger would be great, if the attempt were rashly made,

of staining the pure by an unskilful handling of the im-

pure. A reverent look towards the depths of Satan, as

they are unveiled in the word of God, may alarm the

 


180                           FAMILY JOYS.

 

observer, and cause him to keep farther from the pit's

mouth; but we fear to touch them in detail, lest our

well-meant effort should be snatched, and used as another

fiery dart by the wicked one. All round, this region

seems infected. We have known some who, in venturing

near to rescue others, fell themselves; as miners, descend-

ing the pit to bring out a suffocated neighbour, have been

known to perish with him. It is meet that even those

who, from fear of God and love to men, run to the res-

cue, should hold in their breath, and pull hastily out of

the fire whatever brand they can lay their hands on, and

come back with all speed from the opening mouth of

those descending "steps that take hold on hell" Indeed

this is the substance of all these warnings which occur in

the fifth chapter, and are repeated in the seventh. The

key note of the whole is, "remove far from her." The

word assumes that men are weak, and warns them off

from the edge of the whirling stream that sucks the

unwary in. It is the same lesson that Jesus himself

gave, when he taught that in this matter a look is already

sin. In wise tenderness, He would keep the fluttering

bird clear beyond the reach of the vile charmer's fasci-

nating eye. "Hear ye Him," young men, as you love your

life, and value your souls. We protest that we are clear

from the blood of those that perish there, although we

stand no longer near the deadly spot to warn them

back.

            The Lord condescends to bring his own Institute for-

ward in rivalry with the deceitful pleasures of sin. The

pure joys of a happy home are depicted in the fifteenth

 


                              FAMILY JOYS.                              181

 

and subsequent verses. The saying of Cowper, "God

made the country, man made the town," although it con-

tains no poetic brilliance, has obtained a wide currency

for its pithy expression of a great and obvious truth.

We may be permitted to use the poet's mould in giving

form to our own conceptions, which we believe to be

equally true, and more urgent. "God made the family,

man made the casino, the theatre, the dramshop, the ball-

room." The list might be largely extended, of Satan-

suggested, man-made things, which compete with God's

institute the family, and drain off its support.

            How beautiful and how true the imagery in which our

lesson is infolded!  Pleasures such as God gives to his

creatures, and such as his creatures, with advantage to

all their interests, can enjoy—pleasures that are con-

sistent with holiness and heaven, are compared to a

stream of pure running water. And specifically the joys

of the family are "running waters out of thine own

well."  This well is not exposed to every passenger. It

springs within, and has a fence around it. We should

make much of the family, and all that belongs to it. All

its accessories are the Father's gift, and He expects us

to observe and value them. It is no trifling to apply the

microscope to the petals of a flower, in order to magnify

and so multiply its beauties. In like manner, it is

worthy employment for the greatest to scan the minutest

objects that are the genuine parts of the household appa-

ratus: for, as the Lord's works, they are all very good.

            But remember, although the stream is very pure—nay,

because it is so very pure, a small bulk of foreign matter

 


182                        FAMILY JOYS.

 

will sensibly tinge it. You may have observed that if a

drop of coloured matter be poured into pure water, it

makes its polluting presence very widely felt. Had the

water been discoloured from the first, the effect of an-

other drop would not have been discernible. Thus the

very purity of the family joys in themselves magnifies

the effect of any infringement.  Perhaps the drop that

discolours for days the waters of his own well, may fall

in an unguarded moment from the lips of the husband

and father himself.  A biting word, reflecting on the

wife and mother in presence of the children, when some-

thing in her department is found out of order, will stir

the mud at the bottom, and make the stream run turbid

for many days. His absence, frequent or unnecessary, in

the evening, till the children have gone to bed, and the,

wife feels that much of her labour in making everything

neat has been thrown away, without an eye to see, or a

tongue to applaud it—this will soon change “your own

well” into the appearance of a river in flood. From the

other side also the disturbing element may come. Even.

little neglects on the wife's part will damp the joys of

the house, as a very small cloud may suffice to take all  

the sunlight out of the landscape. A slovenly dress for

the husband's home-coming, made tidy only when

strangers are expected, may be sufficient to tinge the

whole current of conjugal intercourse. Something is felt

to be wrong, and yet neither may know what the ail-

ment is, or where it lies. Sharp, discontented words,

a continual dropping from a woman's lips, whether with

or without cause, will be a poisonous acid in the well,

 


                           FAMILY JOYS.                                183

 

and all joy will die around its borders. The children,

too, have much in their power both for good and evil.

Heavy cares are strong temptations to the parents.

Their spirits are burdened, and the burdened spirit is apt

to give way. If the children, by ready obedience, and

mutual love, would contrive to sit light as a burden on

their parents' shoulders, the lightened parents might re-

joice together, and the beams of glad contentment on the

faces of father and mother would radiate through all the

house. Children are sometimes little peacemakers, bless-

ing their parents, and blessed by God.

            But careful abstinence from evil is only one, and that,

the lower side of the case. There must be spontaneous

outgoing activity in this matter, like the springing of

flowers, and the leaping of a stream from the fountain.

The command is peremptory, v. 18, "Rejoice with the

wife of thy youth." It is not only feed and clothe her,

and refrain from injuring her by word or deed. All this

will not discharge a man's duty, nor satisfy a woman's

heart. All the allusions to this relation in Scripture

imply an ardent, joyful love. To it, though it lie far

beneath heaven, yet to it, as the highest earthly thing, is

compared the union of Christ and his redeemed Church.

Beware where you go for comfort in distress, and sym-

pathy in happiness. The Lord himself is the source of

all consolation to a soul that seeks Him; yet nature is

His, as well as redemption. He has constructed nether

springs on earth and supplied them from his own high

treasuries; and to these he bids a broken or a joyful

spirit go for either sympathy. "Drink waters out of

 


184                              FAMILY JOYS.

 

thine own cistern," is the express command. "Rejoice

with the wife of thy youth"—this is not to put a creature

in the place of God. He will take care of His own hon-

our. He has hewn that cistern, and given it to you,

and filled it, and when you draw out of it what He has

put in, you get from Himself, and give Him the glory.

Husband and wife, if they are skilful to take advantage

of their privileges, may, by sharing, somewhat diminish

tbeir cares, and fully double their joys. They twain

shall be one flesh, and when the two are one, it will be a

robuster life, as two streams joined become a broader river.

            But we must take care lest the enjoyments of home

become a snare. God is not pleased with indolence or

selfishness. When He gives that fountain, He expects 

it will "be dispersed abroad." To keep all to yourself

will defeat your own end. To hold it in will make it

stagnate. The only way of keeping it sweet for our-

selves is to let it run over for the good of others. If the 

family is well ordered, ourselves will get the chief benefit:

but we should let others share it. Those especially who are

in providence deprived of this inestimable blessing, a

home—those who have no parents, or whose parents are

far away, should be admitted to taste of, these pleasures.

This is a charity which God-fearing families might dis-

tribute without cost to a class who need no material

alms, and are therefore liable to be neglected in schemes

of ordinary benevolence.

 


                 THE METHOD OP PROVIDENCE. ETC.            185

 

 

                                            XXXIII.

 

 

                THE METHOD OF PROVIDENCE FOR RE-

                                     STRAINING EVIL

 

 

"The ways of man are before the eyes of the Lord, and he pondereth all his

goings. His own iniquities shall take the wicked himself, and he shall be

holden with the cords of his sins."—v. 21, 22.

 

GOD announces Himself the witness and the judge of

man. The evil-doer can neither elude the all-seeing eye,

nor escape from the Almighty hand. Secrecy is the

study and the hope of the wicked. This word booms

forth like thunder out of heaven into every human heart

where evil thoughts are germinating into wickedness,

proclaiming that the ways of man are before the eyes of

the Lord. A sinner's chief labour is to hide his sin: and

his labour is all lost. Darkness hideth not from God.

The Maker of the night is not blinded by its covering.

            He who knows evil in its secret source is able to limit

the range of its operation. There is a special method by

which this is done. It is a principle of the divine

government that sin becomes the instrument of punishing

sinners. Both for restraint in this life, and final judg-

ment at last, this is the method employed. It is not

only true in general that the wicked shall not escape, but

also in particular that his own sin is the snare that takes

the transgressor, and the scourge that lashes him. The

maker and Ruler of all things has set in the system of

 


186         THE METHOD OF PROVIDENCE

 

the universe a self-acting apparatus, which is constantly

going for the encouragement of good and the repression

of evil.  The providential laws do not, indeed, supply a

sufficient remedy for sin and its fruits; another physician

undertakes the cure; but these laws, notwithstanding,

exert a constant force in opposition to moral evil The

wind may be blowing steadily up the river, and yet a

ship on the river's bosom, though her sails are spread

and filled, may not be moving up, but actually drop-

ping down the stream. Why? Because the stream flows

so rapidly down, that the breeze in the sails, though a

force in the opposite direction, cannot overcome it. The

wind does not, in spite of the current, give the ship mo-

mentum upward, but it makes the ship's progress down-

ward much more slow. That force does not make the

ship move upward, but it prevents the ship from rushing

down with such a headlong velocity as to dash itself in

pieces. The providential laws are directed against the

current of man's sinful propensities, and tell in force

thereon. They do not, however, overcome, and neu-

tralize, and reverse these propensities. They were not so

intended. They impede the stream's velocity, and re-

strain its fury. The providential laws prevent the pre-

sent system from clashing itself into chaos, but they do

not supersede the redemption by Christ, and the renew-

ing by the Spirit.

            "His own iniquities shall take the wicked." This is

an evident and awful truth. Retribution in the system

of nature, set in motion by the act of sin, is like the

"Virgin's kiss" in the Romish Inquisition. The step of

 


                    FOR RESTRAINING EVIL.                        187

 

him who goes forward to kiss the image touches a secret

spring, and the statue's marble arms enclose him in a

deadly embrace, piercing his body through with a hun-

dred hidden knives. Verily a man under law to God

would need to "ponder his path," for the ground he

stands on is mined beneath him, and the first step from

virtue's firm footing aside into the yielding slough of vice,

sets unseen swords in motion which will tear his flesh,

and enter the marrow of his bones. "The Lord reigneth,

let the earth rejoice." He is to be praised for the right-

eousness of his government. His judgments will go into

a song as well as his mercy.

 


188                  SEVEN HATEFUL THINGS.

 

 

                                         XXXIV.

 

 

                        SEVEN HATEFUL THINGS.

 

 

"These six things doth the Lord hate: yea, seven are an abomination unto

him: A proud look, a lying tongue, and hands that shed innocent blood, an

heart that deviseth wicked imaginations, feet that be swift in running to mis-

chief, a false witness that speaketh lies, and he that soweth discord among

brethren."—vi. 16-19.

 

 

SOME of these hateful things are characteristics of par-  

titular members in the body, and some are character-

istics generally of the man. I do not perceive the prin-

ciple of arrangement in the nature of the things; perhaps

the order is modified by the exigencies of Hebrew

poetry.

            It is a claim which the Lord puts forth as the Maker

and Giver of all our faculties. These are some of the

marks by which His wisdom is visibly manifested in crea-

tion. He is displeased when they are plunged into lusts,  

and employed as tools in the service of Satan. These eyes,

this tongue, these hands and feet, are instruments of sur-

passing skill and beauty. They declare God's glory as

articulately as the stars of heaven or the flowers of earth.

Who shall dare to corrupt the allegiance of these tribu-

taries, and enrol them rebels against the King of kings?

The Maker cares for all his works. To pervert any part

of them provokes Him to anger. Every purpose to

which the members of our body are put is noticed by the

All-seeing. If we are in spirit his dear children, we have

 


                      SEVEN HATEFUL THINGS.                     189

 

opportunity to please God as often as we exercise any

faculty of our mind, or member of our frame.

            There is one parallel well worthy of notice between,

the seven cursed things here, and the seven blessed things

in the fifth chapter of Matthew. In the Old Testament

the things are set down in the sterner form of what the  

Lord hates, like the "thou shalt not" of the Decalogue.

In the New Testament the form is in accordance with

the gentleness of Christ.  There we learn the good things

that are blessed, and are left to gather thence the oppo-

site evils that are cursed. But, making allowance for

the difference in form, the first and the last of the seven

are identical in the two lists. "The Lord hates a proud

look," is precisely equivalent to "blessed are the poor in

spirit;" and "he that soweth discord among brethren,"

is the exact converse of the "peacemaker." This coinci-

dence must be designed. When Jesus was teaching his

disciples on the Mount, he seems to have had in view the

similar instructions that Solomon had formerly delivered,

and while the teaching is substantially new, there is as

much of allusion to the ancient Scripture as to make it

manifest that the Great Teacher kept his eye upon the

prophets, and sanctioned all their testimony.

 

 


190                                MOTHER'S LAW.

 

 

                                                XXXV.

 

 

                                      MOTHER'S LAW.

 

 

"My son, keep thy father's commandment, and forsake not the law of thy

mother: Bind them continually upon thine heart, and tie them about thy

neck. When thou goest, it shall lead thee; when thou sleepest, it shall keep

thee; and when thou awakest, it shall talk with thee. For the commandment

is a lamp; and the law is light; and reproofs of instruction are the way of

life: To keep thee from the evil woman, from the flattery of the tongue of a

strange woman."—vi. 20-24.

 

 

A FATHER'S commandment is the generic form, and is

usually employed to signify parental authority; but here,

in addition to the general formula, "the law of a mo-

ther" is specifically singled out. The first feature that

arrests attention in this picture is, that effects are at-

tributed to the law of a mother which only God's law

can produce. The inference is obvious and sure; it is

assumed that the law which a mother instils is the word

of God dwelling richly in her own heart, and that she

acts as a channel to convey that word to the hearts of

her children. To assume it as actually done, is the most

impressive method of enjoining it. Parents are, by the

constitution of things, in an important sense mediators

between God and their children for a time. What you

give them they receive; what you tell them they believe.

This is their nature. You should weigh well what law,

and what practice you impress first upon their tender

hearts. First ideas and habits are to them most import-

 


                           MOTHER'S LAW.                          191

 

ant. These give direction to their course, and tone to

their character through life. Your children are by nature

let into you, so as to drink in what you contain; the

only safety is that you be by grace let into Christ, so

that what they get from you, shall, be, not what springs

within you, but what flows into you from the Spring-head

of holiness. To the children, it is the law of their mother,

and therefore they receive it; but in substance it is the

truth from Jesus, and to receive it is life. It is the law

which converts the soul and makes wise the simple,

poured through a mother's lips into infants' ears.

            It is a sweet employment, and an honourable place, to

be mediators for our own children, bearing up to God

their need, and bringing down to them God's will. This

is a kind of mediation not derogatory to Christ. It is

no presumptuous priesthood; it is a humble ministry,

appointed and accepted by himself. It belongs to the

structure, both of the kingdom of nature, and the cove-

nant of grace. There is in the spiritual department

something corresponding to the birth, when the parent

travails again until the child be born to the Lord; and

there is here also, something corresponding to the nurs-

ing. Great must be the delight of a mother, herself re-

newed, when she becomes the channel through which the

"milk of the word" flows into her child (I Peter ii. 2);

more especially when she feels the child desiring that milk,

and with appetite drawing it for the sustenance of a new

life.

            The injunction is in form addressed to a grown son,

that he forsake not in manhood his mother's law. It has

 


192                    MOTHER'S LAW.

 

often been repeated that mothers have much in their

power, in virtue of their position beside the nascent

streams of life, where they are easily touched and turned.

The observation is both true and important. It is this

weight, cast into woman's otherwise lighter scale, that

turns the balance, and brings her to equality with man,  

as to influence on the world. In spite of man's tyranny

on one side, and her own weakness on the other, woman

has thus in all countries, and even in the most adverse

circumstances, vindicated her right to a place by her hus-

band's side, and silently leaves her own impress as deeply

stamped as his upon the character of the coming gene-

ration.

            In the pliant time of childhood, the character is

moulded chiefly by the mother. Many melting stories

are told on earth, and, I suppose, many more in heaven,

about the struggle carried on through youth and man-

hood, between present temptations and the memory of a

mother's law. Almighty grace delights to manifest itself

in weakness; and oft the echo of a woman's voice, rising

up in the deep recesses of memory, has put a whole legion

of devils to flight.  Oh, woman, if it cannot be said,

great is thy faith, even although it should be small as a

grain of mustard seed, yet great is thy opportunity!  

The Spring season and the soft ground are thine; in with

the precious seed; sow in hope, even though it be also

sometimes in tears; a glad harvest will come, here or

yonder; now or many days hence.

            If parents give to their children a law which they get

not from God, their influence will be great for evil. As

 


                       MOTHER'S LAW.                           193

 

to form, the law of evil, like the law of good, distils

chiefly in small dew-drops through the temper and tone.

Few parents have the hardihood directly to teach wicked-

ness to their offspring.

            The mother should be much with the children herself.

Wherever that is impracticable, it is either a calamity

through the visitation of Providence, or a great fault

on the part of the parents. The difficulties, the mis-

takes, and the transgressions of mothers are different

according to their position in society, and the charac-

ter of their employment. Working-men should take care

not to lay too much on their wives. The mother, as

a general rule in this country, undergoes not the out-

door labour whereby the bread is won; but her hours are

longer, and her task equally outwearing. Let the hus-

band and father do his utmost by every contrivance to

lighten her labour, and cheer her heart. The wounded

spirit of a neglected wife cannot bear its own weight, far

less sustain with buoyant, smiling countenance, the con-

tinual tension of several children hanging about her, with

all their wants and all their quarrels, from morning till

night. A father, whatever the effort might cost him,

would not permit his infant child to suck a fevered nurse;

he should beware, as far as it lies with him, lest the

child's spirit should sustain a greater damage, by drawing

its mental nourishment from a mother fretting, despond-

ing, despairing.

            In the case of mothers who live in affluence, perhaps

trifling is the most pressing danger. Don't cram your

children with unreal forms, like blown bladders, which

 


194                        MOTHER’S LAW.

 

occupy all the room, and collapse at the first rude rub on

real life. In pity to your children, put something into

them that will last, and wear. Don't expend all your

energies in tying ornaments on them, to attract the gaze

of the curious on the street; get into them, if you can,

some of that ornament which is in the sight of God of

great price (1 Peter iii. 4). Mothers, if your hearts have

been quickened by the Spirit, take your fashions from

the word of God. Occupy yourselves mainly in moulding

the heart and life of your children, after the pattern

which Jesus showed and taught This will give you

most enjoyment at the time, and most honour afterward.

            Hitherto we have been sketching from the reflection a

parent's duty, but the command of this passage is directly

addressed to the child. Very graphic and memorable is

the advice here tendered to a son. Bind a mother's laws

continually upon thine heart, and tie them about thy

neck.  The idea no doubt refers to the Mosaic precept

about binding the law of the Lord on the person, which

in practice degenerated into the phylacteries of the Phari-

sees. From this strong figure the moral meaning stands

out in bold relief.  If a piece of dress or a bag of money

hangs loosely upon you, in the jolting of the journey it

may drop off and be lost. Life is a rough journey. The

traveller must crush through many a thicket, and bear

many a shake. If that law of truth, which you get in

childhood through a mother's lips, be loosely held, it may

slip away. "Therefore we ought to give the more ear-

nest heed to the things which we have heard, lest at any

time we should let them slip" (Heb. ii. 1).

 


                          MOTHER'S LAW.                        195

 

            It is intimated in the 22d verse that this law will be

a close and kind companion to you all your days, if you

treat it aright. It will be with you when you lie down

to rest, and when you awake it will be there still, ready

to talk with you. It is beyond expression valuable to

have this law, impressed with all the authority of God

who gave it, and all the tenderness of a mother who

taught it, adhering to the memory through all the changes

of life. A friend in need, it is a friend indeed. Although

it be neglected for flatterers at night, when you awake it

meets you at the moment, and talks over its saving truth

again. Several kind offices of that true friend are enu-

merated here, and a crowning one is recorded at the close.

Bound and kept in the heart as a friend, that law will

prevail to keep the youth "from the strange woman."

Observing a great swelling wave rolling forward to de-

vour him, this faithful teacher imparts to the young voy-

ager on life's troubled sea, a principle which will bear him

buoyant over it. A slender vessel floats alone upon the

ocean, contending with the storm. A huge wave ap-

proaches, towering high above her hull. All depends on

how the ship shall take it. If she go under it, she will

never rise again: if she is so trimmed that her bows rise

with its first approaches, she springs lightly over it, and

gets no harm. The threatening billow passes beneath her,

and breaks with a growl behind, but the ship is safe. The

law and love of the Lord, taught by his mother in child-

hood, and maintaining its place yet as the friend of his

bosom and the ruler of his conscience, will give the youth

a spring upward proportionate to the magnitude of the

 


196                    MOTHER'S LAW.

 

temptation coming on. Saved as by fire, with reference

to the greatness of the danger, yet surely saved, the victor,

as he leaps over the last wave and enters into rest, will

cry out to the welcomers who line the shore, "I am more

than conqueror through Him that loved me."

            There must be many joyful meetings in the better land;

but when a son, saved by the truth his mother taught

him, enters into rest, and meets his mother there, the

joy—oh, one would think that ministering angels must

reverently stand back from it, as one too deep for them

to intermeddle with!

 


                       THE WORTH OF WISDOM.                     197

 

 

                                      XXXVI.

 

 

                     THE WORTH OF WISDOM.

 

 

"Receive my instruction, and not silver;

            and knowledge rather than choice gold."—viii. 10.

 

 

IT is not necessary to inquire whether the wisdom that

cries here be an attribute of God, or the person of Em-

manuel.  We may safely take it for both, or either. The

wisdom of God is manifested in Christ, and Christ is the

wisdom of God manifested. The cry, concentrated in the

Scriptures, and issuing forth through manifold providential

ministries, is public, "She crieth at the gates, at the entry

of the city;" impartial, "Unto you, O men, I call, and

my voice is to the sons of men;" perspicuous, "They are

plain to him that understandeth."

            The very first warning uttered by this wisdom from

above is the repetition of a former word, "Receive my

instruction, and not silver; and knowledge rather than

choice gold." The repetition is not vain. Another stroke

so soon on the same place indicates that He who strikes

feels a peculiar hardness there. The love of money is a

root of evil against which the Bible mercifully deals many

a blow. There lies one of our deepest sores: thanks be

to God for touching it with "line upon line" of his heal-

ing word. When a man is pursuing a favourite object

with his whole heart, it is irksome to hear a warner's

word continually dropping on his unwilling ear, telling

 


198             THE WORTH OF WISDOM.

 

that the choice is foolish. A father who is merely fond

will discontinue the warning, that he may not displease

his wilful child. Not so our Father in heaven. He is

wisdom as well as love. He wields the same sharp word

until it pierce the conscience and turn the course. It is

only while you kick against this warning that it pricks

you: when you obey it, you will find it very good.

            A ship bearing a hundred emigrants has been driven

from her course, and wrecked on a desert island far from

the tracks of men. The passengers get safe ashore with

all their stores. There is no way of escape, but there are

the means of subsistence. An ocean unvisited by ordinary

voyagers circles round their prison, but they have seed,

with a rich soil to receive, and a genial climate to ripen

it.  Ere any plan has been laid, or any operation begun,

an exploring party returns to head-quarters reporting the

discovery of a gold mine. Thither instantly the whole

company resort to dig. They labour successfully day by

day, and month after month. They acquire and accumu-

late heaps of gold. The people are quickly becoming

rich. But the spring is past, and not a field has been

cleared, not a grain of seed committed to the ground.

The summer comes, and their wealth increases, but the

store of food is small. In harvest they begin to discover

that their heaps of gold are worthless. A cart-load of it

cannot satisfy a hungry child. When famine stares them

in the face, a suspicion shoots across their fainting hearts

that the gold has cheated them. They loathe the bright

betrayer. They rush to the woods, fell the trees, dig out

the roots, till the ground, and sow the seed. Alas, it is

 


                   THE WORTH OF WISDOM.                   199

 

too late! Winter has come, and their seed rots in the

soil. They die of want in the midst of their treasures.

This earth is the little isle--eternity the ocean round

it. On this shore we have been cast, like shipwrecked

sailors. There is a living seed; there is an auspicious

spring-time: the sower may eat and live. But gold mines

attract us: we spend our spring there--our summer there:

winter overtakes us toiling there, with heaps of hoarded

dust, but destitute of the bread of life. Oh, that they

were wise, that they understood this, that they would con-

sider their latter end!  Seek first the kingdom of God,

and let wealth come or go in its wake. He who, in the

market of a busy world, gains money and loses his soul,

will rue his bargain where he cannot cast it.

 


200                             HATE EVIL.

 

 

                                       XXXVII.

 

 

                                    HATE EVIL.

 

 

            "The fear of the Lord is to hate evil."—viii. 13.

 

 

HE formally defines here the fear of the Lord. The defi-

nition is needful, for the subject is often grievously mis-

understood. I know not an emotion more general among

men than terror of future retribution under a present sense

of guilt. To vast multitudes of men, this life is embit-

tered by the fear of wrath in the next. To dread the

punishment of sin seems to be the main feature in that

religion which under many forms springs native in the

human heart. This is the mainspring which sets and

keeps all the machinery of superstition agoing. It was a

maxim of heathen antiquity that "Fear made God." It

is chiefly by the dread of punishment that an alienated

human heart is compelled in any measure to realize the

existence of the Divine Being. In proportion as that

terror is diminished by a process of spiritual induration,

the very, idea of God fades away from the mind.

            To fear retribution is not to hate sin. In most cases

it is to love it with the whole heart. It is a solemn sug-

gestion that even the religion of dark, unrenewed men is

in its essence a love of their own sins. Instead of hating

sin themselves, their grand regret is that God hates it.

If they could be convinced that the Judge would regard

it as lightly as the culprit, the fear would collapse like

 

 


                                   HATE EVIL.                             201

 

steam under cold water, and all the religious machinery

which it drove would stand still.

            All the false religions that have ever desolated the

earth are sparks from the collision of these two hard

opposites—God's hate of sin, and man's love of it. As

they strike in the varied evolutions of life, strange fires

flash from the point of contact—fires that consume costly

and cruel sacrifices. In Christ only may this sore derange-

ment be healed. It is when sin is forgiven that a sinner

can hate it. Then is he on God's side. The two are

agreed, and "He is our peace" who hath taken away sin

by one sacrifice. Instead of hating God for his holiness,

the forgiven man instinctively loathes the evil of his own

heart, and looks with longing for the day when all things

in it shall be made new. Such is the blessed fruit of

pardon when it comes to a sinner through the blood of

Christ.

 


202                            RANK AND RICHES.

 

 

                                           XXXVIII.

 

 

                                  RANK AND RICHES.

 

 

"Riches and honour are with me; yea, durable riches and righteousness. . . .

That I may cause those that love me to inherit substance; and I will fill their

treasures."—viii. 18, 21.

 

 

WISDOM from above cries in the gate, and enters into com-

petition with the world's most powerful attractions. In

the matters of rank and riches, the two strong cords by

which the ambitious are led, the two reciprocally support-

ing rails on which the train of ambition ever runs,—

even in these matters that seem the peculiar province of

an earthly crown, the Prince of Peace comes forth with

loud challenge and conspicuous rivalry. Titles of honour!

their real glory depends on the height and purity of the

fountain whence they flow. They have often been the

gift of profligate princes, and the rewards of successful

crime.  At the best the fountain is low and muddy: the

streams, if looked at in the light of day, are tinged and

sluggish. Thus saith the Lord, "Honour is with me."

He who saith it is the King of glory. To be adopted into

the family of God,—to be the son or daughter of the Lord

Almighty,—this is honour. High born! we are all low

born, until we are born again, and then we are the chil-

dren of a King.

            The riches which this King gives to support the dignity

of his nobles are expressly called "durable riches." This

is spoken to place them in specific contrast with those riches

 


                            RANK AND RICHES.                   203

 

that make themselves wings and fly away. They are also

said to be coupled with righteousness for company. Surely

the Spirit who dictates this word knows what is in man,

and the wealth which man toils for. Its two grand de-

fects—the two worms that gnaw its yet living body—are

the unrighteousness that tinges the most of it, and the

uncertainty that cleaves to it all. The riches which the

King of saints imparts along with the patent of nobility

to support its dignity withal, are linked to righteousness,

and last for ever. Anointed by the Spirit, they are secure

from both the rust spots that eat into the heart of the

world's wealth. Pure and imperishable, they have been

by a double metaphor called "the silver springs of grace,

and the golden springs of glory."

            The Lord will cause those that love him to "inherit

substance." Here is a withering glance from the coun-

tenance of the Truth himself at the cheat which the world

practises upon its dupes. Those who are rich in grace in-

herit substance; this is obliquely to say that those who

give themselves to the pursuit of wealth are chasing a

shadow. They are ever grasping at it; and it is ever

gliding from their grasp. Such is the dance through

which Mammon leads his misers. It is kept up through-

out all life's vain show, until the dancers drop into the

grave, and disappear in its darkness. They who seek the

substance shall find it; and as to the amount of their gain,

the promise is precise—"I will fill their treasures." This

is a great promise. It is made in a kingly style. There

is no limit. It will take much to fill these treasures;

for the capacity of the human spirit is very large. God

 


204                     RANK AND RICHES.

 

moulded man after his own image, and when the creature

is empty, nothing short of his Maker will fill him again.

Although a man should gain the whole world, his appetite

would not be perceptibly diminished. The void would

be as great and the craving as keen as ever. Handfuls

are gotten on the ground, but a soulful is not to be had

except in Christ. "In him dwelleth all the fullness of the

Godhead bodily, and ye are complete (that is full) in him."

Hear ye him:  "I will fill their treasures." "Even so,

come, Lord Jesus."

 


   THE REDEEMER ANTICIPATING REDEMPTION.          205

 

 

                                         XXXIX.

 

 

    THE REDEEMER ANTICIPATING REDEMPTION.

 

 

"The Lord possessed me in the beginning of his way, before his works of old. I

was set up from everlasting, from the beginning, or ever the earth was. When

there were no depths, I was brought forth; when there were no fountains

abounding with water. Before the mountains were settled, before the hills

was I brought forth: while as yet he had not made the earth, nor the fields,

nor the highest part of the dust of the world. When he prepared the heavens,

I was there: when he set a compass upon the face of the depth when he

established the clouds above: when he strengthened the fountains of the deep:

when he gave to the sea his decree, that the waters should not pass his com-

mandment: when he appointed the foundations of the earth: then I was

by him, as one brought up with him: and I was daily his delight, rejoicing

always before him; rejoicing in the habitable part of his earth; and my

delights were with the sons of men."—viii. 22-31.

 

HITHERTO, in this chapter, we have found it possible to

speak of wisdom alternately as a property and a person.

Henceforth the terms compel us to keep by the personal

view. Towards the beginning something may be under-

stood as applying to divine wisdom in general; but

toward the close, the wisdom incarnate, in the person of

Emmanuel, stands singly and boldly out. If the terms

are not applied to Christ, they must be strained at every

turn. On this subject, we who enjoy the fuller releva-

tion, should remember that the Old Testament institutes

were necessarily shadows. Before Christ came in the

flesh, He could not be so clearly declared as now. Of

design He was presented to faith under a vail. More

could not have been done in consistency with the pur-

 


206     THE REDEEMER ANTICIPATING REDEMPTION.

 

pose of God, and the nature of things. In the book

of Proverbs by Solomon, it could not be written that

Jesus was born in Bethlehem, and died upon the cross.

One might profitably put the question to himself, if the

Spirit designed to make known something of the personal

history of Christ before His coming, how could He have

done so in plainer terms than this chapter contains

            Regarding this divine person, we learn here, that being

with God before creation, He looked with special interest

upon the preparation of this world as the habitation of

men, and the scene of redemption. This gives us a

sketch of cosmogony, with the Eternal Word as spectator,

and for view-point the throne of God. Here is the

genesis of the world, as it appeared to Him, who even

then longed to redeem it from sin. Out of previous inde-

finite water-depths the mountains were lifted up and

settled. Out of a moving chaos the solid earth arose,

one grand step in the process of providing a domicile for

man. The heavens were prepared as a circle, by setting

a compass on the face of the deep. The clouds were

established above, and the home of the sea beneath was

strengthened to keep its raging inmate. By the same

law He established the clouds in the upper air, and fixed

the ocean in the nether caverns of the earth. If a heap

of solid water were poised on pillars over our heads, how

dangerous would our position be, and how uneasy our

life!  But no such precarious propping is needed, when

the Omniscient would construct a habitation for man.

By heat, portions of the water are made lighter than air,

and forthwith the same law which keeps one part beneath

 


    THE REDEEMER ANTICIPATING REDEMPTION.     207

 

the atmosphere raises another into its higher strata.

During this process of creation, the Son was with the

Father, and already taking his place as Mediator between

God and man. In verses 30th and 31st, these three things

are set in the order of the everlasting covenant (1.)

The Father well pleased with His Beloved, "I was daily

His delight" (2.) The Son delighting in the Father's

presence, "rejoicing always before him." (3.) That same

Son also looking with prospective delight to the scene

and subjects of his Redemption work, rejoicing in the

habitable parts of his earth, and my delights were with

the sons of men." On that early morning of time, you

see on the one side the High and Holy one, and on the

other the sons of men, with Jesus already in the midst,

laying his hand upon both.

            It is a touching view of the Saviour's love. When

He saw the earth undergoing the process whereby it was

furnished as a habitation for man—the mountains up-

heaving, the valleys subsiding, the vapour arising, and

the clouds moving in the sky—He rejoiced in the pro-

spect of being man, for behoof of the fallen, on that

emerging world, nor letting go His hold until He had

borne back many sons and daughters into glory.

            The exhortation which follows could not come from

any other lips than His own. None but Christ is able

to say, "whoso findeth me findeth life." From the New

Testament we know that He only is the Light, and that

the Light is the life of men. The counterpart, terror, is

equally His own:—"he that sinneth against me wrong-

eth his own soul; and all they that hate me love death."

 


208       THE REDEEMER ANTICIPATING REDEMPTION.

 

There is no, salvation in any other, and they who refuse

or neglect Him cast themselves away. The perdition of

the lost is their own doing, for redemption is nigh. "Ye

have kindled a fire in mine anger," said the prophet

(Jer. vii. 4), "which shall burn for ever." A child

or an idiot may kindle a fire which all the city cannot

quench. In spite of their utmost efforts; it might destroy

both the homes of the poor and the palaces of majesty.

So a sinner, though he cannot do the least good, can do

the greatest evil. The Almighty only can save him, but

he can destroy himself.

 


      THE MARRIAGE SUPPER FOR THE KING'S SON.           209

 

 

                                            XL.

 

 

      THE MARRIAGE SUPPER FOR THE KING'S SON.

 

 

"Wisdom hath builded her house, she hath hewn out her seven pillars; she

hath killed her beasts; she hath mingled her wine; she hath also furnished

her table. She hath sent forth her maidens: she crieth upon the highest

places of the city, Whoso is simple, let him turn in hither: as for him that

wanteth understanding, she saith to him, Come, eat of my bread, and drink

of the wine which I have mingled. Forsake the foolish, and live; and go in

the way of understanding."—ix. 1-6.

 

IN the preceding chapter, Wisdom appears, forming

worlds, and peopling them; anticipating the need of

man, and covenanting a sufficient remedy. There Wis-

dom stood, and spoke from the high stage of the heavens;

here we get a nearer view. The Word has come nigh.

His habitation is among men. The colours for the pio-

ture here are taken from things that we know. The

head of her own family, sovereign of her own realm,

builds her house, provides her feast, sends out the invita-

tion, and presses the invited guests to come. From the

same materials, and with the same design, the Word of

God framed similar parables, when He "was made flesh,

and dwelt among men."

            1. The house.—The frame is set up from everlasting,

well ordered in all things and sure. The tried foundation

is the Lord our righteousness. The temple which Solo-

mon built, and the altar within it, whereon he sacrificed,

were emblems of this house eternal. The seven pillars

 


210.      THE MARRIAGE SUPPER FOR THE KING’S SON

 

indicate, in oriental form, that its supports and ornaments

are perfect in strength and beauty. The seven things

(vi. 17-19) which the Lord hates seem to be the clearing

of the rubbish away from the foundations; and the seven

beatitudes (Matt. v.) the pillars of positive truth which

the great master builder erected there. He removeth the

first, that He may establish the second. He takes the

curse away, and brings the blessing in its stead, seven-

fold each. Both the curse which Jesus bears away, and

the blessing which He brings, are measureless.

            2. The feast prepared.—The provisions of God's house

are wholesome, various, plentiful. Whatever the covenant

provides, the true church diligently sets forth in the ordi-

nances before the people. The word, preaching, prayer,

the sacraments, the service of song: a feast of fat things

is provided. "Blessed are they that hunger, for they

shall be filled." In the Father's house there is enough

and to spare, in the Father's bosom a weeping welcome:

prodigals perishing, arise and go.

            3. The inviting messengers—These correspond to the

servants sent forth by the King in the New Testament

parable. To keep up the idea of a matron householder,

the messengers are here called maidens, but obviously in

both cases they are the ambassadors whom Christ em-

ploys to carry the message of his mercy to their brethren.

They have no strength, and no authority. All the power

they wield lies in the Spirit that moves them, and the

good news which they bring. Gentleness and purity are

the qualifications most in request for those who bear the

invitation from Divine Wisdom to a thoughtless world.

 


THE MARRIAGE. SUPPER. FOR THE KING'S SON.      211

 

            4. The invited guests.—The message is specially ad-  

dressed to the simple.  Those who are conscious of igno-

rance are ever most ready to learn the wisdom from above.

Empty vessels fill best when plunged into the fountain.

Those who are filled already, with their marrying and

giving in marriage, their cattle markets, and their landed

estates, send their excuse for absence, and do not them-

selves come to wisdom's feast. From hedges and lanes

of conscious nakedness and need, the marriage festival is

furnished with guests. To the poor the Gospel is preached,

and the poor in spirit gladly listen, whether they are

clothed in purple or in rags.

            5. The argument by which the invitation is supported

is positive, "Come, eat of my bread, and drink of the

wine which I have mingled;" and negative, "Forsake

the foolish and live."—The bread and the wine are the

provisions of our Father's house, the plenty on a Father's

board, every word of God for the prodigal to feed on

when he returns; but the grand turning point is to get

the prodigal to break off from that which destroys him.

Forsake the foolish,—the foolish place, and the foolish

company, and the foolish employments; and what strong

reason do you employ to induce the slave of lust to

wrench himself away, although he should leave his

right arm behind him? Reason! It is his life. Life

and death eternal hang in the balance of this decision.

The Lord by his prophet in the time of old, uttered in

the ears of men the brief command, "Turn ye," and fol-

lowed it up with the awful argument, "Why will ye die?"

The same Lord, in his own person breathed from his

 


212     THE MARRIAGE SUPPER FOR THE KING'S SON.

 

breaking heart the tender plaint, "Ye will not come unto

me that ye might have life." There, from His own lips,

you have a command to come, and a reason for coming.

The argument to enforce his invitation is life—from Him-

self in Himself life that will never die. This Scripture,

too, speaks from Him and like Him. It is the resound

of his own words, afar on these heights of ancient pro-

phecy, "Forsake the foolish and live." By line upon

line throughout all the Bible He is saying, Ye must be

separate from them, or Me.

 


                                         REPROOF.                         213

 

 

                                               XLI.

 

 

                                           REPROOF.

 

 

"He that reproveth a scorner getteth to himself shame: and he that rebuketh a

wicked man getteth himself a blot. Reprove not a scorner, lest he hate thee:

rebuke a wise man, and he will love thee. Give instruction to a wise man,

and he will be yet wiser: teach a just man, and he will increase in learning."

—ix. 7-9.

 

 

THE subject is obvious, interesting, important, urgent.

The supposed case is of frequent occurrence. It is seldom

well met. We need wise counsel to guide us in this

difficult step of the daily life-course. The lesson here is

about Reproof; how to give it, and how to take it. Re-

proofs are like sharp knives, very needful and very useful;

but they should not be in the hands of children. Those

who handle them rashly will wound both themselves and

their neighbours. We are all, by the constitution of

nature, much in contact with others. We see their faults:

they see ours. Reproofs are often needed and often

given. Sometimes they are unskilfully administered, and

sometimes unfaithfully withheld. This is a matter that

bulks largely in life. Great practical difficulties surround

it. It is a subject on which we need to be instructed.

Some of its chief regulating principles are concisely given

here.

            It is not difficult to realize the character of the scorner,

who is the principal figure in the scene. The man is in

a state of nature. He has no spiritual life or light. He

 


14                            REPROOF.

 

is ignorant, but thinks himself knowing, and is proud of

his skill. He has no modesty, and no tenderness for

others. He is a blusterer. He is hollow sounding brass:

a tinkling cymbal. He is surrounded by a knot of com-

panions who ignorantly applaud, or at least silently listen

to him. Thus encouraged, he speaks great swelling words

of vanity. He magnifies himself. As he proceeds with

his display, he affects a superiority to scruples of con-

science. He laughs at the good, and at goodness. He

boasts of evil. Accustomed to exaggerate everything, he

exaggerates even his own wickedness. He scatters blas-

phemies, and is intoxicated by the wonder wherewith the

circle regards his boldness. He rejoiceth in iniquity. He

glories in his shame.  You are a spectator of the scene:

you have heard the blasphemer. You fear God, and are

jealous for his honour. You observe, moreover, that some

youths are there, ignorantly wondering after this beast,

and in danger of learning to count such conduct manly.  

You grow warm—indignant. At last, after some daring

and foulmouthed sally from the scorner, you break silence,

and interpose a reproof.  In God's name, and out of

God's word, you charge him with his sin, and challenge

him to the judgment. You have reproved a scorner, and

you will probably then and there get to yourself shame.

You have trampled on a snake, and it is his nature to

spurt forth his venom on you. But the circumstances

are even more formidable than the nature of the man.

His place as ringleader is at stake. Unless he retrieve

his honour in their presence, the ring of ruffians will melt

away.  He is a god among them; but if his thunders

 


                                   REPROOF.                                215

 

are silent now, they will lay no more incense on his altar.

Your stroke has stirred up every motive within the

scorner, to redouble his blasphemy. He is shut up either

to submit, to you as a conqueror, or to assault you as a

foe. The first he will not, and therefore the second he

must do. He raises the laugh against you, and against

that blessed name which you invoked.  Such is the filthi-

ness of the weapons employed, that you cannot maintain

the combat. To reply would be to defile your own

tongue. You are obliged to be silent, because, if you

should follow him, you could not maintain your footing

on the slimy path. Truth is silent before falsehood and

filth, not from her weakness or their strength, but from

the place and circumstances in which the challenge was

given and the battle accepted. His pride is touched:

he knows that his chieftainship is conclusively forfeited,

if he is seen to quail before a saint. Expressly, he will

"hate thee." You have struck a piece of wood while it

is lying hollow, and instead of cutting it, yourself will be

injured by the rebounding blow. There is a possibility

of approaching it carefully and turning it skilfully, and

getting it laid solid before you strike. Then both you

will sever it, and it will not rebound on you.

            If you could find the scorner alone, his courage would

not be so great.  Conscience makes cowards of us all.

Whisper softly into his ear your solemn reproof. Tell

him that he is trampling under foot that blood of the

covenant which alone can wash his sin away; and if you

tell him this weeping, your word will go the deeper in.

There are many arts by which a wise reprover might

 

 


216                         REPROOF.

 

approach the man on the unguarded side. Find a soft

spot about him, or make one by deeds of kindness. Touch

him so as not to stir the evil spirit at the first, and per-

haps the evil spirit may not be stirred at all. If you

gain a brother thus, it is a bloodless victory. The joy is

of the purest kind that lies within our reach on earth.

It brings you as closely into sympathy as a creature can

be, with the satisfaction of the Redeemer when He sees

of the travail of his soul.

            But in all this we have in view chiefly the scorner him-

self.  A witness for Christ may be so situated, that he ought

to reprove the scorner, although he knows that the scorn-

ing will be redoubled by the reproof.  It may be more

important, for the sake of others, to strike in, although

the evil doer should in judgment be more hardened.

These principles regarding the blasphemer's tendency are

most important. We should be aware of the laws that

regulate all cases, and the circumstances that modify them

in each; but no absolute rule can be laid down. We

must get daily direction, as well as daily bread. Two

things are needful—the swelling spring, and the well-

directed channel for the stream to flow in. There should

be jealousy for the Lord's honour, and compassion for

men's souls like a well-spring ever in the heart; and then

the outgoing effort should be with all the wisdom of the

serpent, and the harmlessness of the dove; and "if any

lack wisdom, let him ask of God."

            Hitherto we have handled only the half of the lesson,

and that the harsher half.  Its complement is a kindlier

thing: "rebuke a wise man, and he will love thee."

 


                                 REPROOF.                                  217

 

There is a double blessing; one to him who gets reproof,

and one to him who gives it. Is it, then, the mark of a  

wise man that he loves the reprover who tells him his

fault? Judging by this test, we are forced into the con-

clusion that there are not many wise men amongst us.

To tell a friend his fault is too often the signal for a

breach of friendship. On both sides, error is frequent,

and wisdom rare. But wisdom here is precious in pro-

portion to its rarity. It will repay all the labour of

seeking and striving for it. The wisdom may be possessed

on either side alone, or on both together. The Lord's meek

and poor afflicted ones may get good from a reproof, al-

though the reprover sinned in giving it: on the other

hand, the witness of evil may rightly reprove it, and so

keep his own conscience clear, although the evil doer have

not grace to profit by the reproof.  On both sides the

wisdom is difficult; but when it is found, it is very gain-

ful.  “Harmless as doves;" that is the word of Him who

knows what is in man. The froth of human passion

swells and spurts out, and impudently calls itself faithful-

ness. When Samuel was instructed to reprove Saul for

his sin, "he cried unto the Lord all night," and uttered

his faithful reproof in the morning (1 Sam xv. 11). Such

a preparation would take none of its strength away, and

greatly add to its softness. For rightly receiving reproof,

the short and simple rule is, be more concerned to get

the benefit of the reproof, than to wreak vengeance on

the reprover. He who should habitually act on this plain

maxim, would grow rich by gathering the gold which

other people trample under their feet.

 


218                       REPROOF.

 

            "Give instruction to a wise man, and he will be yet

wiser," is an interesting fact under the great gospel law,

“to him that hath shall be given, and he shall have more

abundance.”  Some of the true wisdom is a nucleus round

which more will gather. A little island once formed in

the bed of a great river, tends continually to increase.

Everything adds to its bulk. The floods of winter de-

posit soil on it. The sun of summer covers it with

herbage, and consolidates its surface. Such is wisdom

from above, once settled in a soul. It makes all things

work together for good to its possessor.

 


            THE TALENT AND ITS PRODUCE.            219

 

 

                                   XLII.

 

 

             THE TALENT AND ITS PRODUCT.

 

 

"If thou be wise, thou shalt be wise for thyself:

            but if thou scornest, thou alone shalt bear it."—ix. 12.

 

 

THE principle involved in the parable of the Talents (Mat

xxv.) is embodied in the intimation, "If thou be wise,

thou shalt be wise for thyself." The talents are in the

first instance not won by the servant, but given by the

master. So wisdom is specifically the gift of God (James

i. 5). Those servants who use the talents well, are per-

mitted to retain for their own use both the original capi-

tal, and all the profit that has sprung from it: whereas

he who made no profit is not allowed to retain the capi-

tal. Thus the Giver acts in regard to the wisdom which

is His own to bestow. The wisdom, with all the benefit it

brings, is your own. Every instance of wise acting is an

accummulation made sure for your own benefit.  It can-

not be lost. It is like water to the earth. The drop of

water that trembled on the green leaf, and glittered in

the morning sun, seems to be lost when it exhales in the

air unseen; but it is all in safe keeping. It is held in

trust by the faithful atmosphere, and will distil as dew

upon the ground again, when and where it is needed

most. Thus will every exercise of wisdom, although fools

think it is thrown away, return into your own bosom,

when the day of need comes round.

 


220            THE TALENT AND ITS PRODUCT.

 

            Equally sure is the law that the evil which you do

survives and comes back upon yourself:  "If thou scornest,

thou alone shalt bear it." The profane word, the impure

thought, the unjust transaction—they are gone like the

wind that whistled past, and you seem to have nothing

more to do with them. Nay, but they have more to do

with you. Nothing is lost out of God's world, physical

or moral.  When a piece of paper is consumed in the

fire, and vanishes in smoke, it seems to have returned to

nothing. If it bore the only evidence of your guilt, you

would be glad to see its last corner disappear ere the

officers of justice came in. All the world cannot restore

that paper, and read those dreaded lines again. The

criminal breathes freely now; no human tribunal can

bring home his crime. But as the material of the paper

remains undiminished, in the mundane system, so the

guilt which it recorded abides, held in solution, as it were,

by the moral atmosphere which encircles the judgment-

seat of God.  Uniting with all of kindred essence that

has been generated in your soul, it will be precipitated by

a law; and when it falls, it will not miss the mark.  

Thou alone shalt bear it. Those who have not found

refuge in the Sin-Bearer, must bear their own sin. Sins,

like water, are not annihilated, although they go out of

our sight. They fall with all their weight either on the

sin-doer, or on the Almighty Substitute. Alas for the

man who is "alone" when the reckoning comes!

 


                   THE PLEASURES OF SIN.                      221

 

 

                                       XLIII.

 

 

                     THE PLEASURES OF SIN.

 

 

"A foolish woman is clamorous; she is simple, and knoweth nothing. For

she sitteth at the door of her house, on a seat in the high places of the city,

to call passengers who go right on their ways: whoso is simple, let him turn

in hither: and as for him that wanteth understanding, she saith to him, Stolen

waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant. But he knoweth

not that the dead are there; and that her guests are in the depths of hell."—

ix. 13-18.

 

 

WE have heard Wisdom's cry, and learned what are his

offers to men: the next scene exhibits Wisdom's great

rival standing in the same wide thoroughfare of the

world, and bidding for the youth who throng it. The

evil is personified, that it may be set more visibly

forth, in all its deformity, over against the loveliness of

truth. All that is contrary to Christ, and dangerous to

souls, is gathered up and individualized, as an abandoned

woman lying in wait for unwary passengers, baiting her

barbed hook with the pleasures of sin, and dragging her

victims down the steep incline to hell. One of the foul.

spirits that assail and possess men is singled out and

delineated, and this one represents a legion in the back-

ground.

            The portrait is easily recognized. We have met with

it before, both in the pages of this book, and in other

places of the Scripture. It is no fancy picture,—it is

drawn from life. Neither is it a peculiarity of Eastern

 


222                    THE PLEASURES OF SIN.

 

manners, or of ancient times. It concerns us, otherwise

it would not have met us here. The plague is as ram-

pant in our streets, as it is represented to be in the Pro-

verbs. Mankind have sat for the picture: there is no

mistake in the outline; there is no exaggeration in the

colouring. It is a glass held up for the world to see it-

self in. Dark as the lines are in which the importunate,

shameless solicitations of a wanton woman are drawn on

this page, they are not darker than the reality, as seen in

our crowded thoroughfares by day and by night. The

vulture, with unerring instinct, scents the carrion, and

flutters round the place where it lies, until an oppor-

tunity occur of alighting upon it and satiating her appe-

tite on the loathsome food. These vultures would not

hover around our exchanges, and banks, and warehouses,

and manufactories, unless the carrion that feeds them

were scented there. While we have cause to thank God

for the measure of truth, and love, and purity, that His

word and Spirit have transfused through our families, we

have cause also to weep in secret that so many whited

sepulchres glitter pharisaically in the sun of the world's

prosperity, while rankest corruption revels within. We

again cry, "with a great and exceeding bitter cry," to all

that is morally sound in society, resolutely to withdraw their

countenance from the impure, however great their wealth

may be, and however high their position in the world.

The specific occupation of the foolish woman is "to

call passengers who go right on their ways," and per-

suade them to turn aside for her "stolen waters." A

multitude of the young, issuing from their parents' homes,

 


                     THE PLEASURES OF SIN.                223

 

where they have been trained in virtue, start in life's

wide path, with the intention of going "right on;" and

of these, alas, how many are suddenly enticed aside,

entangled in the net, and lost! Beware of the turning

aside. Let not a youth ever once or for a moment go

where he would be ashamed to be found by his father

and his mother. "Forsake the foolish and live." Go not

at her bidding aside; "the dead are there."

            But although the argument that stolen waters are

sweet is, for the sake of vivid representation, put into

the mouth of a "foolish woman," we must understand by

the figure all evil—the devil, the world, and the flesh,

whatever form they may assume, and whatever weapons

they may employ. The one evil spirit dragged forth

from the legion, and exposed, is intended not to conceal

but to open up the generic character of the company.

From above, Divine Wisdom cries (v. 4), "Whoso is

simple, let him turn in hither;" from beneath, a multi-

form lust, that is earthly, sensual, devilish, cries, "Whoso

is simple, let him turn in hither." There they are, con-

spicuously pitted against each other, the two great rivals

for possession of a human heart. No man can serve two

masters. No heart can follow both of these drawings.

No man can choose both death and life, both darkness

and light Every one must go this way or that.  Every

sinner must turn his back either upon his Saviour or

upon his sin. In this life every human being is placed

between these two rival invitations, and every human

being in this life yields to the one or to the other.

            The power of sin lies in its pleasure. If stolen waters

 


224              THE PLEASURES OF SIN.

 

were not sweet, none would steal the waters. This in

part of the mystery in which our being is involved by

the fall. It is one of the most fearful features of our

case. Our appetite is diseased. If our bodily appetite

were so perverted that it should crave for what is poison-

ous, and loathe wholesome food, we would not give our-

selves up to each random inclination. The risk of death

would be great, and, valuing life, we would set a guard

on the side of danger. But in man fallen, there is a dis-

eased relish for that which destroys. Sin, which is the

death of a man's soul, is yet sweet to the man's taste.

There is much to appal us, in this state of things. It

should make us walk circumspectly, not as fools. When

the redeemed of the Lord shall have come to Zion, with

songs of joy, they may indulge to the full unexamined,

unrestricted, all their tastes. There will be no sinful

things to taste there, and no taste for sinful things.

There will neither be the appetite nor its food. Nothing

shall enter that defileth. But here, and now, it should

make us tremble to know that there is an appetite in our

nature which finds sweetness in sin. Oh wretched man

that I am, who shall deliver me from myself? God's

children, while in the body, watch their sinful appetites,

and endeavour to weaken and wither them by starvation.

They who give rein to the appetite are daily more brought

under its power. It grows by what it feeds on. If sin

had no sweetness, it might be easier to keep from sinning.

Satan might fish in vain, even in this sea of time, if he

had no bait on his hook that is pleasant to nature. Beware

of the bait, for the barb is beneath.

 


                    THE PLEASURES OF SIN.                      225

 

            It is only in the mouth that the stolen water is sweet:

afterwards it is bitter. Sin has pleasures, but they last

only for a season, and that a short one. On the side of

sin that lies next a sinner, Satan has plastered a thin

coating of pleasure: a deceived soul licks that sweetness,

deaf to the warning that behind it an eternal bitterness

begins. If a grand bazaar were erected, filled from end

to end with sweetmeats of every form, and laid out in

the most fascinating aspects, but all poisoned so that to

swallow one were death; and if it were a necessity laid

on you to introduce your little child by a door at one

end, and let him traverse the enticing avenues of death

alone, till from without you should receive him at the

other; you would warn your child with a voice of agony

that would thrill through his frame, not to touch, not to

taste, until, beyond the precincts of the pest house, he

should be safe in your arms again. Notwithstanding all

your warning, you would stand trembling, perhaps de-

spairing, as you waited at the appointed door till your

child emerged. You would scarcely expect that your

little one would, all the way through, resist the attrac-

tions of the poisoned sweets. Such are the world's sweet-

ened death-drops to us; and such, as to infantile thought-

lessness, are we in the world. Oh, for the new tastes of

the new nature!  "Blessed are they that hunger and

thirst after righteousness." When a soul has tasted and

seen that the Lord is gracious, the foolish woman beckons

you toward her stolen waters, and praises their sweets in

vain. The new appetite drives out the old.

            One part of the youth's danger lies in his ignorance.

 

 


226             THE PLEASURES OF SIN.

 

He knoweth not, when he is invited to the place of

pleasure, "he knoweth not that the dead are there, and

that her guests are in the depths of hell." What he

knows not, Divine wisdom tells. He can tell us what is

there, and He only. Who knoweth the power of God's

anger? Only Christ. None other can warn us what

the guests of the strange woman suffer in the depths.

The saved cannot tell, for thither they never go. The

lost cannot, for they never return thence. Only He who

bowed under wrath, and rose again in righteousness, can

give warning as to the bitterness that lies behind the

momentary sweet of sin.

            That section of the Proverbs which closes here is cha-

racterized throughout by varied, pointed, unsparing re-

buke of prevailing sins. We have gathered some lessons

from this page of the Bible, and plied our lever to press

them in. We desire humbly to cast the effort, so far as

it has hitherto proceeded, on the quickening Spirit for

power. Those who have escaped these corruptions,

through the power of grace, will have their gratitude

stirred anew by a backward glance on the bondage; the

young and inexperienced may, by the forewarnings, be

better forearmed ere the heat of their battle come; but

the objects of chief interest, while these reproofs are re-

sounding from the word, are those who have been snared

and taken—who have sunk, and are lying yet in the

deep mire. Sins are sweet, and therefore men take

them; they are soporific, and therefore those who have

taken them are inclined to lie still.

            A man has fallen into the sea and sunk: he soon

 


                     THE PLEASURES OF SIN.                   227

 

becomes unconscious. He is living yet, but locked in a

mysterious sleep. Meantime, some earnest neighbours

have hastily made preparations, and come to the rescue.  

From above, not distinguishing objects on the bottom,

they throw down their creeper at a venture, and draw.

The crooked tooth of the iron instrument comes over the

face of the drowning man, and sticks fast in the dress of

his neck, It disturbs the sleeper, but it brings him up.

It scratches his skin, but saves his life. The saved, when

he comes to himself, lavishes thanks on his saviours,

mentioning not, observing not, the hardness of their in-

strument, or the roughness of its grasp. Beneath the

surface of society, sunk unseen in a sea of sin, lie many  

helpless men. Slumbering unconscious, they know not

where they are. They dream that they are safe and

well. They have lost the sense of danger, and the power

of crying for help. Help comes, however, without their

cry. Over the place where we know the drowning lie,

we have thrown these sharp instruments down. We

have been raking the bottom with them in all directions.

If the case had been less serious, we might have operated

more gently. If any be drawn up, they will not find

fault with the hardness of the instrument that reached

and rescued them. The slumbering may wish it were

soft to slip over them, but the saved are glad that it

was sharp to go in.

            When a world of human kind lay senseless in a sea of

sin, one wakeful eye pitied them, and one Almighty arm

was stretched out to save. The Highest bowed down to

man's low estate. He sent His word, and healed them;

 


228               THE PLEASURES OF SIN.

 

but the word was quick and powerful. The sleepers cry

out when first they feel it in their joints and marrow.

The evil spirit in them still resists the coming of Jesus

as a torment; but when they are restored to their right

mind, they sit at that Saviour's feet, and love Him for

His faithfulness.

 


             THE PLACE AND POWER OF A SON.                    229

 

 

                                      XLIV.

 

 

             THE PLACE AND POWER OF A SON.

 

 

"The Proverbs of Solomon. A wise son maketh a glad father:

     but a foolish son is the heaviness of his mother."—x. 1

 

 

"THE Proverbs of Solomon." Hitherto, although the

style has been in the main proverbial, there has been a

large measure of connection and continuity in the argu-

ment. At this stage we enter a new section of the book.

Here we touch the edge of a vast miscellaneous treasure,

contrived or collected by Solomon, and transmitted in

safe keeping down to our own day. It is like a heap of

wheat; the grains are small, but they are many; they lie

close together, and yet each is a separate whole; they

are fair to look upon, and good for food.

            The first proverb is a characteristic specimen of its

kind. Every reader may see at a glance how its words

and clauses are poised upon each other, so as both to con-

dense and reiterate the sentiment—both to retain it on

the memory and impress it on the mind. "A wise son

maketh a glad father." Do you hear this, young man?

It is in your power to make your father glad, and God

expects you to do it. Here is au object for your ambi-

tion; here is an investment that will ensure an imme-

diate return. Come now, make your choice. Whether

will you try, to please these fools who banter you here,

or to gladden your father's heart that is yearning for you

 


230        THE PLACE AND POWER OF A SON.

 

there? He loved you in your childhood, and toiled for

you all the best of his days. He was proud of you when

you promised well, and clings fondly to the hope that

you will be something yet.  These companions that come

between you and him—what have they done for you,

and what would they do for you to-morrow, if you were

in distress? They would desert you, and mind their

own pleasures. They have never lost a night's rest by

watching at your sick bed, and never will.  But your

father—what has he done, and yet will do? The com-

mand of God to you is that you gladden that father, and

not grieve him. Your conscience countersigns that com-

mand now. Obey.

            In former lessons we found out where the root of wis-

dom lies—in the fear of the Lord: here is one of its

sweetest fruits—A son's wisdom is a father's joy! Alas,

how often do we see a son in manhood becoming a bur-

den which a father must bear, instead of a support that

his weary heart may lean upon!  A heavier burden this

than was the helpless child.

            "A foolish son is the heaviness of his mother." It is

difficult to deal with this word. The conception is easy,

and the examples manifold; but though it is easy to

comprehend, it is hard to express it. It is an almost un-

utterable thing. A son who breaks his mother's heart—

can this earth have any more irksome load to bear!

Foolish son, do you ever allow yourself to think that you

are bruising the bosom which you lay upon when you

were a helpless infant? It is not your mother only with

whom you have to deal. God put it into her heart to

 


         THE PLACE AND POWER OF A SON.         231

 

love you, to watch over you night and day, to bear

with all your waywardness, to labour for you to the

wasting of her own life. All this is God's law in her

being. Her Maker and yours knew that by putting

these instincts into her nature for your good, he was lay-

ing on her a heavy burden. But He is just. He in-  

tended that she should be repaid. His system provides

compensation for outlay. There are two frailties—a

frailty of infancy, and a frailty of age. God has under-

taken, in the constitution of his creatures, to provide for

both. Where are his laws of compensation written?

The counterpart laws answer each other from two cor-

responding tablets, His own hand-work both, as the curse

and blessing echoed and re-echoed alternate from the

sides of Ebal and Gerizim, when first the Hebrews en-

tered the promised land. One is written on the fleshly

table of the heart, and the other on the table of the ten

commandments—both, and both alike by the finger of

God. A mother's love! You do not read in the Deca-

logue, "mother, take care of your infant." So deeply is

that law graven on a mother's heart, that God our Savi-

our compares to it His own everlasting love to His re-

deemed (Isaiah xlix. 15). To that law the safety of in-

fancy has been intrusted by the author of our being.

The bed provided for the child is its mother's breast.

There is the provision for humanity's first period of feeble-

ness, and where lies the security for the next? It is

partly in nature too; but it would appear that He who

knows what is in man, would not confide to that instinct

the care of an aged parent. He spoke the command

 


232        THE PLACE AND POWER OF A SON.

 

from the mountain that burned with fire; He engraved

that command on the tables of the covenant, "Honour

thy father and thy mother, that thy days may be long."

There, foolish son, there is thy mother's title to her turn

of cherishing. You dare not dispute her right, and you

cannot withstand her Avenger. There will be compen-

sation. All God's laws re-adjust themselves, and woe to

the atoms of dust that are caught resisting, and crushed

between their dreadful wheels.  How much more per-

fect and uniform is the parent's instinctive love than the

child's commanded obedience, may be seen in all the

experience of life, and is well embodied in the Spanish

proverb, "One father can support ten sons, but ten sons

cannot support one father."

            I never knew a mother. I have been an orphan,

almost from the first opening of my eyes. If at any

time my mind breaks loose from sober submission to my

lot, and wanders into wishes for what cannot be, the

keenest longing of my heart is that I had a mother.

One of the fountains of affection within me has been

sealed up from my birth; I would fain have an object to

let it flow upon. Oh, how sweet it must be to a son in

his manhood strength to be the gladness of his mother!

Foolish sons are compassing sea and land to obtain plea-

sure, and trampling under their feet untasted a pleasure

stronger, sweeter far, even to nature, than that which

they vainly chase.

            Let sons who are not prodigal—who seem to be fairly

doing their filial duty, remember that their time for that

duty is short and uncertain. Let those who now love

 


           THE PLACE AND POWER OF A SON.          233

 

and cherish a mother much, love and cherish her more.

Occupy the talent, lest it be taken. Be yet more tender

of your mother while you have her, lest you suffer by

unavailing regret when it is too late—lest there should

be thorns in your pillow the first night you lie down,

after her voice is silent, and her eyes closed.

 


234              DILIGENT IN BUSINESS.

 

 

                                      XLV.

 

 

                    DILIGENT IN BUSINESS.

 

 

"He becometh poor that dealeth with a slack hand:

   but the hand of the diligent maketh rich."—x. 4.

 

 

THIS rule applies alike to the business of life, and the

concerns of the soul. Diligence is necessary to the lay-

ing up of treasures, either within or beyond the reach of

rust. Debts will rise above the gains, corruptions will

gain ground on the graces, unless there be a watchful

heart and a diligent hand.

            The law holds good in common things. The earth

brings forth thorns, instead of grapes, unless it be culti-

vated by the labour of man. This is an infliction because

of sin, and yet it has been turned into a blessing. Even

human governments have learned so to frame the neces-

sary punishment as to make it a benefit to the culprit.

The Governor of the nations did this before them. A

world bringing forth food spontaneously might have

suited a sinless race, but it would be unsuitable for man-

kind as they now are. If all men had plenty without

labour, the world would not be fit for living in. The

fallen cannot be left idle with safety to themselves. In

every country, and under every kind of government, the

unemployed are the most dangerous classes. Thus the

necessity of labour has become a blessing to man. It is

better for us that diligent application is necessary to suc-

 


                     DILIGENT IN BUSINESS.                    235

 

cess, than if success had been independent of care and

toil. The maxim has passed into a proverb among our-

selves, "If you do not wait on your business, your busi-

ness will not wait on you."

            That diligence is necessary to progress in holiness, is

witnessed by all the word of God, and all the experi-

ence of His people. Indeed, it would be a libel on the

character of the Divine economy to imagine that the ten-

der plant of grace would thrive in a sluggard's garden.

The work is difficult; the times are bad. He who

would gain in godliness, must put his soul into the

business. But he who puts his soul into the business will

grow rich. Labour laid out here is not lost. Those who

strive, and strive lawfully, will win a kingdom. When

all counts are closed, he who is rich in faith is the richest

man.

 

 

 


236                     POSTHUMOUS FAME.

 

 

                                         XLVI.

 

 

                            POSTHUMOUS FAME.

 

 

"The memory of the just is blessed:

   but the name of the wicked shall rot."—x. 7.

 

 

SOME are remembered for good, some are remembered for

evil, and some are forgotten soon. This is a feature

which is set in the machinery of God's moral government,

as a power impelling to righteousness. How many mo-

tives good doing are in providence brought to bear

upon man!  Besides all that pertain to our own life on

earth, and the higher hopes that look up to heaven, a

power from the future of this present world is directed

now upon a human heart to aid in keeping it from

wickedness. It seems an instinct of humanity to desire

honour and dread disgrace to the memory after death.

Like other good things, it may be overlaid and smothered

by a great excess of vice; but its operation is very general,

and all in some measure are sensible of it.  Few are en-

tirely indifferent to the reputation in which they shall be

held among men after their departure. The desire to

diminish the depth of the stigma on their name, is found

in the greatest criminals when their end is near. To

observe the memory of a bad man execrated by the

people is, as far as it goes, in favour of goodness. "Je-

roboam the son of Nebat, who made Israel to sin," is

an expression that occurs frequently in the Old Testa-

 


                  POSTHUMOUS FAME.                        237

 

ment, but the repetition is not vain. By many strokes

on the same place the Spirit in the word at last stamped

very deep upon the heart of Israel a detestation of the

idolatry which Jeroboam introduced.

            As it is not pleasant to the living to think that their

bodies after death shall be torn by dogs, so it is not

pleasant to the living to anticipate that their names shall

be infamous in the generation following. Although

David's sins are faithfully recorded, David's name, was

savoury in Israel for the good that predominated in his

history. This memory of the just must have stimulated

many an Israelite to emulate the spirit and the deeds of

the Shepherd King.

            As skilful men, finding wind, and water, and steam

powers existing in nature, have combined and directed

them so as to make them all help in propelling useful

machinery; so the Supreme Ruler has directed many

streams from different quarters, and made them converge

upon the wayward will of man, to impel it in the direc-

tion of righteousness. This curious appetite for a good

name to abide in the world behind us, is not left like a

mountain stream to waste its power. It is let into the

system of Providence, and plays its own part in pal-

liating the results of the fall. No man would like his

name to "rot" among posterity. This motive is not

strong enough to make a bad man good; but, along with

others, it contributes to diminish the force of wickedness,

and so to avert the absolute extinction of the race.

 


238               THE WISE TAKE ADVICE:

 

 

                                     XLVII.

 

 

        THE WISE TAKE ADVICE: FOOLS ONLY

                                    GIVE IT.

 

 

"The wise in heart will receive commandments:

            but a prating fool shall fall.”—x. 8.

 

 

WE have already learned what wisdom is, and where it

comes from. Here is one of its most valuable results.

It is not what it gives, but what it receives. It receives

commandments. This receptiveness is a prime charac-

teristic of the new heart. The new-born babe desires

the sincere milk of the word, that it may grow thereby.

The good well-broken ground took in the seed, while

other portions kept it lying on the surface. This was

the chief cause of the great difference in the result.

As the thirsty ground drinks in the rain, so the wise

in heart long for and live upon God's word. They are

glad to get commandments. "It is not in man that

walketh to direct his steps." "O send out thy light

and thy truth: let them lead me." "What I know not

teach thou me." This is a wise man, and he will soon

be wiser. To him that hath shall be given. This re-

ceptiveness is a most precious feature of character. Blessed

are they that hunger, for they shall be filled,

            “A prating fool shall fall.” All his folly comes out.

Every one sees through him. The fool, being empty,

busies himself giving out, instead of taking in, and he

 


                       FOOLS ONLY GIVE IT.                   239

 

becomes more empty. From hint that path not

shall be taken. He is known, by the noise he makes, to

be a tinkling cymbal. People would not have known

that his head was so hollow if he had not been constantly

ringing on it.  If ever he become wise, he will begin to

receive commandments; and when he receives them, he

will grow wiser thereby. To receive a lesson and put it

in practice implies a measure of humility; whereas to lay

down the law to others is grateful incense to a man's

pride and self-importance. The Lord himself pointed to

the unsuspecting receptiveness of a little child, and said

that this is the way to enter the kingdom.

 


240               THE CENTRE OF GRAVITY.

 

 

                                      XLVIII.

 

 

                     THE CENTRE OF GRAVITY.

 

 

"He that walketh uprightly walketh surely;

   but he that perverteth his ways shall be known."—x. 9.

 

 

THE term upright, as applied to character, seems emi-

nently direct and simple; yet, in its origin, it is as

thoroughly figurative as any word can be. It is a phy-

sical law declared applicable to a moral subject. When

a man's position is physically upright, he can stand easily

or bear much. He is not soon wearied; he is not easily

broken down. But if his limbs are uneven, or his pos-

ture bent, he is readily crushed by the weight of another;

he is soon exhausted even by his own. There is a simi-

lar law in the moral department. There is an attitude

of soul which corresponds to the erect position of the

body, and is called uprightness. The least deviation from

the line of righteousness will take your strength away,

and leave you at the mercy of the meanest foe. How

many difficulties a man will go through, whose spirit

stands erect on earth, and points straight up to heaven!

How many burdens such a man will bear!

            There is evidence enough around us that righteousness

presides over the government of the world. Although

men are not righteous, yet righteousness is in the long

run the surest way to success even among men. As an

upright pillar can bear a greater weight than a leaning

 


                THE CENTRE OF GRAVITY.                  241

 

one, so moral rectitude is strong, and obliquity weak.

The world itself has observed this truth, and graven it in

a memorable proverb of its own—"Honesty is the best

policy."

            A true witness will bear an amount of cross-questioning

which is sufficient to weigh twenty false witnesses down.

Truth stands longer, and bears more among men than

falsehood.  This law, operating in the world, is a glory to

God in the highest. It visibly identifies the moral Gover-

nor of mankind with the Maker of the world. A lofty

spire bears its own weight, and withstands the force of

the tempest, chiefly because it stands upright. If it did

not point plumb to the sky, it could not stand—it could

not even have been erected. Wonderful likeness be-

tween material and moral laws! Like body and soul,

they are joined for parallel and united action. In trying

times, the safety of a man or a tower lies mainly in up-

rightness. For want of it, many mighty are falling in

our day, and great is the fall of them. Many confiding

families are crushed under the ruins of one huge specula-

tion that has been reared without the plummet of right-

eousness.

 


242                          THE WELL OF LIFE.

 

 

                                             XLIX.

 

 

                                    WELL OF LIFE.

 

 

"The mouth of a righteous man is a well of life."—x. 11.

 

 

SEE what the Lord expects, and the world needs, from

Christians. The mouth is taken as the principal channel

by which the issues of life flow out for good or evil. It,

is a well. If it be full, it flows over; and if the over-

flow be sweet water, the border will be fresh and green.

            The well's supply falls in rain from heaven, and secret-

ly finds its way by hidden veins to the appointed open-

ing. The overflow fringes the well's brim with green,

although the surrounding soil be barren. As the world

is a wilderness, and the righteous are wells in it, there is

urgent need that they should get supply for themselves in

secret from above, and that the outcome of their conver-

sation should be the means of reviving to all around.

            In a hot summer day, some years ago, I was sailing

with a friend in a tiny boat, on a miniature lake, en-

closed like a cup within a circle of steep bare Scottish

hills. On the shoulder of the brown sun-burnt moun-

tain, and full in sight, was a well, with a crystal stream

trickling over its lip, and making its way down toward

the lake. Around the well's mouth, and along the course

of the rivulet, a belt of green stood out in strong contrast

with the iron surface of the rock all around. "What do

you make of that?" said my friend, who had both an

 


                       THE WELL OF LIFE.                       243

 

open eye to read the book of nature, and a heart all

aglow with its lessons of love. We soon agreed as to

what should be made of it. It did not need us to make

it into anything. There it was, a legend clearly printed

by the finger of God on the side of these silent hills,

teaching the passer-by how needful a good man is, and

how useful he may be in a desert world.

            Let your heart take in by its secret veins what comes

pure from heaven in showers of blessing; so shall itself

be full, and so shall its issues, as far as your influence ex-

tends, contribute to fertilize the wilderness. The Lord

looks down, and men look up, expecting to see a fringe

of living green around the lip of a Christian's life-course.

If we get good, we shall be good: if we be good, we shall

do good. This by a law of the new nature. Every

creature after its kind, and the new creature too.

            The wicked have a power similarly exerted, but in an

opposite direction, and with an opposite effect. The

wicked are like the sea—the troubled sea. It is always

heaving from its depths, and casting up refuse and salt

spray upon the shore. A belt of barrenness runs all

round. It scalds the life out of every green thing with-

in its reach. The sea cannot rest, and herbs upon its

border cannot grow. Thus the ungodly act, constantly,

inevitably by a law. The evil get evil, and do evil. Sin

propagates sin, and produces death.

            In our great cities there are many such restless salt

seas. There are many clubs of corrupt men who, by the

law of their nature, corrupt their neighbours. There are

men of false principles, of foul tongues, of callous hearts,

 


244                  THE WELL OF LIFE.

 

of vicious lives. These cannot lie still. They swing to

and fro, and clash upon each other, and fling their own

bitterness all round. Alas for unsuspecting youths who

saunter careless on the edge! Each tender shoot of grace

that may, in kindlier exposures, have begun to spring, is

scorched out by these corrosive drops. All the borders of

that sea are barrenness. Linger not within its tide-mark.

Escape for your life.

 


                  EXPERIENCE KEPT FOR USE.                     245

 

 

                                         L.

 

 

                  EXPERIENCE KEPT FOR USE.

 

 

               "Wise men lay up knowledge."—x. 14.

 

 

ANOTHER brief definition of true wisdom. Many get

knowledge, and let it go as fast as they get it. They

put their winnings into a bag with holes. They are

ever learning, and never wiser. The part of wisdom is

to treasure up experience, and hold it ready for use in

the time and place of need. Everything may be turned

to account. In the process of accumulating this species

of wealth, the wonders of the philosopher's stone may be

more than realized. Even losses can be converted into

gains. Every mistake or disappointment is a new lesson.

Every fault you commit, and every glow of shame which

suffuses your face because of it, may be changed into a

most valuable piece of wisdom. Let nothing trickle out,

and flow away useless. After one has bought wit at a

heavy price, it is a double misfortune to throw it away.

As a general rule, the dearer it is the more useful it will

be. The wisdom which God gives his creatures through

the laws of nature is of this sort. The burnt child has,

at a great price, obtained a salutary dread of the fire.

None of the wisdom comes for nothing, either to old or

young. Our Father in heaven gives us the best kind:

and the best kind is that which is bought. The saddest

thing is when people are always paying, and never pos-

 


246          EXPERIENCE KEPT FOR USE.

 

sessing. Some men gain very large sums of money, and

yet are always poor, because they have not the art of

keeping it: and some learn much, yet never become wise,

because they know not how to lay up the treasure.

            The cleverest people are in many cases the least success-

ful. A man of moderate gifts, but steadfast acquisitive-

ness, lays up more than a man of the brightest genius,

whether the treasure sought be earthly substance or

heavenly wisdom. It is often found that the meek and

quiet spirit, whose life casts no glare around him, has a

supply of oil in his vessel which will keep his lamp from

going out in seasons of sudden surprisal, or long continued

strain. Men, looking on the outward appearance, make

great mistakes in judging of men. Those who give out

little noise may have laid up much wisdom. There is

great encouragement. In the Fountain Head is exhaust-

less supply, and "He giveth liberally." It is a form of

wealth that lies in little bulk; one contrite heart will hold

more than the world's balances are able to weigh.

 


                         THE MONEY POWER.                      247

 

 

                                          LI.

 

 

                         THE MONEY POWER

 

 

"The rich man's wealth is his strong city:

    the destruction of the poor is their poverty."—x. 15.

 

 

HERE he is describing what is, rather than prescribing what

ought to be. The verse acknowledges and proclaims a

prominent feature in the condition of the world. It is

not a command from the law of God, but a fact from the

history of men. In all ages and in all lands money has

been a mighty power; and its relative importance in-

creases with the advance of civilization. Money is one

of the principal instruments by which the affairs of the

world are turned; and the man who holds that instru-

ment in his grasp, can make himself felt in his age and

neighbourhood. It does not reach the divine purpose;

but it controls human action. It is constrained to be-

come God's servant; but it makes itself the master of

man.

            It is an interesting and remarkable fact, that the Jews

wield this power in a greater degree than any other

people. Other channels of effort have been shut up from

them, and consequently the main stream of the nation's

energies has turned in the direction of money. This cir-

cumstance explains at once how their position has been

acquired; but the ultimate design of Providence in the

riches of the Jews cannot be seen as yet. Already the

 


248              THE MONEY POWER.

 

germs of vast power are in possession of the Jews, but in

the meantime, the want of a country of their own effec-

tually checks its exercise. The mighty lever is in their

hands, but they are comparatively powerless for want of a

fulcrum to lean it on. The proposal to buy the land of

Canaan has often been mooted among them. They could

easily produce the price; but other difficulties interpose.

The power that "letteth" may soon be taken out of the

way. In those eastern countries in our own day the angel

of the Lord is doing wondrously; it is our part, like

Manoah and his wife, reverently to look on. All powers,

and the money power among them, are in the hands of our

Father; nothing can happen amiss to his dear child.

            Over against this formidable power stands the counter-

part weakness,—"the destruction of the poor is their

poverty." This feebleness of the body politic is as diffi-

cult to deal with as its active diseases. If pauperism be

not so acute an affection as crime, it is more widely

spread, and requires as much of the doctor's care. Be-

sides being an ailment itself, it is a predisposition to

other and more dangerous evils. All questions have two

sides, and so has this. On one side the rich ought to

help the poor: on the other, the poor ought to help

themselves. By both efforts, simultaneous and propor-

tionate, pauperism may easily be managed: under either

alone it is utterly unmanageable. It is the part of those

who have strength without wealth, to labour diligently

for daily bread, that those only who have neither strength

nor wealth may be cast for support upon the rich.  If

the community are obliged to support the poor only,

 


                     THE MONEY POWER.                            249

 

the exertion will be healthful; but if they are compelled

to bear also the profligate, they will sink oppressed

themselves beneath the load. The poor we have always

with us. This is the appointment of the Lord. To

support them will do us good. It is more blessed to

give than to receive. The vicious we have also with us,

but to support them is pernicious both to them and us.

We should correct and train them. But let it be known

and reverenced as a providential law, that no possible

amount of rates or contributions can relieve the poverty

that is caused by idleness and intemperance among the

population. The disease is in its own nature incurable

by that species of appliance. All such appliances feed

the disease, and nourish it into strength. Though all the

wealth of the nation were thrown into the jaws of this

monster, it would not be satisfied. The lean kine would

eat up all the fat ones, and be themselves no fatter. A

poor-rate increased to supply the children, while every

enticement is offered to the wretched parents to spend

their wages in dissipation, is like pouring water into a

cistern which has not a bottom, and wondering why it is

never filled: When you have poured in all your sub-

stance, it will be as empty as when you began.

            We are under law to God. The wheels of his provi-

dence are high and dreadful. If we presumptuously or  

ignorantly stand in their way, they will crush us by their

mighty movements. We must set ourselves, by social

arrangements, to diminish temptations, and by moral ap-

pliances to reclaim the vicious, if we expect to thrive, or

even to exist as a community. Vice, positively cherished

 


250               THE MONEY POWER.

 

by erroneous legislation, and neglected by a lukewarm

religion, threatens to produce a poverty, such in magni-

tude and kind as will involve rich and poor in one common

destruction. Money answereth all things in its own legi-

timate province of material supply; but when beyond its

province you ask it to stop the gaps which vice is making,

it is a dumb idol—it has no answer to give at all.

            The struggle between manufacturers and mechanics in

the form of strikes, a kind of intermittent fever to which

this country is eminently subject, offers a luminous com-

mentary on this text. In these conflicts, the rich man's

wealth is his strong city, and the destruction of the poor

is their poverty. The masters have most money, and

fewest mouths to fill. They hold longer out, and gene-

rally gain the victory, as the Russian army captured

Kars, by starving the garrison. The men have little

capital, and many thousand hungry wives and children.

Poverty makes them weak, and the weak go to the wall.

Their defeat is a great calamity: perhaps their victory

would have been a greater.

            I would fain see the men in a position of greater inde-

pendence; but it would not be good for any class of the

community if they had power, by numbers and combina-

tion, to stop the channels of trade and overturn the rela-

tions of society. The method is dangerous, and the

measure of its success is fixed within narrow limits. In

some instances and to some extent it may succeed, but as

a general rule it must fail.

            A large proportion of the penniless are in a greater or

less degree reckless. Partly their recklessness has made

 

 


                         THE MONEY POWER.                       251

 

them poor; and partly their poverty has made them reck-

less. There is a reciprocal action in the process which

enhances the result. When a multitude, who are all poor,

combine for united action, rash and regardless spirits gain

influence and direct the course. Such a spirit, powerful by

the numbers whom it wields, is dangerous to every interest

of the community. In this country, working men might

take possession of the strong city as well as their masters.

They might make this "unrighteous mammon" their own

friend. Money, though a bad master, is a good servant.

Money to the working men would answer all the ends

which the strike contemplates, if each, by patient industry

and temperance, would save a portion for himself.  If a

thousand men, in a particular town, or of a particular

trade, possessed on an average a free capital of fifty

pounds each, the fruit of their own savings, they could

maintain their own ground in a conflict with employers.

Their success would be sure, as far as their claim might be

legitimate; and their success would be salutary, both to

themselves and their neighbours.

            Any great community of men is like a body. All

members have not the same office, but each is useful—

each is necessary in its own place. In virtue of their

union, if one member suffer, all the members suffer with

it.  Thus, by the constitution of things, each has an in-

terest in the welfare of all. In arranging the laws of his

universe, the Creator has given a bounty on the exer-

cise of charity, and imposed heavy taxes for the discourage-

ment of quarrels between man and man, or between class

and class.

 


252                THE MONEY POWER.

 

            The whole community of rich and poor, linked together

in their various relations, may be likened to a living body.

Suppose it to be the body of a swimmer in the water.

The limbs and arms are underneath, toiling incessant to

keep the head above the surface; and the head, so sup-

ported, keeps a look-out for the interests of the whole.

If the head be kept comfortably above the water, and no

more, the labour of the limbs will not be oppressive. But

if a disagreement occur, and one member plot against

another, damage will accrue to all.

            If the head thoughtlessly and proudly attempt to lift

itself too high, thereby and immediately a double effort is

entailed upon the labouring limbs—such an effort as they

cannot long sustain. Wearied with the unnatural exer-

tion, they soon begin to slacken their strokes, and, as a

consequence, the head that unwisely sought to tower above

its proper height sinks down beneath it. On the other

hand, if the limbs beneath, jealous of the easy and honour-

able and elevated position of the head, should intermit

their strokes of set purpose to bring it down to their own

level, they would certainly accomplish their object. When

the limbs beneath cease to strike out, the head helplessly

sinks beneath the water. The head would indeed suffer,

but the limbs which inflicted the suffering would have

nothing to boast of.  When the head came down, the

breathing ceased and the blood got no renewing. The

heart no longer, by its strong pulsations, sent the life blood

through its secret channels to the distant limbs, and a cold

cramp came creeping over them. Glad were they there-

fore, if it were not too late, to strike forth again in order

 


                         THE MONEY POWER.                        253

 

to raise, the head above the surface, is the only means of

preserving their own life.

            The promiscuous mass of human beings that are welded

together by their necessities and interests in this island is

like a strong swimmer in the sea; and alas! it is too often

like "a strong swimmer in his agony." Easily might the

huge but well-proportioned body lie on the water in a

calm, and successfully buffet the waves when a storm

comes on, if all the parts were willing to work in har-

mony. We have the knowledge and the power, and the

material means, sufficient to maintain in comfort the

whole population without turning any into slaves; but

half our productive capacity is lost by the want of concert

and co-operation. The head—and here we mean by that

term merely those who have wealth and superior position

—the head, in selfishness or silliness, unduly exalts

itself.  There is a competition in costly luxuries which

throws heavier toil down on the labouring class. In

the shape of long hours, and night-work, and diminished

wages, it entails an agony in those members of the body

which minister to its demands. In some poor garret, or

in some dark cellar, the racking strain is felt, and the in-

mates know not whose weight has brought it on. In like

manner, when the derangement begins below, the hurt is

quickly thrown up to the head, and thence reverberates

down to its sources, working reduplicated sorrow there.

Head and members are all on the water. A great deep

yawns beneath. Moderate exertion, if it be steady and

uniform, will keep every part comfortably buoyant; but

mutual animosities work common ruin. The stoppage of

 


254                   THE MONEY POWER.

 

labour which brings down the head will soon paralyze the

members: the inordinate uplifting of the head, which

overtasks the toiling limbs, will rebound from the suffer-

ings of the multitude a stroke of vengeance to lay the

lofty low.

            Two truths stand conspicuously out from all this con-

fusion. The world has a righteous Ruler, and the Ruler

has a dislocated world to deal with. They speak of the

progress and the perfection of the species. We are far

from the goal as yet, even if we be in the way to it. The

sign from heaven that most surely marks its neighbour-

hood is, One is our Master, even Christ, and all we are

brethren. When we see that beauteous bud swelling and

bursting and blooming all over our land, we may safely

conclude that her millennial summer is nigh.

 


                         THE LIPS AND TONGUE.                   255

 

 

                                            LII.

 

 

                        THE LIPS AND TONGUE.

 

 

"He that hideth hatred with lying lips, and he that uttereth a slander, is a fool.

In the multitude of words there wanteth not sin: but he that refraineth his

lips is wise. The tongue of the just is as choice silver: the heart of the wicked

is little worth. The lips of the righteous feed many: but fools die for want of

wisdom.""—x. 18-21.

 

 

IT is not safe for a man or woman to open the lips and

permit the heart to pour itself forth by that channel with-

out selection or restraint. If the spring within were pure,

the stream could not be too constant or too strong. But

the heart is full of corruption; and from a corrupt foun-

tain sweet waters cannot flow. It is the part of a wise

man to set a watch upon his own lips. This is a more

profitable exercise, if it be less pleasant, than to set a

watch on the lips of our neighbours. If we fling the door

open, and allow the emotions to rush forth as they arise,

it is certain that many of our words will be evil, and do

evil. One who knows himself, if he cannot prevent evil

thoughts from swelling and swarming in his breast, will

at least lay a restraint upon his lips, and check their

outgo.  Weigh the words: those of them that are allowed

to take wing should be few and chosen.

            To refrain, that is, to bridle back the lips, is an exer-

cise hard and healthful to our spirits. It requires some

practice to make one skilful in it; but skill in that art

will be very profitable in the long-run. It is easier, and

 


256                  THE LIPS AND TONGUE.

 

more natural, when one is full of emotions, to open the

sluices, and let the whole gush forth in an impetuous

stream of words. It is easy, but it is not right; it is

pleasant to nature, but it is offensive to God, and hurtful

to men.  You must consider well, and pull the bridle

hard, and permit no false or proud words to pass the bar-

rier of the lips. Strangle the evil thoughts as they are

coming to the birth, that the spirits which troubled you

within may not go forth embodied to trouble also the

world.

            "The tongue of the just," that is, the stream of words

that, flows from it, "is like choice silver." Silver is

bright, and pure, and not corrosive. It may safely be

applied to the body, whether on a sound place or on a

sore. Certain surgical instruments, that penetrate the 

human body, and come in contact with the blood, must

be made of silver. Other materials would be liable to

contract rust, and thereby inflame the wound. Silver,

applied as a healing instrument, does not bite like an

adder, and leave a poison festering behind. Thus, when

an operation of faithfulness becomes necessary, the tongue

of the just is a safe instrument wherewith to probe the

sores of a brother's soul. Its soft, sweet answer turneth

away wrath. The truth spoken will perform the needful

operation; and spoken in love, it will not leave the seeds

of fever behind. A biting, corrosive tongue is a curse

alike to the serpent who wields it, and the victims whom

it strikes.

            There is another object, which in common language is

constantly said, and in common understanding is instantly

 


                  THE LIPS AND TONGUE.                        257

 

felt, to be like a belt of silver. It is a river, when it is

seen from a great height following its graceful windings

over the plain. All along its margin the watered ground

is fresh and green. So would it be if we could obtain a

heaven-high viewpoint, whence the eye could trace the

stream of love and truth which flows from a good man's

lips as he plods over the plain of human life from the

spring-head of his new birth to his point of disappearance

on the shore of eternity. Softly and sweetly it shines,

like a silver stream, on the dark ground of life, and like

it too is fringed on either side with a growth of good-

ness.

            "The lips of the righteous feed many." Themselves

satisfied from the Lord's own hand, they will feed others.

This bread of life which the disciples distribute is not

like common bread. The more you give of it to the

needy, the more remains for your own use. It is the bread

which Jesus blesses in the wilderness—the bread from

heaven, which Jesus is; and when from his hand, and at

his bidding, you have fed three thousand on five loaves,

you will have more bread remaining in your baskets than

the stock you began with. Christ's miracles had a body

and a soul. The inner spirit was embodied in sensible

act, and the sensible act enclosed an inner spirit. In the

act of feeding hungry thousands, through the ministry of

the twelve, he was training them in the elements of their

apostolic work. As their hands then distributed bread to

the body, so their lips fed many souls, by the bread of

life which came down from heaven, and dwelt richly

within them. It is a high calling to be stewards of

 


258               THE LIPS AND TONGUE.

 

these mysteries. The Lord's disciples are made mediators

between the source of life and those that are perishing.

He blesses. He breaks, He is the bread of life, but all

the disciples stand round Him, getting from His hands,

and giving to those who will receive. A Christian's lips

should keep knowledge; in the heart a precious store,

through the lips a perennial flow for the feeding of

many.

            Behold the mutual relations of faith and love—of trust

in Jesus the Saviour, and active effort for the good of

men. Getting much from Him, you will feel the neces-

sity of giving to others; giving much to others, you will

experience more the necessity of drawing ever fresh sup-

plies from the fountainhead. They who abide in Christ

will experience a sweet necessity of doing good to men;

they who really try to do good to men will be compelled

to abide in Christ, as a branch abides in the vine.

            "Fools die for want of wisdom." So far from being

helpful to others, they have nothing for themselves. They

have taken no oil in their vessels, and the flame of their  

lamp dies out.

 


THE BLESSING OF THE LORD MAKETH RICH.      259

 

 

                                    LIII.

 

 

   THE BLESSING OF THE LORD MAKETH RICH.

 

"The blessing of the Lord, it maketh rich, and he addeth no sorrow with it"—

                                     x. 22.

 

 

THE truth here is twofold. The cord, as it lies, seems

single, but when you begin to handle it, you find it

divides easily into two. It means that God's blessing

gives material wealth; and also, that they are rich who

have that blessing, although they get nothing more.

            (1.) The silver and the gold are his, and he gives them

to whomsoever he will. A business may prosper at one

time, and decay at another, while no one is able to detect

the cause. It is not by accident. He who rules in the

highest, reaches down to the minutest concerns of this

world, and controls them all. Long ago, a certain people

diligently plied their agricultural labours, and carefully

watched over their household affairs; and yet misfortune

succeeded misfortune, and general poverty was closing

round the commonwealth. They could not read on earth

the causes of their failure, but a voice from on high pro-

claimed it:—"Ye have sown much, and bring in little;

ye eat, but ye have not enough; ye drink, but ye are

not filled with drink; ye clothe you, but there is none

warm; and he that earneth wages, earneth wages to put

it into a bag with holes. Thus saith the Lord of hosts,

Consider your ways" (Hag. 1. 6, 7). They had forgotten

 


260    THE BLESSING OF THE LORD MAKETH RICH.

 

God, and he had withheld his blessing. There is the

religion of the case, and the philosophy of it too. Will a

poor, short-sighted creature prate about the causes of

things to the exclusion of God's displeasure against sin,

as if there were no causes of things which lie beyond our

view? There are causes of things, which we have never

seen yet.  He is a sounder philosopher, as well as a better

Christian, who owns that the blessing of the Lord has

something to do with the prosperity of his business.

            (2.) But his blessing makes rich—His blessing is

riches, although the wealth of the world should all flee

away. "Godliness, with contentment, is great gain." Here

is a nature prescribed by the All-wise, for satisfying a

soul, and attaining success in life.

            "He addeth no sorrow with it." The word seems to

imply that there are two ways of acquiring wealth. Some

people grow rich without God's blessing, and some grow

rich by it. It would appear that the god of this world

gives riches to his subjects sometimes, when neither giver

nor getter owns the supremacy of the Almighty, and that

God himself gives riches to some who are his children.

Wherein lies the difference, since both the godless and

the godly have gotten wealth? It lies here: He addeth

no sorrow with it, but that other lord does.

            When you are permitted to obtain wealth on which

you do not seek and do not get God's blessing, that

wealth becomes a sorrow. There is no more manifest

mark of a righteous providence now seen protruding

through into time, than the sorrow that comes with ill-

gotten wealth. It lies like a burning spark on the con-

 


THE BLESSING OF THE LORD MAKETH RICH.       261

 

science, which will not out all the rich man's days.

Sometimes the wealth is scattered by means that the

public, with one voice, pronounce judgment-like. Some-

times it becomes waters of strife, to desolate his family

after the winner has been laid in the dust. There are

many arrows of judgment in the Almighty's quiver. Men

may well tremble, when they find themselves growing

rich on a trade whose secrets they are obliged to hide in

their own hearts, and dare not pour out before the All-

seeing day by day. To heap up these treasures, is to

treasure up, wrath over their own head.

            If you take God into your counsels, and so grow rich,

there will be no bitterness infused into your gains. It is

a common practice to constitute firms for trade, and exhi-

bit their titles to the public with a single name, "and

company." Most partnerships, indeed, appear to the

world in that form. Such a man, and company; this is

all about the business that the passing stranger learns

from the sign-board; but, under that indefinite and com-

prehensive addition, who are included? What deeds and

what doers does that mercantile formula conceal? Ah

what some do in the dark beneath that veil!  Now and

then the world is startled by its accidental rending, and

the exposure of a nest of night-birds in the light of day;

but the full disclosure awaits another rending and another

light. Reverently take the All-seeing into your com-

mercial company and counsels. If you cast Him out,

there is no saying, there is no imagining whom you may

take in.  When these counsels cease to be godly, they

are "earthly and sensual;" and a terrible experience tells

 


262   THE BLESSING OF THE LORD MAKETH RICH.

 

"that no effectual barrier lies between these and the next

step—"devilish." More especially those who have once

made a Christian profession, if they allow themselves

to engage in transactions on which they dare not ask

God to look—if they glide into a business, for its gain,

which is incongruous with prayer for a blessing, will

probably be left to go greater lengths in shame than other

men.

            One peculiar excellence of the riches made in a com-

pany from whose councils God is not banished is, that the

wealth will not hurt its possessors, whether it abide with

them or take wings and fly away. A human soul is so

made that it cannot safely have riches next it. If they

come into direct contact, they will clasp it too closely;

if they remain, they wither the soul's life away; if they

are violently wrenched off, they tear the soul's life asun-

der. Whether, therefore, you keep them or lose them, if

you clasp them to your soul with nothing more spiritual

between, they will become its destroyer. Certain tor-

tures that savages have invented and applied to human

bodies, bear an analogy to the process by which his

money makes the miser miserable, alike when it abides

with him and when it departs. They wrap the body of

the living victim all round in a thick impermeable plas-

ter, and then set him free. If the covering remains, all

the pores of the body are clogged, the processes of nature

are impeded, and the life pines away; if it is torn off, it

tears the skin with it—the pain is sooner over, but it is

more severe. Thus the soul of a thorough worldling is

either choked by wealth possessed, or torn by wealth

 


THE BLESSING OF THE LORD MAKETH RICH.       263

 

taken away. Out of that dread dilemma he cannot

wriggle. The laws of God have shut him in.

            Those who get riches should beware lest a sorrow be

added to them, more weighty than all their worth. The

Maker of the soul is its Portion; He made it for Himself.

When riches are clasped closest to the heart, He is slight-

ed and dishonoured. An idol has usurped his throne.

"Covetousness is idolatry." For this very end Christ has

come that a man might take the Holiest, into his bosom,

and yet not be consumed. Put on Christ. Seek first

the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and these

other things may be safely added outside. If riches be

added outside, while Christ is taken closest in, the riches

there will, not hurt their owner while they remain, nor tear

him asunder when they depart. When your "life is hid

with Christ in God," you will live there, whatever amount

of the world's possessions may be attached outside; and

though, in some social concussion, all the world's thick

clay should drop off, you will scarcely be sensible of a

change. If you be Christians, if you have put on Christ,

great riches may come and go; you will not be clogged

while you have them; you will not be naked when they

leave. But if the wealth be the first and inner wrapping

of the soul, how shall that soul ever get into contact with

the Saviour, that life from its fountain may flow into the

dead? Many disciples of Jesus prosper in the world:

few who have courted and won the world in their youth,

become disciples in their old age. It is easy for a Chris-

tian to be rich, but hard for a rich man to become a Chris-

tian.

 

 


264                        A FOOL'S SPORT.

 

 

                                           LIV.

 

 

                              A FOOL'S SPORT.

 

 

       "It is as sport to a fool to do mischief."—x. 23.

        "Fools make a mock at sin."—xiv. 9.

 

 

COSTLY sport this:  We are wont to wonder at the stupid

despot who set fire to his capital that he might see the

blaze; but there are many greater fools in the world than

he. The fire that Nero kindled in Imperial Rome was

soon put out; the flame which sin for sport lights up can

never be quenched. "Ye have kindled a fire in mine

anger, which shall burn for ever" (Jer. xvii. 4).

            To do mischief is one evil; to make sport of the mis-

chief which you have done is another and a worse. A

swearer frequently pours out a volume of filth and blas-

phemy in a fit of exuberant mirthfulness. "The Lord will

not hold him guiltless who taketh his name in vain." To

be held guilty by the Judge of men in that day, is a

heavy price for a moment's mirth. Besides offending

the Divine Majesty, an oath offends also the little ones

for whom our Father specially cares. The sounds fall

upon a tender conscience like drops of scalding fire upon

the flesh. The fool pays dear for his mirth, when he

incurs on account of it the anger of the orphan's Almighty

Friend. Another species of mischief often done in sport

is to make a neighbour drunk by practising upon the

 


                           A FOOL'S SPORT.                        265

 

experience of the young, or the depraved tastes of the

aged. We have all seen some instances of this amuse-

ment, and heard of more. This is wickedness of the very

worst kind. The crime of a robber who maims your

body, is venial in comparison of his who by stealth lays

a paralysis at once upon your soul within, and your limbs

without. We often hear of those who deal in strong

drink giving it for money to children, until the children

are laid helpless in the gutter. To do this for gain is a

great crime, but to do it for sport is a greater. I can-

not find a name for the man who deliberately makes

amusement for himself by defacing God's image from a

brother's soul. If any of these occupy the position, they

have certainly forfeited the character of gentlemen. They

are destitute alike of godliness and manliness. Brutal

would be an improper designation; devilish, though in-

sufficient, is the most suitable that language can supply.

            There is not so much of this in our day as there was

in the past generation. Of late there has been some faith-

fulness and earnestness in dragging these abominations to

the light. The light these deeds of darkness cannot bear.

            Perhaps the arrow would more readily find a joint in

the harness to penetrate by, if I should name some sins

that seem really lighter, and more fit for sport. Some

people tell lies to children, with the view of enjoying a

laugh at their credulity. This is to make a mock at sin,

and they are fools who do it. The tendency in a child

to believe whatever it is told, is of God for good. It is

lovely. It seems a shadow of primeval innocence glancing

by. We should reverence a child's simplicity. Touch it

 


266                   A FOOL'S SPORT.

 

only with truth. Be not the first to quench that lovely

trustfulness, by lies.

            It is emphatically the part of a fool to mock at sin.

God, counted it serious, when, to deliver us from its

power, he covenanted to give his Son to die. Christ

counted it serious, when he suffered for it. All holy

beings stand in awe before it. Angels unfallen look on

in wonder, and converted men who have been delivered

from it, fear it with an exceeding great fear. Only the

victims who are under its benumbing power, and exposed

to its eternal curse, can make light of sin.

            The laugh is a symptom of cowardice, rather than of

courage. It is not in the power of a human being to

laugh at sin, if he look in its face. The mirth of these

mockers is but a violent effort to shut their eyes or turn

round. Sin in its two grand alternative aspects—sin

putting Christ to grief, or casting men into hell—sin is

not a laughable thing at all. He who mocks at it, ex-

pecting thereby to gain a character for courage, is a

coward who dares not to confront its issues, and hysteri-

cally strives to stifle his fear.

            To mock at sin now, is the way to the place of eternal

weeping. They who weep for sin now, will rejoice in a

Saviour yet. Blessed are they that so mourn, for they

shall be comforted.

            Those who make a mock at sin are obliged also to

mock at holiness. This is the law of their condition.

"Evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse." To

laugh at sin and to laugh at holiness are but two sides of

one thing. They cannot be separated. Those who make

 


                            A FOOL'S SPORT.                             267

 

mirth of goodness persuade themselves that they are only

getting amusement from the weakness of a brother. Let

them take care. If that in a Christian which you make

sport of be a feature of his-Redeemer's likeness, He whose

likeness it is, is looking on, and will require it. Let

the merry-makers see to it, when they are raising a

laugh at the softness of a Christian, lest they be really

scorning the gentleness of Christ, reflected in the mirror

of a disciples life-course. God is not mocked.

 


268    FEARS  REALIZED AND HOPES FULFILLED.

 

 

                                            LV.

 

 

           FEARS REALIZED AND HOPES FULFILLED.

 

 

“The fear of the wicked, it shall come upon him:

      but the desire of the righteous shall be granted.”—x. 24.

 

 

WE are not to understand from this verse that the

wicked have only fear, and the righteous have only desire

or hope. The wicked have hope as well as fear: the

righteous have fear as well as hope. Both characters

experience both emotions. In this respect, one thing

happens to all. The dread of evil and the desire of

good tumultuate and struggle for the mastery in a human

breast all through this present life, whether the person

be a child of God or the servant of sin. The difference

between the righteous and the wicked lies not in the

existence of these emotions within them now, but in their

issue at last. In each character there are the same two

emotions now: in each, at the final reckoning, one of

these emotions will be realized and the other disap-

pointed. The wicked in life both hoped and feared; at

the issue of all things his fear will be embodied in fact,

and his hope will go out like a lamp when its oil is done.

The righteous in life both hoped and feared; at the issue

of all things his hope will be satisfied, and his fear will

vanish, as imaginary spectres that terrified the benighted

traveller disappear with the day. Fear and hope were

common to the two in time; at the border of eternity

 


     FEARS REALIZED AND HOPES FULFILLED.          269

 

the one will be relieved from all his fear, the other will

be deprived of all his hope. The wicked will get what

he feared, and miss what he hoped; the righteous will

get what he hoped, and miss what he feared. Ah! how

deep this difference is! One has his hopes all realized,

and his fears all disappointed; the other has his fears all

fulfilled, and his hopes quenched in despair.

            It is not very difficult to ascertain what are the chief

fears and desires of a wicked man. Cleaving to his sins,

he is in enmity against God. The terrors of the Lord

glance from time to time like lightning in his conscience,

and he trembles at every quiver of the light, lest it be a

bolt of wrath sent to strike him through. When one

flash has passed and not smitten him, he gathers breath

again, and is glad he has escaped; but ere he is aware, he

is wincing beneath another. He fears the wrath of God

and the punishment of sin. What does he desire or

hope? His desire for time is the indulgence of his appe-

tites; his desire for eternity is that there should be no

God, or, at least, that he should not be just to mark

iniquity. This desire shall not be gratified; for God is,

and is the rewarder of them that seek Him. It is a

desperate throw to risk your soul and its eternity on the

expectation that God will turn out to be untrue, and that

the wicked shall not be cast away. This is the desire of

every unrenewed, unreconciled man, whether he confess

it to himself or not; and this desire must be disappointed.

The hope of the sinner will perish when Christ shall, come

in the clouds of heaven and sit upon the throne of judg-

ment.  But the fear of the wicked—what did he fear?


270      FEARS REALIZED AND HOPES FULFILLED.

 

In spite of all his hopes, he feared death, and judgment,

and eternity. His fear shall come upon him. All that a

sinner feared shall come upon the sinner—all that he feared,

and more. The fruits of good and of evil are equal as they

are opposite. Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither

have entered into the heart of man the terrible things

which God hath prepared for them that hate Him. Those

who heard Noah preaching righteousness, and refused to

repent, would nevertheless sometimes be conscious of fear

under the patriarch's denunciations But even those of

them who feared the most had no conception of such a

flood as that which came and covered them. The terrors

of wrath that sometimes work in a sinner's conscience are

but drops from an ocean infinite.  The fear of the wicked,

when it comes, will be greater than all that the wicked

feared—greater by the difference between time and

eternity. The expectation of the wicked shall perish.

If the master of a ship at sea should, through carelessness

or wilfulness, in spite of warnings, deviate from his course

and hold on, with all sail set, by a false reckoning; and

if he should expect and say, when told of his error, that

he would escape—that there would turn out to be no

rock to strike upon, that he would no doubt get safe into

the desired haven—what would become of his expecta-

tion? It would perish when his ship struck on a stormy

shore.

            In the voyage over life to eternity there is, indeed, one

difference. No one has gone over the voyage and re-

turned to tell that the rocks are really there. And if

men persist in refusing to believe whatever they cannot

 


    FEARS REALIZED AND HOPES FULFILLED.         271

 

see, they must even be left to themselves. But a message

has been sent out to us. We can make only one voyage

over this sea, and the Lord of that better land has sent out

directions and a chart to guide us in. Most certain it is,

if heaven and hell—if sin and salvation, be real, the ex-

pectation of the wicked shall perish.

            The desire of the righteous shall be granted; what,

then, shall become of his fears? What becomes of the

darkness when the daylight shines? It is gone. Such

are the fears that agitate the bosoms of God's dear chil-

dren here in the body. When Christ comes, His coming

shall be like the morning. But, meantime, let it be care-

fully noted that the saints are subject to fears. The

promise to believers is not that they shall never fear; it

is that the thing feared will never come upon them.

What are their fears? They fear sometimes that God's

anger will lie upon them yet; and sometimes they fear

that, in time of temptation, they may fall away. But

though these terrors disturb them, the thing they dread

can never come. "There is  now no condemnation to

them that are in Christ Jesus;" and "they are kept by

the power of God through faith unto salvation, ready to

be revealed." Their desire shall be granted; and what is

their desire? It is twofold: that they may be pardoned

through the blood of Christ, and renewed after his image.

When these are the desires of our souls, how safe we are!

If these desires were left unfulfilled, God our Saviour

would be disappointed in His plan, and stript of His

glory. These desires are the desires of the Almighty

Redeemer of men, and He will do all His pleasure.

 


272      FEARS REALIZED AND HOPES FULFILLED.

 

When I fear what He hates, my fears will be driven

away like smoke before the wind; when I desire what

He loves, all my desires will be gratified, even to the

whole of the kingdom. Behold the golden chain on

which a disciple's hope hangs down from heaven—"All

things are yours, and ye are Christ's and Christ is God's"

(1 Cor. iii. 22, 23).

 


THE PASSING WHIRLWIND AND THE SURE FOUNDATION.    273

 

 

                                          LVI.

 

 

           THE PASSING WHIRLWIND AND THE SURE

                                 FOUNDATION.

 

 

"As the whirlwind passeth, so is the wicked no more:

    but the righteous is an everlasting foundation."—x. 25.

 

 

THE course of the wicked through time is like the pea-

sage of a whirlwind over a continent. Life moves quickly,

like the wind. When seen from eternity it is as nothing.

A wicked life is like the wind in the violence and eccen-

tricity of its movements. The soul that has no hope in

Jesus is driven up and down like chaff in a tempest. It

is dashed from side to side a while, and at last thrown

into the sea or the flames. The righteous is an everlast-

ing foundation. He cannot be moved. Though the

mountains should be cast into the sea, the righteous man's

standing remains unshaken, untouched. The heavens

and the earth shall pass away, but he who has made the

Eternal God his refuge will never be removed. "Neither

death nor life, neither things present nor things to come,"

neither men nor devils, can ever drive or draw the feeblest

disciple from his confidence. The Lord will "lay a sure

foundation;" and "he that believeth shall not make haste"

(Isa. xxviii. 16). These two promises lie together in the

scripture. When your heart's hope is fixed on that pre-

cious corner stone, you need not be thrown into a flutter

by the fiercest onset of the world and its god.

 


274        THE GREATNESS OF LITTLE THINGS.

 

 

                                           LVII.

 

 

             THE GREATNESS OF LITTLE THINGS.

 

 

"As vinegar to the teeth, and as smoke to the eyes,
    so is the sluggard to them that send him.—x. 26.

 

 

THE minor morals are not neglected in the Scriptures.

Cleanliness and punctuality have their place in religion

as well as the weightier matters of the law. These lesser

features must be all filled in ere the beauty of the Lord

be seen upon us. There may be the main things that

constitute the backbone of Christianity, and yet the char-

acter may be imperfect and ungainly. There may be

faith, righteousness, and truth, and yet little of the love-

liness of the bride prepared to meet her husband. Even

a Christian has much need to pray that the Lord would

perfect that which concerneth him. Even when the sub-

stantial groundwork has been attained, you can do little

to honour the Lord, or to win a brother, until the minuter

features of the heavenly pattern be imprinted on your

life.

            You would not select activity and punctuality as the

cardinal tests of a man's condition before God: and yet

these things are by no means of trifling importance. To

be a sluggard is a great blemish. Such a spot may

sometimes be on one who is a child of God, but it is not

the spot of God's children. "What thy hand finds to do,

do it with thy might." Sluggishness is a continual injury

 


            THE GREATNESS OF LITTLE THINGS.           275

 

inflicted on others. It is a cutting, vexing thing. If

we are Christ's we should crucify this self-pleasing affec-

tion of the flesh. One of the Christian laws is to look,

not every man on his own things, but every man also on

the things of others. If we would adorn the doctrine of

Christ, we must be active, early, punctual.  It is a sin to

waste another man's time, as much as to waste his pro-

perty. "Whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God."

No doubt it is the natural disposition of some people to

be slovenly, and unexact. But what is your religion

worth if it do not correct such a propensity? A person

who is nimbler in body and spirit than you may find it

an easier thing to fulfill, his appointments; but he has

some other weak side which he must watch. "Watch and

pray," each at his own weak side, "that ye enter not

into temptation." If any man be in Christ, he is a new

creature. If the new life is strong in the heart, it will

send its warm pulses down to the extremest member. It

should be the delight of a disciple, to be leaving the

things that are behind, and pressing forward to what lies

yet before. It should be like the meat and drink of a

disciple to be making progress in bringing unto captivity

to the obedience of Christ those thoughts that hitherto

have been allowed to run wild. Ye are God's husbandry.

Our effort should be to bring all the outspread field of

life under cultivation—to leave no corner lying waste.

In olden times when land in this country was not so

much valued, many portions, a strip by the roadside here,

and a corner beside a stream there, were allowed to

escape notice, and to lie unsown. But as its value in-

 

 


276       THE GREATNESS OF LITTLE THINGS.

 

creased, and became better known, useless roads were

broken up, and useless hedges pulled out, and every yard

of soil turned to account. A man's life is the field that

belongs to the great heavenly Husbandman. It is not

enough to cultivate its middle.  Every corner should be

turned up and occupied. Those who are bent on making

rich, know well how much depends on taking care of

small fragments. If we were wisely ambitious of becom-

ing rich towards God, we would not cast anything away.

The farthest advanced Christian may be known by his

care to serve Christ in little things, which others leave to

chance—by his care to cultivate for Christ those little

corners of life, which others allow to be filled with weeds.

When any portions of the field, even outside edges and

corners, are left unsown, uncared for, the roots and seeds

which grow on these, spread widely and injure all. It is

sad to see the whole field damaged by the weeds that run

to seed on its borders. Do we not see a Christian life

marred and made almost useless by certain minor outside

parts of it not being Christianized. The smallest extre-

mity should be occupied for the Lord as well as the heart.

And remember, although the heart is the chief thing as

to acceptance with God, the smallest things of life often

become the most important for his service in the world.

It is precisely at the extremities of our life-course, those

parts that run out into diminutive points, that we come

into contact with others. If these little outside things

which they feel be not baptized in the spirit of Christ,

we have no means of letting them feel our Christianity

at all. A Christian in the city may be called to make a

 


            THE GREATNESS OF LITTLE THINGS.   277

 

bargain with a man, or keep an appointment with him,

a hundred times for once that he is called to tell his

views of the Gospel, and the ground of his hope. There-

fore, unless in these common things, these little outside

points, we witness for Christ, we shall seldom have it in

our power to witness for him at all. Let every one

please his neighbour for his good to edification.

            There is in your house a central cistern for containing

water, and it is supplied from the river or the spring. Out

from that cistern, at its lip, go many channels leading to

all parts of the house, for the use of all the inmates. If

the cistern be nearly full—filled in almost all its bulk,

and yet not filled to the lip, so as to cover the mouth of

the outgoing channels, all these channels will remain dry,

and none of the inmates will get any supply of water.

The cistern is almost full,—a little more would make it

overflow,—and yet to the household, in their several de-

partments of labour, it is very much the same as if it were

empty. They get none. There is not an overflow. It

is not so full as to go into these branching channels, and

appear at their farthest extremities, with constant pressure,

ready to burst out at a touch.

            I think I see many a Christian useless to the world in

this way. He is almost full, but not overflowing. He is

concerned about the great things of eternity; but he is

not so completely possessed as to let the spirit of Christ

flow over into the smallest, commonest things of daily life.

These remain hard and dry like the world. But it is by

these that he touches others, and therefore, real Christian

though he be, he does little good to others; perhaps he

 


278        THE GREATNESS OF LITTLE THINGS.

 

does harm to others by misrepresenting Christ to them,

and even misrepresenting himself

            He who is a Christian in little things, is not a little

Christian. He is the greatest Christian, and the most

useful. The baptism of these little outlying things shows

that he is full of grace, for these are grace's overflowings

and they are ever the overflowings of the full well that

refresh the desert. The great centre must be fully occu-

pied before the stream can reach that outer edge.

 


              HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY.                279

 

 

                                    LVIII.

 

 

              HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY.

 

 

"A false balance is abomination to the Lord;

     but a just weight is his delight." —xi. 1.

 

 

FROM my youth I have been better acquainted with this

verse than with any other in the book, because I was wont

to read it with much interest when I was a little boy,

engraved in antique characters on a mouldering stone over

the gateway of a market in the city of Perth. In the

times immediately after the Reformation, when the word

of God was new to the people, it was much valued.

Through the spread of that word the nation had been

emancipated from a bondage of many generations. After

the long darkness, men rejoiced in the light. They were

not ashamed of their deliverer. All classes felt and

acknowledged their obligations to the Bible. In this

respect our lot has fallen on worse times. Direct appeal

to the scriptures seems to be counted a violation of taste

in places of power. When that writing from the law of

the Lord mouldered away by age, the magistrates did not

engrave it again in their restored market-place. The

motto of another city, "Let Glasgow flourish by the

preaching of the word," has dwindled down to "Let Glas-

gow flourish." The legend became curt when the age

grew carnal. These straws show how the current has

been running; but there is reason to hope that the tide

 


280        HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY.

 

has already turned. It is refreshing to observe how the

early reformers appealed to the scriptures as the supreme

arbiter in human affairs. It was an evil day for the

nation when rulers began to ignore the Bible, and govern

as if God had never spoken to men. Rulers and subjects,

buyers and sellers alike should love the Bible. Its law

only can keep the world right.

            The precept is abundantly plain. It requires no ex-

position. One of the ways in which dishonest selfishness

strives to attain its ends is to use false weights and mea-

sures in the market As civilization advances, fewer

opportunities occur of successfully accomplishing this trick.

Other forms of deceit have crept in and cast into the shade

the old-fashioned dishonesty. The modern dealer finds it

more possible to cheat in the quality than in the quantity

of the article. Dishonesty of either kind, of every kind,

is abomination to the Lord. Justice is His delight, alike

in the weight of the goods and their worth. Though an

honest man should get no thanks from the world, he

ought to count it an abundant reward for all his self-

sacrifice that the world's Judge sees every righteous deed,

and delights in it. God claims to be in merchandise, and

to have his word circling through all its secret channels.

When this set is awanting, forthwith they become cor-

rupt.  Many men would fain banish God from his world.

They are not Atheists. They are willing to meet Him

by appointment on the Sabbath, and in the church,

on condition that they shall be allowed to buy and sell

without Him all the rest of the week. You may as well

expect to escape from the air as from His presence. "In

 


                  HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY.             281

 

Him we live and move and have our being." The only

man who in merchandise is happy or safe, is the man who,

while trying to please his customer over the counter, tries

also to please God. We ought, in this bustling commu-

nity, to be aware that unfair trickery in disposing of goods

is a sin that "doth most easily beset us." When a prac-

tice becomes common, it ceases to attract attention, and

if it be evil, it escapes reproof, by reason of its prevalence.

It would be our wisdom to suspect ourselves on our ex-

posed side. It is in a crowd that you are apt to lose your

money, or your good conscience. When you have cleverly

concluded a bargain by concealment and falsehood, the

loss is not all on one side. The seller suffers more by

that transaction than the buyer. He leaves the shop

with a damaged article, you remain with a defiled con-

science.  It is more blessed to give than to receive; and

the counterpart is a terrible truth,—it is more cursed to

be an intake than to be taken in.

            But there is much actual dishonesty where the parties

have not a deliberate intention to deceive. A man's

judgment leans sadly over to the side of his own interest.

He has a bias in his own favour, and unless he be both

watchful and prayerful, he will enter ere he is aware into

the temptation, and give a false tone to his statements

without admitting to himself the design of telling lies.

This kind of dishonesty is still dishonest. A man may

indeed innocently make a mistake, but the innocent mis-

takes will, on an average, as frequently favour your cus-

tomers as yourselves. If they are all on your own side,

they are not innocent There is a rule by which we may

 


282          HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY.

 

escape this danger. I have seen a mechanic working with

the appropriate tools upon a piece of wood, in order to

bring its surface to a perfect level. After he had wrought

some time, he took a rule and laid it along his work,

bending his head and looking, to ascertain whether the

rule and the wood plied to each other along their whole

length, or whether daylight appeared anywhere between

them. When the work had so far advanced that the rule

and the wood touched each other throughout their length,

the workman, not yet satisfied, turned the rule round the

other way, and looked again. Why? He did not trust

the rule; there might, for aught he knew, be a slight

bend in it; and though the plank and it agreed, both

might be uneven. By reversing the rule, he removes all

chance of deception. His object is not that the plank

should appear, but that it should be straight. Go and do

likewise. You lay your rule along the transaction, and

the two agree. But one's heart is deceitful; perhaps it is

inclined to yourself a little. Reverse the rule. Put

yourself in the customer's place, and the customer in

yours. Would you then like the same representation to

be made, and the same price to be paid? This is a

method for detecting an unfair bias in our bargains, which

the Redeemer himself condescended to supply—"What-

soever ye would that men should do unto you, do ye even

so unto them."

            If I speak plainly, even bluntly, against dishonest

shifts, it is not that I have any prejudice against trade.

I honour merchandise. I place merchants on equality

with princes in my esteem. I think the time is coming

 


                 HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY.           283

 

when their position will be more honourable still. To a

greater extent every year, the surplus produce of one

country is required to supply the increasing wants of an-

other. This is a great providential arrangement for bring-

ing and binding the nations into one. Merchants are the

true ambassadors of nations, conducting their intercourse

and interlacing their interests. The longer the world

lasts, it will become more difficult for nation to go to

war with nation. They are undergoing a dovetailing

process, and every year interpenetrating each other with

deeper and deeper indentations. Merchants are the en-

gineers and artificers in that mighty process of Provi-

dence for binding the peoples of the earth together by

their interests, and perhaps for preparing among them the

way of the Lord. Between east and west, north and

south, barbarian and civilized, merchants are the me-

diators accredited and sent by the Supreme. As the

atmosphere touching both, mediates for blessed purposes

between the sea and the earth, relieving the sea of its

surplus water, and pouring it over the thirsty ground;

so the class of merchants mediate between the different

countries of the world, making the produce of all the pro-

perty of each, and the produce of each the property of all.

            It is because I see the greatness of merchandise that I

strive for its purity. When the truth of God, as a pre-

serving salt, shall pervade the fountain in the merchants'

hearts, the outgoing streams of traffic will be pure, and

the whole landscape will wave with the blossoms of love

and the fruits of righteousness. Though dishonesty be

concealed, its effects cannot be diminished. The world is

 


284            HONESTY IS THE BEST POLICY.

 

under law to God. Falsehood, in proportion to its amount,

poisons and paralyses the whole mercantile system. It is

a bitterness in the spring which, according to its extent,

will infallibly tell in scorching the land with barrenness.

The system of nature is constructed so as to fit into truth.

The world has been made for honest men. The dishonest

rack and rend it, like gravel among the wheels of a

machine. But if lies impede the motions of the social

system, the social system in its slow and solemn revolu-

tions brings down heavy blows upon the liar's head.

 


                           ASSORTED PAIRS.                              285

 

 

                                       LIX.

 

 

                           ASSORTED PAIRS.

 

 

"When pride cometh, then cometh shame:

      but with the lowly is wisdom." —xi. 2.

 

IN morals, things go in pairs as rigidly and regularly as

living creatures in nature. The Bible contains the his-

tory and the rules of God's government, and therefore

the unions that exist in Providence are written in the

word. Here is one of them. Pride and shame consti-

tute a pair. They must go together whether they will

or not. All the wriggling of the victims cannot break

the chain that binds them. For wise and righteous ends,

they have been made twins by the Author and Ruler of

the world. As well might you try to tear away the

shadow, so that it should not haunt the body, as to pre-

vent shame from dogging the steps of pride. The laws

of nature cannot be overturned by the power, or over-

reached by the cunning of men. It is not only that

shame will appear as the punishment of pride on some

future day, "Pride cometh; then cometh shame."

There is always something at hand to gall pride, where

there is pride to be galled. A proud man is never at

ease. He is always apprehensive of danger, and always

on the watch. It is certain that no man has good

ground for being proud; and to have ideas at variance

with your circumstances, is to steep your life in misery.

 


286                    ASSORTED PAIRS.

 

A proud man, having nothing to be proud of, is like a

boy trespassing in a field not his own: the pleasure is

all embittered by the fear of being caught. In this life,

the condition of humanity at the best is one of suffering;

but pride adds other irritants of its own. Two men are

confined in cells of equal capacity: neither habitation can

be reckoned roomy; neither inhabitant can be altogether

content. But if one meekly submits, and makes the

best of it, his lot will be endurable; whereas the other,

if he dash himself continually on the sides of his prison,

will make his life miserable while it lasts, and soon

bring it to a close. Both the humble and the proud

man are in a low confined condition; but the one, by

bowing his head, escapes the blow; the other, by stretch-

ing aloft, brings his body into destructive collision

with the barriers which the Omnipotent has set round

the sinful.

            Pride? what is the man proud of?  Money? It will

not procure for him one night's sleep. It will not buy

back a lost friend. It will not bribe off approaching

death. Land? a very little bit of it will serve him soon.

Birth? what has he inherited, but sin and corruption.

Learning? If he is equal to Newton he has gathered one

little pebble on the ocean's shore, and even that one he

must soon lay down again. It would be better that

shame should come now on the proud like a flood to cover

them, that their hearts may melt in godly sorrow: for if

shame come first when mercy has finally passed away,

how dreadful will its coming be! Then it will be "shame

and everlasting contempt"

 


                             ASSORTED PAIRS.                         287

 

            With the lowly is wisdom,—the wisdom from above.

The lowest parts of the land are warm and fertile the

lofty mountains are cold and barren. The secret of the

Lord is with them that fear him. "Blessed are the poor

in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven."

 


288                                   DIPLOMACY.

 

 

                                                  LX.

 

 

                                         DIPLOMACY.

 

 

"The integrity of the upright shall guide them:
    but the perverseness of transgressors shall destroy them."—xi. 8.

 

 

ALL obliquity and trick in the intercourse of men is a

libel on Providence. Every recourse to falsehood is a

direct distrust of God. Truth is both the shortest and

the surest road in every difficulty. How much labour is

lost by adopting tortuous paths. A great part of life's

labour consists in following a crooked course, and then

trying to make it appear a straight one. The crooked

line is far more difficult at the first, and the defence of it

afterwards doubles the labour. The intercourse of nations

with each other, designated by the general term diplomacy,

is proverbially a game of dexterity. We do not certainly

know what goes on, for we have never been admitted

into their secrets; but if diplomatists be not much

maligned, there is a great deal of double dealing in their

art. It seems to be understood that a man of transparent

and scrupulous truthfulness is not fitted to be a diplo-

matist. It is a prevalent idea among politicians, that

though truth is best in the abstract, yet in some cases it

is not safe to depend upon it, while others are endeavour-

ing to circumvent you. You are in difficulty and danger;

you must fortify to the uttermost; you must do the best;

therefore you will twist together a few lies in order there-

 


                             DIPLOMACY.                                    289

 

by to defend your position, and foil your adversary!

That is, when there is a stress you cast aside the straight

line of truth, and trust to the crooked course of hypocrisy.

The cripple, at a rocky part of the road, throws away his

sturdy oak-staff, and grasps a bruised reed, by way of

making sure that he will get safely over. Vain hope!

"Truth is great, and it will prevail" Truth is the most

potent weapon of attack, and the surest covering for the

head in the day of battle. Each party throws the blame

of lying on his adversary, and continues himself to lie.

The ever-recurring justification of diplomatic trick is,

though we were willing to be true, we have lying rogues

to deal with. What then? The question remains entire;

in dealing with them, what is your strongest weapon and

surest defence? Is it truth, or a lie? Meet them with

transparent truthfulness. Your truth will, in the long

run, be stronger than their lie, and you will overcome.

We are confident that if a nation, in all its intercourse

with neighbours, were transparent and true like sunlight,

that nation would soon be in the ascendant. Truth is

God's law, as well as gravitation. Those who conform

to these laws, in their several departments, are safe; those

who contravene them are crushed by their self-acting

vengeance-stroke. Their own act brings down the

retribution. "The perverseness of transgressors shall

destroy them."

 

 

 


290        THE DESTROYER OF A NEIGHBOUR

 

 

                                           LXI.

 

 

              THE DESTROYER OF A NEIGHBOUR.

 

 

"An hypocrite with his mouth, destroyeth his neighbour."—xi. 9.

 

 

AN untrue man is the moral murderer, his mouth the

lethal weapon, and his neighbour the victim. Horrid

employment!  For what purpose have we been placed in

the world? Look unto Jesus, and learn in His life what

is your own errand here. He came to seek and save the

lost.  He went about doing good. Let no man deceive

himself with words. Nothing in nature is surer and

truer than this, that Christians are like Christ; and they

who are not like Christ are not Christians. Let that

mind which was in Him be also found in you. He has

left us an example that we should follow His steps. The

destroyers of a neighbour are as far from the track of

Jesus as men in this life can be. Beware of carrying

deadly weapons. For what end did God give to man

and to man alone, a speaking mouth? The Maker of

that tongue meant it not to be a dart to pierce a brother

with. Remember every morning who gave you that

wonderful instrument, and how He intended it to be

used. When a kind parent sends to his distant child a 

case of curious mechanical instruments, he takes care to

send along with them printed "directions for use." Even

such a set of directions has our Father in heaven sent to

us along with the ease of cunning instruments which our

 


       THE DESTROYER OF A NEIGHBOUR.             291

 

living body contains. Look into the directions and see

what is written opposite the mouth and tongue; for

"speaking the truth in love" (Eph. iv. 15). Every dear

child will do what his Father bids him. He tries the

edge of the weapon on truth to honour the giver God,

and on love to soothe the sorrows of brother men. The

tongue is one, and that not the least, of the ten talents.

"Occupy till I come," is the condition of the loan; near,

though unseen, is the day of reckoning.


292                          A TALEBEARER.

 

 

                                           LXII.

 

 

                               A TALEBEARER

 

 

"A talebearer revealeth secrets:

  but he that is of a faithful spirit concealeth the matter."—xi. 13.

 

 

A TALEBEARER [double tongued] is an odious character.

He takes in all your story, if you are weak enough to

give it to him, and then runs off to the next house, and

pours it into the greedy ears of jealous neighbours. His

character is a compound of weakness and wickedness.

He is feared less than bolder criminals, and despised

more. If he were not weak, he would not act so

wickedly; but if he were not wicked, he would not act

so weakly. He breeds hatred, and spreads it. He car-

ries the infection from house to house, like a traveller,

from city to city, bringing the plague in his garments.

Families soon begin to mark him as a dangerous man;

and, in the exercise of sovereign authority within their

own borders, they prescribe a rigid quarantine. They pre-

scribe for him an offing wide enough to ensure their own

safety.  The true antithesis to the talebearer is a "faith-

ful spirit." Poets have often sung the sweetness of

true friendship, but they can never reach the bottom of

it. It is a spring in the desert. Without it the weary

pilgrim would not get forward at all. Beyond computa-

tion, precious is the friend who, instead of the weakness

and wickedness of a talebearer, possesses the opposite

 


                          A TALEBEARER.                            293

 

qualities of strength and goodness,—who is soft enough

to take in your sorrows, and firm enough to keep them.

It is a substantial help to suffering humanity, when a

being of the same nature with yourself goes into your

very heart, and yet will not divulge the secrets which he

has witnessed there. The Lord, who knows what is in

man, takes notice of these things. He provides helps

meet to us in our griefs. He provides human sympathy

for human sorrow to lean upon. He approves when any

one, for his sake, and at his bidding, acts the part of a

friend to a needy brother. He gives, indeed, to his own

people such duties as these to exercise their graces on.

"Without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing," is their

ultimate, acquirement, and should be their present aim.

They are glad to be employed by Him, and like Him.

Apprentices learning a trade, they do not look for wages.

Rather they count themselves obliged, when subjects and

opportunities are afforded to try upon, that by exercise

they may grow more skilful in acting the part of faithful

friends.

 


294                  DEBTS AND SURETIES.

 

 

                                        LXIII.

 

 

                        DEBTS AND SURETIES.

 

 

"He that is surety for a stranger shall smart for it;

     and he that hateth suretiship is sure."—xi. 15. See also ch. vi. 1-6.

 

 

RASH suretiship, and the ruin that follows it, seem to

have been common in those days, as well as our own.

The traffic of ancient times was small, in comparison with

the vast system of exchange which now compasses the

whole world, like network; but the same vices that we

lament marred it, and the same righteousness that we

desiderate would have healed its ailments. Neither the

law of gravitation nor the law of righteousness has

changed since the time of Solomon; both are as powerful

now as they were then, and as pervasive. The things

are different in form and bulk, but ancient and modern

merchandise are of the same nature, and subject to the

same laws. As to the laws, whether physical or moral,

there is nothing new under the sun.

            In those primitive times, it seems, as in our own, some

men desired to get faster forward in the world than their

circumstances legitimately permitted. They were deter-

mined to get up, although they had nothing to stand

upon. Their ambition fretted at the slow and vulgar

method of climbing up by patient industry; they would

ascend by a bound. They must get a neighbour to

become security for them, that they may get the use of

 


                     DEBTS AND SURETIES.                       295

 

money which is not their own. They will throw for a

fortune to themselves at another's risk. There were also

others, it appears, so simple as to become surety for the

adventurers, perhaps because they could not command

enough of courage to refuse a friend, although they

thereby cast into a lottery the home and the food of their

own families.

            The warning does not of course discourage considerate

kindness in bearing a deserving man over a temporary

pressure. When you have ascertained the character of

the person, and measured the amount of his need; when

you have balanced your own affairs, and discovered that

they have buoyancy sufficient to bear both yourself and

your brother over the strait, then do a brother's turn,

and enjoy a brother's love. No precept of the Bible

demands that we should harden our hearts against the

claims of the needy. The Bible permits and requires

more of kindness to our brother than we have ever

shown him yet; but it does not allow us to do a cer-

tain substantial evil, for the sake of a distant shadowy

good. It condemns utterly the rash engagements which,

under pretence of doing a kindness to one, inflicts injus-

tice on a hundred. Righteousness, in all times, and all

circumstances, reclaims against the blind effort which, for

the sake of supporting a tottering fabric, incurs the risk

of bringing your own house down about your ears, and

crushing beneath its ruins many innocent victims.

            We make no inquiry into the method of conducting

pecuniary transactions in the days of Solomon. Our

object is not antiquarian research, but the rebuke of pre-

 


296                 DEBTS AND SURETIES.

 

sent wrong, and the establishment of righteousness. The

most convenient method will be to apply what we count

the straight line to a number of cases that are daily

occuring in business. We shall thread them on like

beads upon a string, and every one, with the Bible in his

hand, and a conscience in his breast, may judge for him-

self whether they hang fairly.

            (1.) If a merchant, possessing unencumbered twenty

thousand pounds, desires to get the use of ten thousand

more, he may legitimately obtain it in money or goods

from bankers or brother merchants, if he do not mis-

represent the real state of his affairs. But although he

really possesses twenty thousand, and think himself safer

if he convey to others in any way the impression that

he has forty thousand, in order to obtain more credit, he

infringes the law of righteousness as certainly and sin-

fully as the trickster on a lower platform, and a smaller

scale.

            (2.) A man who has not more than ten pounds may

legitimately borrow ten thousand, if he can get it, after

revealing the whole case to the capitalist as thoroughly

as it is known to himself.  He may be such a man, that

his character and ten pounds in hand are a better guaran-

tee than another man can give who has ten thousand

pounds, but not a character. Let the whole truth be

known—make a clear breast, and if another choose to

take the risk, you may accept the money. The same

principles would of course bind you to be at least as care-

ful of the money so obtained as if it were your own.

            (3.) A merchant is engaged in extensive business.

 


                     DEBTS AND SURETIES.                  297

 

He began it with a large capital, and good credit. In

process of time he meets with heavy losses. He dis-

covers from his balance that his assets will not cover his

liabilities. What should he do? A common maxim in

such a case is—take care not to change your house; on

no account dismiss your coachman, or sell your horses;

invite dinner parties more frequently this winter than

you did the last, and see that the luxuriance be not in

aught diminished, all to keep up your credit. Measured

by the line of God's law, all this is unmitigated dis-

honesty. It is to fence your position all round with a

battery of lies. It is to keep money on false pretences.

When you have nothing, if you keep up a show for the

purpose of persuading your creditors that you are as rich

as ever, you are cheating your neighbours. When the

ground on which a man gave you credit has fallen away,

you must let him know it. If, after revelation and ex-

planation, he think it better on the whole that you

should make another effort, it is well; let the effort be

made, but concealment in these circumstances is sheer

dishonesty.

            (4.) A man has lost on his business this year. He

hopes that he will make good the loss in another and

better season. He borrows from his friends, and pushes

forward. Again at the balance it is discovered that he

is still sinking. He is below the horizon of solvency.

He owes now more than all that he has. He borrows

again, not revealing to the creditors the state of the case.

Is he justified? No, verily. The act is dishonest, and

there is a loathsome selfishness in the dishonesty; he is

 


298                 DEBTS AND SURETIES.

 

pushing forward, knowing that if he succeed the gain

will be his own, if he fail, the loss will lie on his neigh-

bours, for he has nothing to lose.

            (5.) A man, honest and honourable, is conducting a

legitimate business in a legitimate way. He is indebted

to his customers, and his customers are indebted to him.

The whole process goes regularly and fairly on. He

gains a few hundreds every year for the support of his

family, and there is at all times a balance in his favour

over the transactions in the mass. A friend not con-

nected with him in business comes to this man, and re-

quests the favour of his name to a bill by which he may

obtain the use of ten thousand for a few months, to en-

able him to take advantage of a promising speculation

(speculations are always promising). He yields. In an

evil hour he writes his name on that paper. Now his

position in relation to his ordinary creditors is wholly

changed. They knew him only in the transactions of

business. They had, in the course of these transactions,

given him credit to a legitimate amount, and for a rea-

sonable time. When they gave it, he had the means of

repaying all. Now he has contracted, without telling

them, a liability which, if it become due, will swallow

up all his substance, and leave his lawful creditors unpaid.

To contract that liability was unjust.

            (6.) One case more we shall adduce, connected like the

last immediately and directly with suretiship, and

selected as a specimen of the extravagant and dangerous

excesses to which speculation runs in this feverish age.

Suretiship, as distinct from money lending, has been

 


                     DEBTS AND SURETIES.                       299

 

converted into a business, and prosecuted for profit. A

species of underwriters has sprung secretly up, who in-

sure against losses, not on the sea of water, but on the

more treacherous waves of gambling speculation. You

are engaged in business, with large assets and heavy lia-

bilities, but with the reputation in society of substan-

tial wealth. Another man is struggling against the tide,

and is no longer able to keep his head above water. He

applies to a neighbour as needy as himself. A bill with

both names attached is presented to the banker. The man

of money shakes his head, and requests time to consider.

But time is the very thing which the two adventurers can-

not spare. Money they must have, and they must have it

now. They present themselves with their bill in your

counting-house. They want your name; you will never

be troubled—all that they want is your name, to enable

them to clear a pressing difficulty. You have no interest

in them, and will not give them your name for love; but

you have an eye to your own interest, and will give it

for money. The terms are discussed—how much per

cent for your name; the terms are adjusted, and the

bargain struck. If the applicant is needy, he will offer

a large premium—not for the loan of money, be it ob-

served, for the poor borrower is obliged to pay the in-

terest to the bank besides, and you do not give him a

farthing, even in loan—he agrees to pay a large premium

to you for the use of your name, to enable him to borrow

in another quarter. If traffic becomes extensive, large

profits may come in for a time; but in the nature of

things the medicine aggravates the speculator's disease.

 


300                 DEBTS AND SURETIES.

 

The traffic becomes more and more dangerous. The

hollow principals fail to meet their engagements. The

liability falls back on you. Your capital is swallowed

up, your family ruined, and your ordinary creditors de-

frauded.

            Enough of these examples: now for the elucidation of

the principles of truth and righteousness as applied to

modern trade. We are met here by the old cry, that

business cannot be conducted at all if these principles

are closely insisted on. Let business perish if it must

needs rise on downcast and dishonoured Truth! Let

business creep on the ground, in isolated acts of exchange,

like the diminutive and simple transactions of children

and savages, if its vast and symmetrical structure can be

reared only upon the wreck of righteousness.  But we

are not shut up to such a dire alternative. Business, in

all its extent, and through all its complications, will stand

more securely on a basis of perfect righteousness, and

move more sweetly when every wheel turns in a bedding of

transparent truth. The goodly machine needs no under-

hand dealing and false representation to keep it going.

These are the things that make it jerk and creak, and

break and rend those who handle it.

            Specifically, as to sureties, the law of the Lord gives

no harsh recommendation, and countenances no selfish

neglect of a neighbour in need. Help him, if he is de-

serving and you are able; but help him out of your own

means, and do not mortgage for that object the money

that really belongs to another man. You have a right

to pledge your own money   in the case, if you think the

 


                    DEBTS AND SURETIES                      301

 

case is good; but you have no right to pledge mine also

in it, however good it may be: but you do pledge the

money of other people, the moment that you bind your-

self for more than you have of your own.

            We are very far from saying or thinking that, in the

intricate avenues of modern merchandise, a strictly con-

scientious man will always see his way clearly, and never

meet with difficulties. We are well aware that, in the

evolution of circumstances, an honest man may suddenly

find himself in an inclosure where it is exceedingly diffi-

cult to determine in what direction righteousness leads.

Let it be supposed that he fears God and regards man;

that he would do justly at all hazards if he were sure

what course would, on the whole, be most just. We

grant readily that the line of duty may, in some cases,

be involved in great darkness, and that with a pure pur-

pose the man may sometimes take a step which involves

himself and others in the direst disasters. Flesh and

blood ourselves, and knowing that even when pure prin-

ciple reigns in the heart, the path of practical duty, in

any line of life, may be involved in many doubts, we

would not proudly dictate to a brother on difficulties

which beset his steps, and from which our different pro-

fession, not our superior probity, keeps us free. First, in

the name of the Lord and in the cause of righteousness,

we denounce all dishonesty and untruth, however large

and intricate the transactions in question may be. And

then, with human sympathy and in conscious weakness,

we counsel all good men engaged in business to be aware

of its dangers, and to watch and pray that they enter not


302            DEBTS AND SURETIES.

 

into temptation. In this line of life as in every other,

there are trials of faith and of other graces. All that we

demand, and all that is needed, is that Christian mer-

chants take their Christianity with them into merchan-

dise, and keep it with them all the way. In every case

seek the Lord's will and you will find it. Consult the

honour of Christ and the safety of your soul as to what

business you will go into, and how far in you will go.

You have not fulfilled your duty when you are able to

say that you did not of set purpose do any wrong.

The question is, where the path is slippery and many

falling, how painful and prayerful were you that you

might not stumble unconsciously into evil. A Christian

is not forbidden to go into business; but if he look

within and around, he will discover that his watchword

there should be "Fear, and sin not."


                   VIRTUE ITS OWN REWARD.                     303

 

 

                                       LXIV.

 

 

                    VIRTUE ITS OWN REWARD.

 

 

"The merciful man doeth good to his own soul;

   but he that is cruel troubleth his own flesh."—xi. 17.

 

 

BLESSED are the merciful., All the good they do to

others returns with interest into their own bosoms. "It

is more blessed to give than to receive." In every act

that mercy prompts there are two parties who obtain a

benefit,—the person in need, who is the object of com-

passion, and the person not in need, who pities his suf-

fering brother. Both get good, but the giver gets the

larger share. In common life, the act of showing mercy

to the needy is very good for the man who shows it.

The good Samaritan who bathed the wounds and pro-

vided for the wants of a plundered Jew, obtained a

greater profit on the transaction than the sufferer who

was saved by his benevolence. It is like God to consti-

tute his world so. Even Christ himself, in the act of

showing mercy, has his reward. When He sees of the

travail of his soul He is satisfied.

            Like other fixtures in nature, this principle has its

counterpart. When light departs, darkness comes in its

stead. When a human bosom is a stranger to the blessed-

ness of the merciful, it tastes the misery of the cruel or

the careless. As mercy blesses, cruelty torments both

the parties,—the one who bears and the one who inflicts


304          VIRTUE ITS OWN REWARD.

 

it. This is a law of God, set deep in the constitution of

things—a law that magnifies his mercy. A man cannot

hurt a neighbour, without hurting more deeply himself.  

The rebound is heavier than the blow. The man who

chastises his brother with whips, will himself; by the

movements of providence, be chastised with scorpions.

Such is the fence which the Creator has set up to keep

man off his fellow. This dividing line is useful now to

check the ravages of sin; but when perfect love has

come, that divider, no longer needed, will be no longer

seen. It is like one of those black jagged ridges of rock

that at low water stretch across the sand from the edge

of the cultivated ground to the margin of the sea, an im-

passable, an unapproachable barrier: when the tide rises,

all is level and it is nowhere seen. This law of God,

rising as a rampart between man and man, is confined to

this narrow six thousand year strip of time. In the per-

fect state it will act no more, for want of material to act

upon.

 

 

 

 


      EVERY SEED BEARS FRUIT OF ITS OWN KIND.          305

 

 

                                         LXV.

 

 

     EVERY SEED BEARS FRUIT OF ITS OWN KIND.

 

 

"The wicked worketh a deceitful work:

    but to him that soweth righteousness shall be a sure reward."—xi. 18.

 

 

WICKEDNESS is a work that deceives its performer. It

may do the harm which he intended to a neighbour, but

it cannot procure the good which he expected for himself.  

By necessity of his condition, every man's life, and every

moment of it, is a sowing. The machine is continually

moving over the field and shaking; it cannot, even for a

moment be made to stand still, so as not to sow. It is

not an open question at all whether I shall sow or

not to-day; the only question to be decided is, Shall I  

sow good seed or bad? Every man always is sowing

for his own harvest in eternity either tares or wheat.

According as a man soweth, so shall he also reap. He

that sows the wind of vanity shall reap the whirlwind of

wrath.  Suppose a man should collect a quantity of small

gravel and dye it carefully, so that it should resemble

wheat, and sow it in his field in spring, expecting that

he would reap a crop of wheat like his neighbours in

harvest. The man is mad; he is a fool to think that by

his silly trick he can evade the laws of nature, and mock

nature's God. Yet equally foolish is the conduct, and

far heavier the punishment, of the man who sows wicked-

ness now and expects to reap safety at last.  Sin is not

 

 


306           EVERY SEED BEARS FRUIT OF ITS OWN KIND.

 

only profitless and disastrous; it is eminently a deceitful

work. Men do not of set purpose cast themselves away.

Sin cheats a sinner out of his soul. The devil, man's

great adversary, acts by deceiving. He is a liar from

the beginning.

            The same law sparkles brightly and beauteously in the

counterpart: "To him that soweth righteousness shall be

a sure reward." The reward is mire, because it comes in

the way of natural law: The reward follows righteous-

ness as fruit follows the seed.  The only righteous man.

that ever lived, the Righteous One, sowed in this desert

world--sowed in tears; but he sowed righteousness. Out

of that sowing a great increase, has already sprung, and

a greater coming.  From that handful on the moun-

tain top a harvest shall wave like Lebanon. “Come ye

blessed of my. Father, inherit the kingdom.” Behold the  

husbandman returning home with  joy, bringing his

sheaves with him. To his members in their own place

the same law holds good. Sowing righteousness is never,

and nowhere, lost labour. Every act done by God's

grace, and at His bidding, is living and fruitful. It may  

appear to go out of sight, like seed beneath the furrow

but will rise again.  Sow on, Christians! Sight will

not follow the seed far; but when sight fails sow in faith,

and you will reap in joy soon. More of the word of

God is scattered over the world in our day than at any

previous period of the Christian dispensation. The re-

sult, though unseen, is not doubtful. In grace as in  

nature, things proceed by law, and the ultimate result is

sure.

 


             GOD'S PEOPLE ARE GOD’S DELIGHT.                307

 

 

                                         LXVI.

 

 

              GOD'S PEOPLE ARE GOD'S DELIGHT.

 

 

“They that are of a froward heart are abomination to the Lord:

      but such as  are upright in their way, are his delight."—xi. 20.

 

 

To think of God only as "angry with the wicked''

but half truth; and half a truth becomes practically a

falsehood. To picture our Father in heaven all in shade

is to hide half His loveliness, and keep His creatures

terrified away. There is another side of His character,

and the two together make up the divine perfection.  

The righteous Lord loveth righteousness. It is an en-

couraging and not a presumptuous thought, that the

Holy One delights in every good, thing which grace has

wrought in His children. "Ye are God's husbandry."

That field He watches and waters night and day.  Many

weeds grow there to grieve Him, and many spots lie

barren; but our "Father is the Husbandman;" the Hus-

bandman is a Father, and He suffers long.  He bears

with the barrenness of His garden; and, in so far as it

thrives, he tastes the fruit and counts it pleasant.  It

was a wilderness until.  He, in sovereign mercy, took it in,

and many things mar its fruitfulness yet; but He does

not therefore despise or desert it. He loves all that He

recognises as His own there. That humble and broken

heart becomes His dwelling-place.

 


308                     A JEWEL ILL SET.

 

 

                                        LXVII.

 

 

                           A JEWEL ILL SET.

 

 

"As a jewel of gold in a swine's snout,

    so is a fair woman which is without discretion."—xi. 22.

 

 

THE lines of this picture are few and bold. The details

are not elaborated; but by one stroke the likeness is

caught, and with unwavering hand it is held up to public

gaze. The conceptions and expressions here are peculiar

and memorable. They are remarkable alike for the un-

varnished homeliness of the allusion, and the permanent,

palpable truth of the picture. The very rudeness of the

imagery is designed, and serves a purpose. An analogy

might have been found fitted to convey a true sentiment

on the point, and steering clear of associations which

affect the mind with a measure of disgust.  But that

very disgust is an essential part of the impression to be

conveyed. The words of the Lord are tried words. The

comparison is chosen for the purpose of setting before us

an outrageous incongruity—the conjunction of two things

whose union is palpably and monstrously inappropriate.

Both the judgment and the taste must be educated. It

is necessary that we should both see the thing to be

wrong, and feel it to be revolting. We need both to

have the understanding enlightened and the affections

exercised. Christian's affections should be trained to

strike out positive and strong in both directions; he

 


                        A JEWEL ILL SET.                           309

 

should love the lovely and hate the hateful. Both emo-

tions should start quickly, like instincts, when their

objects appear; both should be hearty and effective. A

good man loathes evil as much as he loves good. The

law that action and reaction are equal and opposite holds

good in morals as well as in physics. The righteous

Lord loveth righteousness, and it is but the other side of

that same glory that glances in the rebuke of lukewarm

Laodicea, "I will spue thee out of my mouth" (Rev.

iii. 16.)

            Personal beauty is not a thing to be despised. It is a

work of God, and none of his works are done in vain.

We do not count it a man's duty to be unimpressed by

the grandeur of a lofty mountain, or the loveliness of a

starry sky. It is obvious that human kind are the chief

of God's works on earth, and that in the human form is

displayed the highest beauty of creation. Beauty is a

talent, and has a power. Call it, if you will, a power

like that of a sharp knife, dangerous in the hands of the

weak or the wicked; but still it is a power the gift of

God, and capable of being ranked among the all things

that advance his glory. Like wealth or wisdom, or any

other talent, it may be possessed by the humble, and em-

ployed for good. If the heart be holy and the aim true,

personal beauty will enlarge the sphere and double the

resources of beneficence. The same spread full sail may

speed the ship on her course, or dash her on the rock of

doom. If the beautiful be not also good, beauty becomes

an object of disgust and a cause of ruin. For such a

spread of sail, and such a breeze as it is sure to catch, a

 


310                     A JEWEL ILL SET.

 

greater than ordinary amount of solid deep ballast is

needed in the body of the character, not only for

tended usefulness; but even for simple preservation from

quick perdition.

            The lesson on this subject appears in the word in

form of peculiar homeliness: we must beware, lest, in

straining after refinement, we let its, strength slip through

our fingers. If we would maintain congruity between

the comment and the text, we must go to our object, by

a straight short line. Let a man beware of being tricked

and caught and chained by a woman's beauty, so as to

be dragged through the mire by the bewitching bond.  

When an impure character is clothed, in corporeal loveli-

ness, it is the spirit of darkness appearing as an angel of

light, enticing to devour.  A beautiful woman who is

proud, flippant, selfish, false, is miserable herself, and dan-

gerous to others. It is a combination to be loathed and

shunned.  A swine wallowing in the mire is not a crea-

ture that you would follow and embrace, although she

had a jewel of gold in her snout! Such is the glass in

which the Bible bids us see the sin and folly of the man

who gives himself over to the fascination of a worthless

heart, because it is covered by a fair skin.

            Women who have beauty above the average should be

peculiarly watchful on that side, lest they sin and suffer

there. You have a jewel of gold; don't put it in a

swine's snout. The misapplication, will prostitute the

gift; the incongruity will be repulsive to all whose tastes

are true. It will attract the vain, and repel the solid.

There are diversities of operation under the ministry of

 


                              A JEWEL ILL SET                         311

 

the same spirit. For discipline to human souls in time,

deformity is given to one, and beauty to another. The

chief consideration for each is how she may best bear the

trial, so as to get it enlisted among the workers for good,

and instruments of saving.  If both are saved, it will be

a pleasant exercise to compare notes of their several paths

and several burdens, when they meet in equal loveliness,

without, spot or wrinkle, in the presence of the. Lord

If it were our part to judge, most of us would think it

probable that beauty is the greater trial, and that under

it a greater proportion stumble and fall. But we are not

permitted to judge, for we are not able to judge aright.  

We do not see far.  The Lord is judge himself and the

day shall declare whether beauty, in filling the soul with

vanity, or deformity, in fretting it with envy, has been

actually the more successful instrument of evil in Satan's

hands.  Meantime, those who on either extremity have

a weight to bear, should watch unto prayer, and cast

their burden on the Lord; while we, the mass of human-

kind, in the middle, who in that respect have neither

poverty nor riches, should be humbly thankful to God

for casting our lot in a safer place, and marking out for

us an easier path.

 


212            THE DESIRE OF THE RIGHTEOUS.

 

 

                                         LXVIII.

 

 

                  THE DESIRE OF THE RIGHTEOUS.

 

 

         "The desire of the righteous is only good.—xi. 23.

 

IN the preceding chapter, we learned that "the desire of

the righteous shall be granted:" here we are told that it

is good. The fruit we gathered on a former page; and

now the tree that bore it is displayed. A good tree

bringeth forth good fruit. Holy desires implanted in the

heart will issue in glad enjoyments. "Delight thyself

also in the Lord, and He shall give thee the desires of

thine heart" (Ps. xxxvii. 4).

            The new nature has new affections. Every creature

after its kind. The desires of this new man which has

been "put on" in conversion are "only good;" but the

desires of the old nature are not yet destroyed, and a life-

long conflict is maintained between them. In every

Christian while he lives there is a warfare between two

opposite principles. Paul stands forth as the type of the

truly converted, but not perfectly sanctified disciple—

"When I would do good, evil is present with me" (Rom.

vii. 21). There is a great tumult in a human breast

where these two contrary currents contend. It is like

the meeting-place of the rising tide and the descending

torrent. One stream, pure and transparent, is rising

mysteriously up; another, yellow and turbid, is rushing,

according to its constant nature, down. The contention

 


                 THE DESIRE OF THE RIGHTEOUS.             313

 

is sharp; but it is soon over. The pure overcomes the

impure. That which rises up, apparently contrary to

law, overcomes that which flows down obviously accord-

ing to law. The ocean, entering that channel, over-

powers and beats back the mountain stream. It is thus

that the tide which issues from the Infinite, and acts 

against the law of the carnal mind, arrests and throws

back the carnal mind, notwithstanding its long possession

and its impetuous flow. The tide that rises is under

law, as well as the stream that descends; but the law

lies deeper among the things of God. That rising tide

is not only pure in itself, it has Omnipotence behind to

urge it on. There will be a mixture at the point of con-

tact, and while the conflict rages; but soon the unclean

will be driven back, and the channel will be filled from

brim to brim by a pure ascending stream.

            Pure in character, and upward in direction, is the cur-

rent of a righteous man's desire. This description is a

standing rebuke of our poor attainments. How faintly

is the attraction from heaven felt, how feebly flow the

heart's emotions thitherward, how deeply tinged, even

in their upward course, by the mingling remnants of the

downward current! And yet there is encouragement

here, as well as rebuke; this purity of desire is attain-

able, in some measure, on the earth. The design of dis-

cipline is to increase it; and it will be perfect when the

discipline is done. The hope of final and complete suc-

cess is a powerful motive to present exertion. When

the new man is perfect, his desires will be only good,

with no admixture of evil; and when the desires are

 


314          THE DESIRE OF THE RIGHTEOUS.

 

only good, they will all be gratified. When the last ruse

of the flesh is crucified, disappointments will cease.  If

my heart's desires were all and only good, they would

be like God's; and when my will is God's will, it shall

be accomplished, for He will do all his pleasure.

 


SCATTERING TO KEEP, AND KEEPING TO SCATTER  313

 

 

                                        LXIX.

 

 

          SCATTERING TO KEEP, AND KEEPING TO

                                     SCATTER

 

 

"There is that scattereth, and yet increaseth; and there is that withholdeth

                more than is meet, but it teadeth to poverty."—xi. 24.

 

THE maxim, although in form approaching the paradox.

has become familiar by frequent use.  If any of us should

hear it now for the first time, we would be startled by

its boldness; but the proverb, like a well worn coin, has

become smooth by long continued handling, and it passes

easily from mind to mind; in the intercourse of life.  To

have undergone so much wear, and yet to be accepted in

the market-place for "all its original worth, is evidence,

both that the metal is pure, and that the stamp of roy-

alty is on it.  Day by day this proverb of Solomon is

offered and accepted on our streets, as a ground, legiti-

mate and authoritative, for giving freely of our means in

behalf of objects that are acknowledged good. By Christ-

tians, who labour for the good of men, it is boldly

applied; and wherever there is an enlightened con-

science, and a sound understanding, it is felt to be appli-

cable. As the formal and authoritative expression of a

fact which may be observed in the history of Providence;

it is a word of great practical value. It is a sharp wea-

pon, always at hand, by which a man may deal a blow

against incipient selfishness in himself or his neighbour.

            The conception is similar to the sowing of righteous-

 


316     SCATTERING TO KEEP, AND KEEPING TO SCATTER.

 

ness which occurred before. In agriculture, to scatter

corn, is the sure and only way to increase it. It is a

species of faith that the cultivator of the soil exercises

when he casts good grain into the ground. In point of

fact, the exercise is easy, and the mind is not racked by

stretching far into the dark future for a pillar of truth to

support its trust; still, in its nature, it is faith in the

unseen. The direct design is to increase corn, and with

that view the man who possesses it scatters what he has.

His faith is rewarded by a manifold return: if, in stupid,

wilful, short-sighted penuriousness; he had withheld the

seed, the hoarding would have tended to poverty.

            To distribute portions of our wealth in schemes and acts

of wise philanthropy, is like casting into the ground as

seed a proportion of the last year's harvest. It goes out of

your sight for the moment, but it will spring in secret, and

come back to your own bosom, like manna from heaven.

            An unwise man may indeed scatter his corn on barren

rocks, or equally barren sands, and though he sow boun-

tifully, he will reap sparingly there. So, in the moral

region, the increase is not absolutely in proportion to the

profusion of the scattering. When a man lays out large

sums on unworthy objects, to feed his own vanity, or

gratify his own whim, he neither does nor gets good.

The outlay is in its own nature, and necessarily unprofit-

able. Sound judgment is as necessaay, in selecting the

objects of philanthropy, and determining the proportion

of effort that should be bestowed on each, as in deciding

where and when the seed should be sown. To give

money, for example, indiscriminately to street beggars,

 


    SCATTERING TO KEEP, AND KEEPING TO SCATTER.    317

 

who tell a whining tale, and cunningly enact distress, is

worse than to sow precious seed on the sand of the sea-

shore. The seed cast on the sand will be lost: money

given to the profligate is lost, and more. It is not bar-

ren; it multiplies and replenishes the earth with vice. There

are many fields for scattering contribution and effort on,

both needful and promising. In educating the young,

in reclaiming the vicious, in supporting the aged poor, in

healing the sick, and in making known the gospel to all,

we have ample fields to cultivate, and the prospect of

large returns to cheer us in the toil.           

            The law that judicious liberality does not impoverish,

and selfish niggardliness does not enrich, may be seen in

its effects by any intelligent observer. If one, not con-

tent with the homely evidence of experience, should

demand how this can be, it would be sufficient answer

simply to repeat that it is, and appeal to the history of

the city or the generation. But, farther, we may answer,

by another question, how does the material seed grow in

the material ground? In point of fact, it does grow; and

this is the sum of our knowledge regarding it. Only

the pride of the rankest ignorance imagines that we

know how or why it grows. A step deeper, as was to

be expected, are the ways of God in the moral processes,

and on those borders where moral causes touch the mate-

rial to produce sensible effects; but in both regions, man

must ever be speechless under the challenge, "Cast thou

by searching find out God?"

            If we understand the maxim, we should act on it; and

if we would act on it more, we would come to understand

 


318    SCATTERING TO KEEP, AND KEEPING TO SCATTER.

 

it better. Both to our money and ourselves, it is

better to wear than to rust. This it an earnest time.

Seek a good investment lay it out.  In the tides

and currents of that commercial sea which now as one

connected ocean encircles all the earth, it it observed as a

law that when many and great losses are incurred in one

region, there is a flow of money into some other channel.

Of late, investments in man's hands for time have not been

secure.  In that department we have heard many a heavy

crash, and been called to pity the mangled victims as they

crawled from beneath the ruins.  Might we not expect

that after these disappointments men would be seen

streaming over to the other side, and hastening to invest

in God's hands for eternity? This lending to the Lord,

when a surplus accrues, affords the best security, and

ensures the largest return. if the Son of Man should

now come, would He find faith in the earth?  We think

ourselves eminently a practical generation; but we should

beware lest we mistake the merely unspiritual for the

profitably practical.  A carcass will not serve the pur-

poses of a man. Action is useless or worse except in so

far as it has true faith to energize and direct it.  The

material acquisitions of the age will become a heavier

heap on the grave of humanity, if the Spirit of God be 

grieved away. The large and complicated body of our

material prosperity will, if its soul goes out, only encumber

us with a greater bulk of corruption.  Faith it the ani-

mating soul of practice.  Men cannot get forward even in

things temporal unless they believe that God is; and that

He is the rewarder of them that diligently seek Him.

 

           


                    THE WATERER IS WATERED.                 319

 

 

                                       LXX.

 

 

                   THE WATERER IS WATERED.

 

 

"The liberal soul shall be made fat;

     and he that watereth shall be watered also himself.” —xi. 25.

 

 

IT is announced here that the bountiful shall be enriched;

and that law is expressed in a simple, intelligible, and

memorable figure. —“He that watereth shall be watered

also himself." How wisely and kindly God has bound his

worlds into one, making all depend on each, and each on

all! When we look up to the heavens, the moon and the

stars which He hath made, we find there a law by which

all the worlds of space are linked together. Our earth

affects the moon, and the moon affects the earth; each

planet influences all the rest: the removal of one would

disturb the order of the whole. The well-being of all is

concerned in the right working of each. This law per-

vades the works of God. Souls are linked to souls in the

spiritual firmament, by a bond equally unseen, but equally

powerful. One necessarily, affects for good, or evil all the

rest in proportion to the closeness of its relations, and the

weight of its influence. You draw another to keep him

from error: that other's weight which you have taken on

keeps you steadier in your path. You water one who is

ready to wither away; and although the precious stream

seems to sink into the earth, it rises to heaven and hovers

over you, and falls again upon yourself in refreshing dew.

 


320             THE WATERER IS WATERED.

 

            It comes to this: if we be not watering we are wither-

ing. There are only two things in time worthy of having

the whole force of an immortal mind directed upon them,

and these two are both here. The one is to be in Christ

ourselves saved; and the other, to be used by Christ in

saving others. "None of us liveth to himself, and no

man dieth to himself.  For whether we live, we live unto

the Lord; and whether we die, we die unto the Lord:

whether we live therefore, or die, we are the Lord's "

(Rom. xiv. 7, 8).

            To water green flowers that they may not wither, or

withered ones that they may revive, is one of the sweetest

employments that fall to the lot of man. Moral and

natural beauty are so entwined together in the act, that

his spirit must be dull indeed who is not drawn by the

double attraction. When the tastes of the spiritual life

are kept keen by frequent exercise, it must be a strong

and pure pleasure to be employed as a vessel to convey

water from the well of life to souls which would wither

for want of it. To be the instrument of keeping fresh a

lively plant, or making fresh a drooping one, in the garden

of God, is an occupation that angels might eagerly apply

for; but this work is all reserved for the children of the

family: servants are employed in other and outer things.

There are diversities of occupation for the children, as

well as diversities of operation by the Lord. To water

flowers in a sheltered garden, at the going down of a

summer's sun, is one work for man; and to ply the

hatchet on the hoary trunks of the primeval forest is

another. The works are very diverse, and yet the same

 


                   THE WATERER IS WATERED.                321

 

hand may do them both. The department of the Lord's

work which this text commends is of the gentlest and

most winsome kind. It differs as much from direct

assault on Satan's stronghold for the first conviction of

sinners, as that clearing of the first spot in the solitude

which tries the strong arm of the emigrant differs from

the watering of a garden-flower, which may be done by

a woman's hand; but it is a work commanded by God,

and needful for a brother. If we are his, and yield our-

selves to him as instruments, he will at one time nerve

us for rough work, and at another solace us with gentle

occupation. He has both departments in his power, and

in dividing he does all things well.

            Opportunities and calls swarm at every turn. The

blind may never see the case or the time in which he can

do any good; but where the eyes are opened the willing

man sees a mountain full of them.

            Here is a young woman, into whose heart the word

came with power in early youth. Through a storm of

terrible conviction she emerged into peace. She sat down

at the Lord's table in the church, and took the standing

of the Lord's disciple in the world. She has grown up,

and come out: perhaps by her parents she was ostenta-

tiously brought out from the kindly shade of youthful

retirement into the blaze of the world's hot light.

Passions are kindled in her breast, —passions for dress,

for company, for pleasure, which formerly she felt not and

feared not. The sun has risen with a burning heat on the

tender plant, not yet deeply rooted. Forthwith it droops,

and is ready to die. Run and water that weakling.

 


322               THE WATERER IS WATERED.

 

Mingle faithful reproof with patient kindness. At the

same moment touch her weakness with human sympathy,

and her sin with God's awful word. When she feels that

a disciple cares for her, she may be more easily convinced

that the Lord cares for her too. Gently lead her to the

beauty of holiness, that there she may lose relish for the

pleasures of sin. She may be saved, and you may be the

instrument of saving her. I have seen a plant of a cer-

tain species that had been exposed all day, unsheltered,

unwatered, beneath a burning sun, bent and withered

towards evening, and to all appearance dead; but when

one discovered its distress, and instantly watered it, the

plant revived so suddenly and so completely as to strike

inexperienced observers with astonishment.

            Oh, it is sweet employment to be the waterer of a

withering soul! It is gentle work for tender workers.

"Who is on the Lord's side let him come," and labour in

this department. The work is pleasant and profitable.

In the keeping of this commandment there is a great

reward. To be a vessel conveying refreshment from the

fountain-head of grace to a fainting soul in the wilderness

is the surest way of keeping your own spirit fresh, and

your experience ever new.

 


                  RAISING THE MARKET, ETC.                323

 

 

                                       LXXI.

 

 

     RAISING THE MARKET—THE PRACTICE AND

                                THE PENALTY.

 

 

"He that withholdeth corn, the people shall curse him:

      but blessing shall be upon the head of him that selleth it."—xi. 26.

 

 

To keep up grain in order to raise the market is a prac-

tice of very old standing, and the world has not done

with it yet. The manner in which this word deals with

it is worthy of observation. This law bears no mark of

having emanated from the ruling class of a nation. Here,

as elsewhere, the Bible holds the balance even between

the wealthy few and the needy many. Either class pos-

sesses its own peculiar power; one the power of wealth,

another the power of numbers. The domination of any

part over another is tyranny: liberty lies in the just

balance of all interests. In this brief maxim no arbitrary

rule is laid down to the possessor of corn, that he must

sell at a certain period, and at a certain price: and yet the

hungry are not left without a protecting law. The pro-

tection of the weak is entrusted not to small police regu-

lations, but to great self-acting providential arrangements.

The double fact is recorded in terms of peculiar distinct-

ness, that he who in times of scarcity keeps up his corn

in order to enrich himself is loathed by the people, and

he who sells it freely is loved. This is all. There is no

further legislation on the subject.

 


324                 RAISING THE MARKET—

 

            The wisdom of this course lies in its reserve. The his-

tory of some modern nations, especially that of France,

reveals the disastrous consequences of forcing sales and

regulating prices by arbitrary legislation. When a ruler

rashly puts his hand to the wheel of providence to guide

its movements, although it is done from the best of

motives, he hurts both himself and his subjects. In the

Bible no law is enacted, and no penalty prescribed. The

evil doer is left under a penalty which legislation can

neither abate nor enforce:  "the people shall curse him."

He becomes an object of detestation to the community in

which he lives. No law and no government can shield

him from that punishment. They might as well attempt

to prevent the clouds from coming between his corn-fields

and the sun. Nor is the punishment light. To be the

object of aversion among his neighbours is a heavy inflic-

tion upon a human being. No man can despise it. What

though I be lord of the land, as far as my eye can see on

every side; if the men and women and children who live

on it loathe and shun me, I am miserable. When from

the battlements of my castle I survey the landscape, and

see the blue smoke from many a cottage curling up to the

sky, the scene will to me have no sweetness, if I know

that there rises with it a sigh to the Husband of the

widow and the Father of the orphan for a judgment on

my head. My barns may be full, but my heart will be

empty. This, in the last resort, is the protection of the

poor and the punishment of the oppressor. The mightiest

man desires the blessing of the people, and dreads their

curse. Wealth would be a weapon too powerful for the

 


          THE PRACTICE AND THE PENALTY.            325

 

liberty of men, if he who wields it were not confined

within narrow limits by the weakness of humanity, com-

mon to him with the meanest of the people. In the

necessary dependence of man upon man lies the ultimate

protection of the weak and the ultimate limit of the

powerful.

            In our country, and in our time, the scale of operations

has been prodigiously enlarged, but they do not, in virtue

of their magnitude, escape from the control of the provi-

dential laws. Latterly the contest with us has not lain

between a single holder of grain and the labouring poor of

the nearest village; the whole nation was divided into

two hostile camps. Agriculture and manufactures were

ranged against each other. In the main it was a battle

between those who sell bread and those who buy it. The

bone of contention was not precisely whether corn should

be hoarded or sold, but whether the buyers should be

permitted to range the world freely for a market. The

price of food in this country was formerly kept up, not

by individuals withholding it from sale, but by the

legislature preventing free importation. The land-owners

held that peculiar burdens were laid on them, and claimed,

therefore, corresponding protection in the form of a tax

on foreign corn. Whatever amount of reality there might

be in their plea, the form in which the issue was sub-

mitted was to their side altogether adverse. Their

demand was, close the foreign market from the people,

that we may get a higher price. They believed that they

had a right to compensation; but their position was most

unfortunate. It was defended at a great disadvantage; its

 


326                RAISING THE MARKET, ETC.

 

defenders accordingly were driven away before the onset

of the multitude. All this was accomplished by peace-

ful moral means. It proceeded with utmost regularity

under the great providential law or fact, "He that with-

holdeth corn, the people shall curse him." The tide of the

people's displeasure, stimulated and directed by vigorous

leaders, was steadily rising, and the opposing line, fearing

that it should swell into a "curse," and burst into civil

broil, gave way and submitted to defeat. The issue has

been, not the triumph of one class and the prostration of

another, but, the equal benefit of all. Scarcely a remnant

of party conflict, or even party feeling on that subject,

now lingers within our borders. Buyers and sellers agree

that corn shall not be withheld, come from what quarter

of the world it may. The muttering curse has died away,

and mutual blessings circulate from side to side of our

favoured island home. "Bless the Lord, O my soul,

and forget not all his benefits!"

 


                   THE TREE AND ITS BRANCH.              327

 

 

                                           LXXI.

 

 

                   THE TREE AND ITS BRANCH.

 

 

"He that trusteth in his riches shall fall:

       but the righteous shall flourish as a branch."—xi. 23.

 

SUPPOSE the world to be scorched by drought, as com-

pletely as it was deluged by water in Noah's day. Vege-

table life disappears. Trees, shrubs, and plants remain

where they were; but they are the sapless monuments of

a former glory. Every root is rottenness, and the stiffened

blossoms will at a touch of the finger go up like dust.

The circulation is arrested, the life-sap is exhaled, and the

vegetation of a world lies dead upon its surface. On hill

or dale the observer's weary eye can find no green or grow-

ing thing to rest upon. On every side are the withered

remnants of what once were trees, but no life. The

branches are very many and very dry—dry as the bones

of the unburied dead.

            Can these dry branches live? No; they cannot. Mois-

ture now would not restore them. Rain may preserve

living plants, but cannot quicken the dead.

            As you stand gazing on the desolation—weeping over

a barren world, a new sight attracts your eye. From

heaven a living tree descends. It is planted in the un-

moistened dust—the living among the dead. It grows

by its own life, in spite of the earth's barrenness. It

spreads over the land. The hills are veiled by its shade.

 


328            THE TREE AND ITS BRANCH.

 

It stretches its boughs on the one hand to the sea, and on

the other to the river. This heavenly plant is a root in

a dry ground, but not a dry root. While all earth's own

growth lies withered round, it is full of sap and flourishing.

But now another wonder: the withered branches begin

to grow into that living root. One and another that have

no life in themselves are successively grafted into it, and

as soon as they are in it, live. No hand is seen to touch

them, yet they move. Like the hewing of the stone out

of the mountain, the process is accomplished "without

hands." Branch after branch they begin to quiver where

they lie, like the bones under Ezekiel's preaching, and by

a mysterious power are drawn towards the tree of life and

let in. The branches which abide on their own old stock

continue dry, and at an appointed time are cast into the

burning. The engrafted branches are not dependent now

on earth and air. They draw their life-sap from a foun-

tain that never fails. They have life, and they have it

more abundantly than any that this world's soil ever sus-

tained.

            The vision is of man's fall, and Messiah's mission. A

native human righteousness flourished once on earth. The

head of this material creation, like all its other parts, was

very good as it came from its Maker's hands.  Man was

made in God's image. Trees of righteousness, the planting

of the Lord, flourished in that garden which is now a wilder-

ness. But the blight of sin came over it, and all moral

life died. "There is none that doeth good, no, not one."

Is there any hope that this desert will revive and blossom

like the rose?  No; this is not the languor that will be

 


                   THE TREE AND ITS BRANCH.                        329

 

refreshed by a shower. This is death. There can be no

revival here, except by a new creation. These dry branches

cannot of themselves live. Sin has cut sinners off from

the Life, and a great gulf keeps the severed members away.

We could not make our own way back to God, but he has

come to us. He that is mighty has done great things for

us. In amongst the dead came the living One. "In

Him was light, and the light was the life of men." In

Him the withered grow green, the dead become alive.

"If any man be in Christ, he is a new creature." Stand-

ing within the circle of his own disciples, Jesus said, "I

am the vine, ye are the branches" (John xv. 5).

            Here lies the secret of spiritual life among men. The

righteous,—and some such there have been even in the

darkest periods of the world's history,—the righteous

"flourish as a branch." They lean not on their own

stem, and live not on their own root. From the begin-

ning the same Jesus to whom we look was made known

to faith. The manner and measure of making known

truth to the understanding were in those days widely

different; but the nature and the source of spiritual life

were the same. They stood "afar off," but they looked

unto Jesus. The medium of vision was diverse, but the

object was identical. As to knowledge, the ancient dis-

ciples were children, whereas disciples now are grown men:

but life was as true and vigorous in the Church's infancy as

it is in the Church's age. There was in those ancient times

a medium of union to the Redeemer: and blessed are all

they that trust in Him. The branch will flourish when

it is in the living tree.

 


330          THE TREE AND ITS BRANCH.

 

            But though all the real branches live, all do not

equally flourish. Whatever girds the branch too tightly

round, impedes the flow of sap from the stem, and leaves

the extremities to wither. Many cares, and vanities,

and passions warp themselves round a soul, and cause the

life even of the living to pine away. When the world

in any of its forms lays its grasp round the life, the stric-

ture chokes the secret channels between the disciple and

his Lord, and the fruit of righteousness drops unripe. It

is only as a branch that Christians can flourish in this

wilderness; they have no independent source of life and

growth. It becomes them, therefore, to be careful above

all things to keep clear the communion between them

selves, and the root of their new life in the Lord. Ivy

has climbed from the ground, and gracefully coiled itself

round a majestic bough. Beautiful ornament! you say;

it would be barbarous to cut it through, and tear it off.

We dispute not the beauty of the parasite, and we

have no enmity to elegance. We only desire to keep

everything in its own place. According to the order

which the Scripture prescribes, let us have first the king-

dom of God and his righteousness, and then, if we can

get them, other things. Whether is its own life or the

elegance of its ornament the chief thing for the branch?

Let us not hear of any addition to its beauty, which may

endanger its life. Granted that this adjunct adorns; the

question remains, does it kill?  If it strangles the living,

I would ruthlessly tear off its tendrils: without compunc-

tion I would cast its green mantle in the dust. Let me

have a flourishing and fruitful branch, although its stalk

 


             THE TREE AND ITS BRANCH.                    331

 

should seem bare, rather than a sapless stick within a

wrapping of treacherous ornament.

            By this short process should many questions be settled,

which become the weapons of this world's god, and

wound the consciences of incautious Christians. Gain,

honours, accomplishments, company, are bought too dear,

when they obstruct the flow of grace from its fountain.

We speak not against the refinements of society, but for

the preservation of the soul's life. When bodily interests

are in the balance, we generally judge righteously between

rival claims. The order of arrangement is first life, next

health, and last adorning. The same principles faithfully

applied to higher issues would carry us safely through.

Life spiritual as an independent tree is not possible: and

seeing that we can have life only as a branch has, it, the

first care is to be in the living tree; the second is to let

nothing warp round the branch which would diminish

its freshness; and then ornaments, hung loosely on, may

be allowed to take their place. The first thing is to be

"found in Him;" the next is to cast off everything that

hinders us from receiving "out of his fulness:" and when

these two are satisfied, let the embellishments that per-

tain to the world be content with the fragments that

remain.

            Even those who are branches in the tree of life may

be impeded in their growth; but those who are not in

union with the tree cannot grow at all. "He that

trusteth in his riches shall fall." I have seen a row of

branches profusely covered with leaves and blossoms,

stuck by children in the earth around a miniature garden.


332            THE TREE AND ITS BRANCH.

 

They appeared more luxuriant than those that were

growing on the neighbouring trees, but they withered in

an hour, and never revived. Behold the picture of a

man who has gained the world and neglected the

Saviour! The earth into which he plunges his soul has

nothing to satisfy its craving, or sustain its life. All the

gains and pleasures of time cannot contribute a drop of

moisture to refresh a drooping soul in the hour of its

greatest need. "The portion of Jacob is not like them"

(Jer. x. 16).


          THE WISDOM OF WINNING SOULS.              333

 

 

                                 LXXIII.

 

 

          THE WISDOM OF WINNING SOULS.

 

 

"The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life;

            and he that winneth souls is wise." –xi. 31.

 

To win souls seems to be the chief fruit which the trees

of righteousness bear in time. It is sweet and precious.

It is pleasing to God, and profitable to men. It is an

everlasting memorial. In monuments of marble we com-

memorate for a few years the deeds of the great; but a

soul won through your means will itself be a monument

of the fact for ever. It is thus that "the righteous shall

be in everlasting remembrance" (Ps. cxii. 6). The

righteous, we learn in a previous verse, "shall flourish as

a branch;" this is the secret of his fruitfulness. "As the

branch cannot bear fruit of itself except it abide in the

vine; no more can ye, except ye abide in me" (John xv. 4).

Christ is the source of a Christian's fruitfulness. From

Him it comes and to Him it returns. This branch bears

fruit after its kind. It is the life work of the won, to

win others.

            A soul won is a bright conception, but it suggests

inevitably its dread counterpart, a soul lost. From the

night's darkness the daylight springs; there must be a

sense of loss ere there can be a real effort to save. We

must begin at the beginning. Our defect lies at the root

If we knew the ailment, the cure is at hand. Food is

 


334           THE WISDOM OF WINNING SOULS.

 

abundant; it is hunger that is rare. We seem to act as

if men were safe in a competent hereditary portion, and

might or might not lay themselves out for new acquisi-

tions. The true state of the case is, all is lost already,

and the soul that is not won shall perish. To realize this

would embody theory in action, and change the face of the

world. We would all labour more to win souls if we really

believed them lost.  "Fools " are "slow of heart to

believe," and, therefore, they are slack of hand to work.

Faith knows the death by sin, and the life through

Jesus; therefore, the faithful work, and the workers win

souls,—their own first, and then their neighbour's.

            The charity that wins a soul begins at home; and if

it do not begin there it will never begin. The order of

nature in this work is, "save yourselves and them that

hear you." But though this charity begins at home, it

does not end there. From its centre outward, and

onward all around, like the ripple on the surface of the

lake, compassion for the lost will run, nor stop until it

touch the shore of time. On this errand Christ came

into the world, and Christians follow the footsteps of the

Lord. He recognised the world lost, and therefore He

came a Saviour. Those who partake of His spirit put

their hand to His work.

            To win an immortal from sin and wrath to hope and

holiness—this is honourable work, and difficult.  It is

work for wise men, and we lack wisdom. On this point

there is a special promise from God. Those who need

wisdom, and desire to use it in this work, will get it for

the asking. The wisdom needed is very different from

 


         THE WISDOM OF WINNING SOULS.               335

 

the wisdom of men. It is very closely allied to the

simplicity of a little child. Much of it lies in plainness

and promptness. Those who try to win souls must

not muffle up their meaning: both by their lips and their

life, they must let it be seen that their aim is not to

make the good better, but to save the lost. Delays also

are dangerous, as well as ambiguities. Get the word of

life dropt on the conscience of the healthy, lest he be sick

before another opportunity occur. Tell the whole truth

to the sick to-day, lest he be dead before you return.

None who try to win deal slackly, and none who deal

slackly win, whether it be a fortune, or a race, or a battle;

those should throw their whole might into the conflict,

who wrestle with a more powerful adversary, and for a

greater prize.

 


336        A BITTER BUT HEALTHFUL MORSEL.

 

 

                                       LXXIV.

 

 

              A BITTER BUT HEALTHFUL MORSEL.

 

 

"Whoso loveth instruction, loveth knowledge;

            but he that hateth reproof is brutish."—xii. 1.

 

 

REPROOF is not pleasant to nature. We may learn to

value it for its results, but it never will be sweet to our

taste. At the best it is a bitter morsel. The difference

between a wise man and a fool is, not that one likes and

the other loathes it,—both dislike it,—but the fool casts

away the precious because it is unpalatable, and the wise

man accepts the unpalatable because it is precious. It

is brutish in a man to act merely according to the im-

pulse of sense. We are not so foolish when the health

of our bodies is at stake. When we were children in-

deed, if left to ourselves, we would have swallowed

greedily the gilded sweetmeat that sickened us, and

thrown away the bitter medicine which was fitted to

purge disease from the channels of life; but when we

became men, we put these childish things conclusively

away. Day by day, in thousands of instances that con-

cern this life, we accept the bitter because it is salutary,

and reject the sweet because it destroys. Would that we

were equally wise for higher interests "I hate him; for

he doth not prophecy good concerning me" (1 Kings xxii.

8): there, in the person of that ancient Israelitish king,

is humanity in the lump and without disguise. Grown

 


              A BITTER BUT HEALTHFUL MORSEL.                 337

 

men lick flattery in because it is sweet, and refuse faithful

reproof because it is unpleasant. The beat of us has

much to learn here: and yet we think that, by pains

and prayer, Christians might make large and rapid pro-

gress in this department. No advancement will be at-

tained without particular and painstaking trial; but such

trial will not be labour lost.  Paul reached his high

attainments not by an easy flight through the air, but

by many toilsome steps on the weary ground: smaller

men need not expect to find a royal road to spiritual

perfection. "Herein do I exercise myself," he said,

"that I may have a conscience void of offence." What

he obtained only by hard exercise, we need not expect

to drop into our bosom. Here is an exercise ground for

Christians who would like to grow in grace. Nature

hates reproof: let grace take the bitter potion, and

thrust it down nature's throat, for the sake of its healing

power. If we had wisdom and energy to take to our-

selves more of the reproof that is agoing, and less of the

praise, our spiritual constitution would be in a sounder

state.

            Some of the reproof comes directly from God by his

providence and in his word. This, if there be the spirit

of adoption, it is perhaps easier to take. So thought

David. When he found that a terrible rebuke must

come, he pleaded that he might fall into the hands of

God, and not into the hands of man. Still these chas-

tenings are painful, and wisdom from above is needed

to receive them aright. But although all are ultimately

at the disposal of the Supreme, most of the reproofs that

 


338        A BITTER BUT HEALTHFUL MORSEL

 

meet us in life come immediately from our fellow-men.

Even when it is just in substance and kindly given, our

own self-love kicks hard against it; and, alas! the most

of it is mixed with envy and applied in anger. Here is

room for the exercise of a Christian's highest art.  There

is a way of profiting by reproof, although it be adminis-

tered by an enemy. It is in such narrows of life's voyage

that the difference comes most clearly out between the

wise and the foolish. A neighbour is offended by some-

thing that I have said or done. He becomes enraged,

and opens a foul mouth upon me. This is his sin and

his burden; but what of me? Do I kindle at his fire,

and throw back his epithets with interest in his face?

This is brutish. It is the stupid ox kicking everything

that pricks him, and being doubly lacerated for his pains.

It is my business and my interest to take good for my-

self out of another's evil. The good is there, and there

is a way of extracting it. The most unmannerly scold

that ever came from an unbridled tongue may have its

filth precipitated and turned into a precious ointment, as

the sewage of a city, instead of damaging the people's

health, may as a fertilizer become the reduplicator of the

people's food. The process is difficult, but when skilfully

performed it produces a large return. When Shimei

basely cursed David in his distress, the counsel of a rude

warrior was, "Let me go over and take off his head."

This was merely a brutish instinct—the beam that lay

not on the solid, rebounding, by the law of its nature,

to the blow. But the king had been getting the

good of his great affliction. At that moment he had


          A BITTER BUT HEALTHFUL MORSEL.           339

 

wisdom, and therefore he got more. He recognised a

heavenly Father's hand far behind the foul tongue of

Shimei: he felt that the rebuke, though cruelly given,

contained salutary truth. He occupied himself not with

the falsehood that was in it in order to blame the reprover,

but with the truth that was in it in order to get humbling

for himself "Let him alone," said the fallen monarch,

meekly; “let him alone and let him curse, for the Lord

hath bidden him.” Here is wisdom. It is wise to re-

ceive correction from God, although it come through an

unworthy instrument. Although the immediate agent

meant it for evil, our Father in heaven, can make it work

for good.


340                         A HUSBAND'S CROWN.

 

 

                                             LXXV.

 

 

                               A HUSBAND'S CROWN.

 

 

"A virtuous woman is a crown to her husband:

            but she that maketh ashamed is as rottenness in his bones."—xii. 4.

 

 

WOMAN's place is important; God has made it so, and

made her fit for filling it. Man is incomplete with-

out her; there is a blank about him which she alone

can fill; it is here that her great strength lies. When

she assumes an independent or rival place, she mistakes

her mission and her power. Man, though made for

the throne of the world, was found unfit for the final

investiture until he got woman as a help. She became

the completion of his capacity and title—she became his

crown. Let woman ever be content with the place that

God has given her; let her be what He made her, neces-

sary to man, and not attempt to make herself indepen-

dent of him. In her own place, her power has hardly a

limit in human affairs; out of it, her efforts only rack

herself and reveal her weakness. Elsewhere in this book

we learn that "a gracious woman retaineth honour, and

strong men retain riches." The comparison intimates

that what strength is to man in maintaining his wealth,

grace is to woman for securing her position and influence.

This is a finger-post directing woman in her weakness to

the place where her great strength lies. If there be the

fear of the Lord as a foundation, with wisdom, truth,

love, and gentleness rising gracefully upon it, a queenly


                        A HUSBAND'S CROWN.                              341

 

power is there. The winsome will win her way. With-

out the trappings of royalty, she will acquire the homage

of a neighbourhood. The adaptation of the feminine

character to be the companion and complement of man is

one of the best defined examples of that designing wis-

dom which pervades creation. When the relations of the

sexes move in fittings of truth and love, the working

of the complicated machinery of life is a wonder to an

observing man, and a glory to the Creator God.

But what horrid contrast have we here, like the echo

of a glad song given back transformed into despairing

wails from some pit of darkness; "she that maketh

ashamed is as rottenness in his bones!" We need not

be surprised by this announcement. It is according to

law; the best things abused become the worst. The

picture is an appalling one, but it is taken from life.

In many ways woman, when she is not virtuous, makes

man ashamed. When she is slovenly and uncleanly in

her person and her house; thoughtless and spendthrift in

the management of her means; gaudy and expensive in

her tastes for herself and her children; company-keeping,

gipping, tale-bearing; quarrelsome with neighbours or

servants; discontented, querulous, taunting, at home; and

last of all (for what abounds in the world should go down

on this page, though it be a noisome thing), drunken:

when in these or in other of its legion forms, the unclean

spirit possesses woman, he contrives thereby to penetrate

everywhere, and to poison all. Woman is the very ele-

ment of home, wherein all its relations and affections live

and move. When that element is tainted, corruption


242                   A HUSBAND'S CROWN.

 

spreads over all its breadth, and, sinks into its core. It

spreads shame on the husband's countenance, and infuses

rottenness into his bones.

            God did not take from among the creatures any help

for man that came to hand, but made one meet for him.

The Maker of all things took the measure of man's need,

and constituted woman a suitable complement. This is

God's part, and His work, in as far as it bears yet the

mark of His hand, is very good. Every man on his

part should seek an individual "help," "meet" for his

own individual need. On that choice interests of un-

speakable magnitude depend for time and eternity; he

who makes it corruptly or lightly is courting misery, and

dallying with doom. It is not in man that walketh to

direct this step of his life; those who seek direction from

above will be sure to find it. Our Father loves to be

consulted in this great life-match for his children, and

they who ask His advice will not be sent away without

it. If men were duly impressed with the vastness of the

interests involved in the transaction, that alone would go

far to bear them steadily through. Let a man remember

that woman, by constitutional character, goes into all,

like water. She should be clean who plies so close. Let

a young man know, while he is adjusting the balance of

this momentous choice, what are the alternatives that

depend on either side, and the weight of them will do

much to keep his hand steady and his eyesight clear.

In that act he is either setting a crown on his own head,

or infusing rottenness into his own bones.


     THE TENDER MERCIES OF THE WICKED.            343

 

 

                                 LXXVI.

 

 

     THE TENDER MERCIES OF THE WICKED.

 

 

"A righteous man regardeth the life of his beast:

            but the tender mercies of the wicked are cruel."—xii. 10.

 

 

CONSISTENT kindness to brute creatures is one of the

marks by which a really merciful man is known. When

the pulse of kindness beats strong in the heart, the warm

stream is sent clean through the body of the human

family, and retains force enough to expatiate among the

living creatures that lie beyond. The gentleness of

Christ is one beauty of the Lord, which should be seen

on Christians. Over against this lovely light, according

to the usual form of the proverb, yawns the counter-

part darkness, habitation of horrid cruelty. Cruelty is

a characteristic of the wicked in general, and in particu-

lar of antichrist, that one, wicked by pre-eminence, whom

Christ shall yet destroy by the brightness of his coming.

By their fruits ye shall know them. The page of history

is spotted with the cruelties of papal Rome.  The red

blood upon his garments is generally the means of dis-

covering a murderer. The trailing womanish robes of the

papal high priest are deeply stained with the blood of

saints. The same providence which employs the bloody

tinge to detect the common murderer has left more last-

ing marks of Rome's cruelty. The Bartholomew mas-

sacre, for example, is recorded in more enduring charac-


344       THE TENDER MERCIES OF THE WICHED.

 

ters than the stains of that blood which soaked the soil

of France. By the accounts of those who did the deed,

and favour Rome, 30,000; according to other estimates,

100,000 Protestants were slain. Such were the heaps,

in some places, that they could not be counted. The

Pope and his cardinals greatly rejoiced when they heard

the news. So lively was their gratitude, that they cast

a medal to record it on. There stands the legend, raised

in brass and silver, "Strages Huguenotorum" (the

slaughter of the Huguenots), in perpetual memory of the

delight wherewith that wicked antichrist regarded the

greatest, foulest butchery of men by their fellows that

this sin-cursed earth has ever seen. That spot will not

out by all their washings. That monument, reared by the

murderer's own hands, exhibits to the world now a faith-

ful specimen of his tender mercies, and will remain to

identify the criminal at the coming of the Judge.

"Blessed are the merciful." A curse lies on the cruel

ever since Cain shed his brother's blood.


LIES, THE SNARE THAT LIARS ARE CAUGHT IN.         345

 

 

                                     LXXXVII.

 

 

             LIES, THE SNARE THAT LIARS ARE

                                  CAUGHT IN.

 

 

"The wicked is snared by the transgression of his lips:

            but the just shall come out of trouble."—xii. 13.

 

 

THE Supreme has set many snares, in the constitution of

things, for the detection and punishment of evil doers.

The wicked are continually trailing into them, and suffer-

ing. The liar's own tongue betrays him. In some of its

movements, ere he is aware, it touches the spring which

brings down the avenging stroke. It is instructive to

read with this view the detailed account of a criminal

trial. In the faltering and fall of a false witness, you

should see and reverence the righteousness of God. The

first lie must be defended by a second, and that by a

third. As the line of his defences grows in length, it

grows in weakness. His fear and labour increase at

every step. He is compelled at every question to con-

sider what truth is like, and imitate it in lies. Ere long,

when he is crossing his own path, he falls into a lie that

he had left and forgotten there; he falls, and flounders,

like a wild beast in a snare. When a man is not true,

the great labour of his life must be to make himself

appear true; but if a man be true, he need not concern

himself about appearances. He may go forward, and

tread boldly; his footing will be sure. Matters are so


346   LIFE, THE SNARE THAT LIARS ARE CAUGHT IN.

 

arranged, in the constitution of the world, that the

straight course of truth is safe and easy; the crooked

path of falsehood difficult and tormenting. Here is

perennial evidence that the God of providence is wise

and true. By making lies a snare to catch liars in, the

Author of being proclaims, even in the voices of nature,

that he "requireth truth in the inward parts." All the

labour of swindlers to dress up their falsehood, so as to

make it look like truth, is Satan's unwilling homage

to the true God. It is counted a glory to the Lord

when his enemies feign submission unto Him (Psalm

lxxxi. 15).

            "The just shall come out of trouble;" that is the word;

it is not said that he will never fall into it. The inven-

tory which Jesus gives of what his disciples shall have

"now in this time," although it contains many things

that nature loves, closes with the article "persecutions"

(Mark x. 30). The recorded description, "these are

they who have come out of great tribulation," belongs

alike to all the redeemed of the Lord, when they come

to Zion. These, who wave their palms of victory, and

sing their jubilant hymns of praise, were all in the hor-

rible pit once: they were held helpless by its miry clay,

until the Mighty One lifted them up, and set their feet

upon a rock, and established their goings.


                              HOPE DEFERRED.                           347

 

 

                                     LXXVIII.

 

 

                            HOPE DEFERRED.

 

 

"Hope deferred maketh the heart sick:

            but when the desire cometh, it is a tree of life."—xiii. 12.

 

 

THE rule, as expressed in the first clause, is universal;

but in the second clause it is applied to a particular case.

Hope deferred makes the heart sick, whether the person

hoping, and the thing hoped for, be good or evil. Thus

far one thing happens to all. But the second member is a

dividing word. The accomplishment of the desire "is a

tree of life." This belongs only to the hope of the holy.

Many, after waiting long, and expecting eagerly, dis-

cover, when at last they reach their object, that it is

a withered branch, and not a living tree. When a human

heart has been set on perishable things, after the sick-

ness of deferred expectation, comes the sorer sickness of

satiated possession. If the world be made the portion of

an immortal spirit, to want it is one sickness, and to

have it is another. The one is a hungry mouth empty,

and the other a hungry mouth filled with chaff.  The

cloy of disappointed possession is a more nauseous sick-

ness than the aching of disappointed desire.

            There is no peace to the wicked. They are all always

either desiring or possessing; but to desire and to possess

a perishable portion, are only two different kinds of

misery to men. They are like the troubled sea, when it


348                            HOPE DEFERRED.

 

cannot rest. You stand on the shore, and gaze on the

restless waters. A wave is hastening on, struggling, and

panting, and making with all its might for the shore.

It seems as if all it wanted was to reach the land. It

reaches the land, and disappears in a hiss of discontent.

Gathering its strength at a distance, it tries again, and

again, with the same result. It is never satisfied: it

never rests. In the constitution of the world, under the

government of the most Holy, when a soul's desire is set

on unworthy objects, the accomplishment of the desire

does not satisfy the soul. In the case here supposed,

however, the desire must be pure, for the attainment of

it is found to be a tree of life: it is living, satisfying,

enduring. It has a living root in the ground, and satis-

fying fruit upon its branches.

            Those who were enlightened by the Spirit before the

incarnation, looked in faith, through the sacrifices, for Jesus;

and they beheld his day, but it was afar off. They

longed for Christ's coming as those that wait for the

morning. While they waited for redemption in Israel,

hope deferred made their hearts sick; but they waited

on. Their desire, the Desire of all nations, came. The

Word was made flesh, and dwelt among them, and they

beheld his glory. That desire satisfied did not pall upon

their taste. It was enough. "Lord, now lettest thou

thy servant depart in peace, for mine eyes have seen thy

salvation" (Luke ii. 29, 30).

            The same experience is repeated in the personal history

of disciples now. When a hungering for righteousness

secretly rises in a human heart, the blessing is already


                        HOPE DEFERRED.                              349

 

sure; but it is not enjoyed yet. The hungerer "shall be

filled;" but in the meantime, his only experience is an

uneasy sensation of want. The craving of that appetite,

while yet it is not satisfied, is a painful thing. The heart

is sick of that love. Far-seeing friends delight to ob-

serve the symptoms of that sickness beginning in a youth,

not for the sake of the suffering, but because of the glad

enlargement to which it leads. In God's good time that

desire will be satisfied. That longing soul will taste and

see that the Lord is gracious. The peace of God which

passeth all understanding will come in and keep that heart

and mind.

            In the tumults of these latter days, some earnest spirits

greatly long for the second coming of the Lord. Their

hope has been deferred, and their hearts are sick; but

"when the Desire cometh"—and He shall come without

sin unto salvation—the sorrow will no more be remem-

bered in the joy of their Lord. To them that look for

Him he will appear, and his coming will be like the

morning. This "Tree of life"—the redeemed of the Lord,

when they come to Zion, shall sit under His shadow with

great delight, and the days of their mourning shall be

ended. "The Lamb which is in the midst of the throne

shall feed them, and lead them unto living fountains of

waters; and God shall wipe away all tears from their

eyes."


350      GOD'S WORD THE PRESERVER OF NATIONS.

 

 

                                          LXXIX.

 

 

           GOD'S WORD THE PRESERVER OF NATIONS.

 

 

“Whoso despiseth the word shall be destroyed:

            but he that feareth the commandment shall be rewarded."—xiii. 13.

 

 

THIS word has a private and personal, as well as a public

application; but it is in the providential government of

the nations that its truth has been most conspicuously

displayed. The kingdoms of the world in these days

prosper or pine in proportion as they honour or despise

God's word. Show me a land where the Bible is de-

graded and interdicted, and I will show you a land whose

history is written in blood and tears. Show me a land

where the Bible is valued and spread, and I will show

you a country prosperous and free. Number the nations

over one by one, and see where property is valuable and

life secure; mark the places where you would like to in-

vest your means and educate your family; you will shun

some of the sunniest climes of earth, as if they lay under

a polar night, because the light of the truth has been

taken from their sky. Traverse the world in search of

merely human good, seeking but an earthly home, and

your tent, like Abraham's, will certainly be pitched at

"the place of the altar." Scotland is a kindlier home

than Connaught. The Irish Papist abjures the Bible as

an unintelligible or dangerous book, and implicitly sub-

mits to the spiritual guidance of his priest: the British

 

 


GOD'S WORD THE PRESERVER OF NATIONS.         351

 

Protestant holds God's word in his hand, at once the

standard of his teacher's doctrine, and the rule of his

own life. Hence chiefly the difference, moral and mate-

rial, between the two peoples. They who despise the word

are a prostrate race. A nation of beggars starves at our  

doors, on an island that might become a garden. The

map of the world is sufficient evidence that God is, and

that He has revealed his will to men.

            This country has been preserved safe in many convul-

sions, while others have been rent asunder. It has

grown great, while others have wasted.  It has been

gradually growing more free, while other nations are

robbed of their liberty, or retain it at the price of their

blood. We should know Who makes us to differ, and

what. The Bible has made us what we are; it is dark

ingratitude to despise or neglect it. It is often observed

that when a man rises in the world, he no longer knows

the person by whom he rose. This is the mark of a low

ungenerous mind. Symptoms not a few of this vulgar

vice may be seen in high places of our own land. The

preserved do not care to know their Preserver. A sum-

mer tour on the Continent is not a sufficient lesson. The

power of Britain shields her subject during his travels,

and the iron of Popish despotism does not enter into his

soul.  But a year of subjection to Italian rule, such as

the Italians feel it, would teach politicians a truth which

they are slow to learn. They might discover the worth

of the Bible as the preserver of liberty, if they felt the

want of it.


352                   THE HARD WAY.

 

 

                                  LXXX.

 

 

                          THE HARD WAY.

 

        "The way of transgressors is hard.” —xiii. 15.

 

 

Is not the way of transgressors pleasant in its progress,

though it ends in death? No. Sin barters away future

safety, but does not secure present peace in return.

Things are not always as they seem to be. The

pleasures of sin are not only limited in their duration,

they are lies even while they last. They are "for a

season" as to endurance, and for a show as to their cha-

racter. There is a bitterness in the transgressor's heart,

which only that heart can know. The man in the gos-

pel history, who wore no clothes, and lived among the

tombs, did not lead a happy life. The rocky, thorny

grave-yard was a hard bed, and the dewy night air a

cold covering for the naked man; but such was his will,

or the will of the spirit that possessed him. It was the

man's pleasure to take that way, but the way was hard.

It is so still, and ever will be, for all whom the same

spirit leads. It has neither the promise of the life that

now is, nor of that which is to come. The race is torture,

and the goal perdition. "Destruction and misery are in

their paths, and the way of peace have they not known."

Here is a glory of God reflected from the experience

of men. It is far-seeing mercy that makes the way of

transgressors hard. Its hardness warns the traveller to


                     THE HARD WAY.                              353

 

turn that he may live. Two mechanics work side by

side all day, and receive equal wages at night. One

goes home when his toil is over, and rests in the bosom

of his own family, enjoying doubly all that he has won,

because he shares it with those who love him there: the

other having no home to love, or no love to home, goes

into a public-house, and remains there as long as his

money lasts. Late at night he is driven to the street,

penniless, hungry, and without a friend. He falls

at every turn. His clothes are besmeared with mud;

his bones are bruised; his face streams with blood. In

pity for his misery, rather than in vengeance for his

crime, the officers of justice drag or carry him to a prison

cell, and lay him on its floor till morning. The man

followed the way of transgressors, and he has found it

hard. Day by day his body is bruised and torn on

the rugged sides of that crooked path; and yet he will

not forsake it. If any one inquire after the name of

this foul spirit, we answer, his name is Legion, for they

are many.

            Nor is this the only crooked path that tears the feet

of the wretched passenger: they are all hard however

widely they diverge from each other--all that diverge

from the line of righteousness. In some of them, the

hardness is an iron that entereth into the soul, rather

than the body, and therefore the wounds are not so pal-

pable to others. The pain is not on that account, how-

ever, less pungent to the sufferer. "A wounded spirit,

who can bear?"

            But the right way is not a soft and silky path for the


354                     THE HARD WAY.

 

foot of man to tread upon; and, if one thing happens to

all in the journey of life, what advantage have the good?

Much every way, and specifically thus:  The hardness

which disciples experience in following the Lord, is right-

eousness rubbing on their remaining lusts, and so wasting

their deformities away; whereas the hardness of a trans-

gressor's way is the carnal mind, in its impotent enmity,

dashing itself against the bosses of the Almighty's buckler.

The one is a strainer, made strait to purge the impuri-

ties away, through which the purified emerges into peace;

the other is the vengeance which belongeth unto God,

beginning even here to repay. The stroke of discipline

under which a pilgrim smarts, as he travels towards

Zion, is an excellent oil which will not break his head.

The collision between transgressors and the law of God,

hardens the impenitent for completer destruction at the

final fall. As the pains of cure differ from the pains of

killing, so differs the salutary straitness which presses the

entrants at the gate of life, from the hardness which hurts

transgressors while they flee from God.


          THE CHOICE OF COMPANIONS.             355

 

 

                            LXXXI.

 

 

          THE CHOICE OF COMPANIONS.

 

 

"He that walketh with wise men shall be wise:

            but a companion of fools shall be destroyed.—xiii. 20.

 

 

LOVE of company is a steady instinct of the young. This

tendency performs a great part in the economy of human

life. Like many other forces under the control of a free

moral agent, it is mighty for good or evil, according to

the direction in which it is turned. It is the nature of

certain plants, while they strike their own independent

roots into the ground for life, to twist their tendrils

round other trees for support to their branches. To this

species in the animal department of creation belong the

young of human kind. Physically, the organization of

each individual is separate and complete, but morally

they interweave themselves into others; so that, though

the growth of their bodies is independent, the cast of

their characters is largely affected by the companions to

whom they cling. At this point, therefore, there is room

and need for much prayer, and watchfulness, and effort

both by and for the generation that is now tender, and

taking the form of any mould that closes round and

presses it.

            The principle of reciprocal attraction and repulsion

pervades all nature, both in its material and spiritual

departments. Your character goes far to determine


356          THE CHOICE OF COMPANIONS.

 

the company that you will keep, and the company

that you keep goes far to mould your character. But

while these two are hanging in the balance, it is the

place and prerogative of man, for himself or his brother,

to rush in and lay his hand upon the scales, and cast a

makeweight into the side of safety. By the warnings of

God's word, and the lessons of our own experience, we

know before they begin what the end of certain com-

panionships will be. The awful end is opened up to make

us fear the beginning.

            Your heart takes to a companion who has been acci-

dentally thrown in your way. You should not yield to

that inclination merely because it works within you. The

beasts that perish do so, and therein they never err.

They associate with their kind, and are never corrupted

by the company that they keep. Their instincts are

perfect as they come from the Creator's hands. It is safe

to trust them. But there is a bias to evil in a human

heart. It must be watched and thwarted, if we would

avoid error now and escape perdition at last. It is not

for us to let our hearts have their own way in the selec-

tion of companions.  On that choice depend interests too

great to be safely left to chance. The issue to be de-

cided is not what herd you shall graze with a few years

before your spirit return to the dust; but what moral

element you shall move in during the few and evil days

of life, till your spirit return to God who gave it. I like

this companion; he fascinates me; I cannot want him;

an enforced separation would be like tearing myself asun-

der. Well, if that companion's heart be godless, and his


              THE CHOICE OF COMPANIONS.                 357

 

steps already slipping backward and downward, why not

tear yourself asunder? The act will be painful, no doubt;

but "skin for skin, yea, all that a man hath will he give

for his life." Your soul's life depends on that painful

act. It is better that you enter into life maimed of that

member, than that your tempter and you should perish

together. In this way the young are put to the test,

whether they will obey Christ's word or no. On this

side there are right arms to be cut off, and right eyes to

be plucked out. Young men and women, God and all

the good are looking on, and watching to see whether

you will throw off the chain of charms by which brilliant

but wandering stars have led you, and cling to the skirts

of the meek and lowly, who follow the Lamb whitherso-

ever He goeth.

            "He that walketh with the wise shall be wise." If he

is wise he will walk with them, and to walk with them

will make him wiser. To him that hath wisdom to choose

the wise as his companions shall be given more wisdom,

through their converse and example. Such is the blessed

progress in the path of life, when fellow travellers towards

Zion help each other on; but, alas! what of him who "hath

not" any wisdom to begin with? Let him who lacks

wisdom ask of God, who giveth to all men liberally and

upbraideth not. God takes peculiar delight in granting

this request, when it comes up in earnest simplicity from

the needy. Wisdom from above will be given to them

that ask it for the purpose of selecting safe companions.

No one, it may be safely affirmed, ever made this request

in simplicity to God, and came away without an answer.


358           THE CHOICE OF COMPANIONS.

 

No; when people cling to unprofitable and dangerous

associates, it is because they take what they like without

asking counsel of God, not because they asked counsel

and failed to obtain it. This dashing, clever youth makes

sport of serious things and serious persons.  He quotes

a text so dexterously, that the gravest of the circle are

surprised into laughter. He sings merrily, and perhaps

drinks deeply. He affects to be skilled in the mysteries

of vice, and kindles the curiosity of a novice by knowing

hints, which seem to leave the most untold. Here is a

fool who will probably entice some to be his companions.

Before the bargain be struck, while this leader and his

dupes are arranging the terms of his lead and their fol-

lowing, a voice bursts out above them—"The companion

of fools shall be destroyed." It is God's voice; He speaks

in mercy; hear ye Him. "Forsake the foolish and live."


            THE FATHER WHO HATES HIS SON.              359

 

 

                                  LXXXII.

 

 

            THE FATHER WHO HATES HIS SON.

 

 

          "He that spareth his rod hateth his son.” —xiii. 24.

 

 

You indulge your child and do not correct him: you

permit selfishness, and envy, and anger to encrust them-

selves, by successive layers, thicker and thicker on his

character: you beseech him not to be naughty, but never

enforce your injunction by a firm application of the rod;

and you think the fault, if it be a fault, is a very trivial

one: perhaps you appropriate to yourself a measure of

blame for loving your child too much. Nay, brother;

be not deceived; call things by their right names. Be-

ware of the woe denounced against those who call evil

good. You do not love, you hate your child.

            Love is a good name, and hate a bad one. Every one

likes to take to himself a good name, whether he deserve

it or not. To love one's own child, even though that

love should run to excess, is counted amiable: to hate

the child in any measure, is reckoned the part of a mon-

ster. In order to keep a fair character before the world,

a deceitful heart so shuffles in secret the two things, that

while hate is the real character of the deed, its outward

appearance shall be love.

            It is obvious to any careful observer of human nature,

that even blame is pleasant to indulgent parents, when it

is the blame of loving their own children too much. They


360         THE FATHER WHO HATES HIS SON.

 

swallow the soft reproof as a luscious flattery. The

scripture deals with them in another way. It does not

gratify them by the soft impeachment of excess in parental

love. It roundly asserts that they have no love at all.

It comes down upon them abruptly with the charge of

hating the child.

            Sparing the rod is the specific act, or habit, which is

charged against the parent, as being equivalent to hating

his son. The child begins to act the tyrant. He is cruel

where he has power, and sulky where he has not. He is

rude, overbearing, untruthful. These and kindred vices

are distinctly forming on his life, and growing with his

growth. The matter is reported to the father, and the

same things are done in his presence. He tells the child

to do better, and dismisses him with caresses. This pro-

cess is frequently repeated. The child discovers that he

can transgress with impunity. The father threatens some-

times, but punishes never. The child grows rapidly worse.

By the certainty of escaping, acting in concert with a

corrupt nature, the habit of intentional evildoing is

formed and confirmed. All the while this father takes

and gets the credit of being, if not a very wise, at least a

very loving parent. No it is mere prostitution of that

hallowed name to apply it to such ignoble selfishness.

Love, though very soft, is also very strong. It will not

give way before slight obstacles. To sacrifice self is of

its very essence. If it be in you, it will quickly make

your own ease give way for the good of its object. When

a father gives the child all his own way, yielding more,

the more he frets, until the child finds out that he can get


        THE FATHER WHO HATE HIS SON.                      361

 

anything by imperiously demanding it, he yields not from

love to his child, but from loathsome love of ease to him-

self.  It is a low animal laziness that will not allow its

own oily surface to be ruffled even to save a son. If

there were real love, it would be strong enough to endure

the pain of refusing to comply with improper demands,

and chastening for intentional or persistent wrong-doing.

Parents who are in the habit of giving their children

what they ask, and permitting them to disobey without

chastisement, may read their own character in this verse

of scripture. Such a father "hateth his son:" that is

the word. To call it love is one of Satan's lies. It is

unmingled selfishness. The man who gravely tells his

child what is wrong, and, if the wrong is repeated, sternly

chastens him,—that man really loves his child, and sacri-

fices his own ease for the child's highest good. It is

enough to break one's heart to think how many young

people are thrown off the rails at some unexpected turn

of life by the momentum of their own impetuousness, for

want of a father's firm hand to apply in time the neces-

sary break. We need a manful, hardy love—a love that

will bear and do to the uttermost for all the interests of

its object

            Let it be remembered here, however, that every blow

dealt by a father's hand is not parental chastening. To

strike right and left against children, merely because you

are angry and they are weak, is brutish in its character

and mischievous in its effects. A big dog bites a little

one who offends him: what do ye more than they? Never

once should a hand be laid upon a child in the hasty im-


362    THE FATHER WHO HATES HIS SON.

 

pulse of anger. The Koh-I-Noor diamond, when it came

into the Queen's possession, was a misshapen lump. It

was very desirable to get its corners cut off, and all

its sides reduced to symmetry: but no unskilful hand

was permitted to touch it. Men of science were sum-

moned to consider its nature and its capabilities. They

examined the form of its crystals and the consistency of

its parts. They considered the direction of the grain,

and the side on which it would bear a pressure. With

their instructions, the jewel was placed in the hands of

an experienced lapidary, and by long, patient, careful

labour, its sides were grinded down to the desired pro-

portions. The gem was hard, and needed a heavy pres-

sure: the gem was precious, and every precaution was

taken which science and skill could suggest to get it po-

lished into shape without cracking it in the process. The

effort was successful The hard diamond was rubbed

down into forms of beauty, and yet sustained no damage

by the greatness of the pressure to which it was sub-

jected.

            "Jewels, bright jewels," in the form of little children,

are the heritage which God gives to every parent. They

are unshapely, and need to be polished; they are hard,

and cannot be reduced into symmetry without firm

handling; they are brittle, and so liable to be per-

manently damaged by the pressure; but they are stones

of peculiar preciousness, and if they were successfully

polished they would shine as stars for ever and ever,

giving off from their undimming edge, more brilliantly

than other creatures can, the glory which they get from


      THE FATHER WHO HATES HIS SON.              363

 

the Sun of righteousneas. Those who possess these dia-

monds in the rough should neither strike them unskil-

fully, nor let them lie uncut.

            This boy placed in the dock before you, with his

clothes torn, and his hair dishevelled, with an air of peni-

tence put on, over a purpose of more mischief that

gleams through the awkward covering, just one minute

after your last lecture, has been caught up to the ears

in another scrape. What is to be done with him? You

have tried severity, and tried gentleness. All is in

vain. He waxes worse in your hands. Do with him

as the infant-school rhyme enjoins you, "try, try, try

again." Don't let him alone, for he is all unshapely, and

in this form he will have no loveliness in the sight of

God or man. Don't strike rashly, for in one moment

you may start a rent of hatred and discontent through

and through a soul that no after discipline will ever

obliterate. Cautiously, firmly, perseveringly, lovingly,

polish away at your jewel.  Get a right estimate of its

value impressed upon your heart, and you will not give

up in despair, although you have made many unsuccess-

ful efforts. The work is difficult, but the prize is great.

If he is won, he is won to himself, and to you, and to

society, and to God.

            While there should be a strong manly love to wield

the rod firmly, there should also be a far seeing wisdom

to judge, in view of all the circumstances, whether and

when the rod should be applied. A parent must study

carefully both his child's character and his own. If his

own nature be now rigid, and incapable of going into


364       THE FATHER WHO HATES HIS SON.

 

sympathy with the impetuous playfulness of robust youth,  

he may with the best intention fall into a fatal mistake.

He may chasten for that which is not a fault, and so

crack the temper of his child for life. We must learn to

measure the instincts of boyhood, and make allowance

for the muscular exercise, amounting almost to perpetual

motion, which nature demands. Love will give ample

room for the effervescence of a buoyant spirit; but, when

it has separated so widely between sportiveness and sin,

it will then all the more bring down the rod with the

certainty and severity of a law of nature, for every dis-

covered, definite, wilful wickedness. If a father on earth

be like our Father in heaven, judgment will be his

"strange work." Do not resort to it often, but let it be

real when it comes.

            I am disposed to set a high value on, not only the

general principles of Scripture regarding this subject, but

also its specific precepts. I would limit with jealous

apprehension the application of the rule about duty

changing with the change of circumstances. The only

thing that I would leave open to be modified by circum-

stances is the mere instrument wherewith the chastening

is administered. By all means let "rod" stand as a

generic term, and under it let the most convenient imple-

ment be used; but the spirit of the text is abandoned,

as well as the letter, when a parent abjures corporal

chastisement altogether, and trusts exclusively to moral

means. There is indeed no virtue in bodily pain to heal

a moral ailment; it depends on the adaptation of punish-

ment in kind and measure to the particular form of the


           THE FATHER WHO HATES HIS SON.             365

 

child's waywardness. If a child so act as seldom to need

the rod, or never, then seldom or never let the rod be

applied; but beware of determining and proclaiming be-

forehand that you will not in any case resort to corporal

chastisement, lest you be setting up your wisdom against

the law of the Lord.

            I have heard of some educators who, in public assem-

bly, with much pomp and circumstance, cut the tawse in

a hundred pieces, and scattered the fragments in the

wind, proclaiming, by way of contrast, the reign of love.

There is more of quackery under this than the benevo-

lent performers suspected. It is a shallow mistake. The

rod and love are not antagonist. It is not necessary to

banish the one in order to submit to the reign of the

other. Love keeps the rod, and lifts it too, and lays it

on when needful. This is the very triumph of true love,

over a spurious imitation. When a father puts forth his

strength to hold the struggling victim, and applies the

rod, although every stroke thrills through his own heart,

this is love such as God commands and approves. Our

Father in heaven chastens every child whom He loves,

and does not spare for their crying. Genuine parental

love on earth is an imitation of His own.

            Although it is an important rule not to trifle with this

work when it is begun, yet the effect does not depend on

the number or weight of the blows. The result is deter-

mined more by the side on which the force is applied,

than by the mere magnitude of the force. The stroke in

which the operator suffers more than he inflicts, power-

fully impels the child in the direction which you approve,

 

 


366       THE FATHER WHO HAT HIS SON.

 

but spurts of selfish anger drive him the other way. It

is like admitting steam into the cylinder of an engine: if

you admit it on this side, the machine goes forward; if

you admit on that side, the machine goes backward.

One characteristic mark of genuine love is to chasten

a child "betimes." To do it early is both easiest and

best. It is, cruel to let your son grow up without the

correction which he needs.  If you who love him do not

bend him while he is a child, those who do not love him

will break him after he has become a man.

            The word is specifically "son," and not generally

"child." There is a reason for this selection of terms.

Although there may be here and there individual excep-

tions, the common rule is that boys are more stubborn

than girls. In proportion to the hardness of the subject,

must be the heaviness of the blow. The child must be

subdued into obedience at whatever cost. This is the

most important of a parent's practical duties in life. He

should not permit any other business to push it aside

into a secondary place. The boy is your richest treasure,

and should be your chief care. He is the greatest talent

which the Master has placed in your hands; lay it out

well, even though other things should be neglected. Exert

all the wisdom and foresight and firmness that you can

command in the cultivation of this field, no other will

yield a return so sure or so satisfying.

            Prayer and pains must go together in this difficult

work. Lay the whole case before our Father in heaven:

this will take the hardness out of the correction, without

diminishing its strength.

 

 


                                          SECULARISM.                                              367

 

 

                                               LXXXIII.

 

 

                                          SECULARISM.

 

 

          "A scorner seeketh wisdom and findeth it not:

            but knowledge is easy unto him that understandeth."—xiv. 6.

 

 

IT is the constant profession of those who reject the

Bible that they are seeking truth. Their likeness is taken

here from life. They seek wisdom, but do not find it.

They want the first qualification of a philosopher, a humble

and teachable spirit.

            There is a race of men, amongst us at the present day

who scorn bitterly against faith's meek submission to

God's revealed will. They desire to be free from authority.

The papist, they say, submits to the authority of the

church, and the protestant to the authority of the Bible.

They count these only different forms of superstition, and

cast off with equal earnestness both the bonds. They

make a man's own feelings the supreme judge to that

man of right and wrong, good and evil. The divinity, as

they phrase it, is in every man; which means that every

man is a god unto himself.  It is, in its essence, a repro-

duction of the oldest rebellion.  A creature, discontented

with the place which his Maker has given him, strives to

make himself a god.

            If men really were independent beings, it would be

right to assert and proclaim their independence; but as

matters really stand, this desperate kicking against

 


368                         SECULARISM.

 

authority becomes the exposure of weakness, and the

punishment of pride. We are not our own cause and our

own end; we are not our own lords. We are in the

hands of our Maker, and under the law of our Judge.

Our only safety lies in submission to the rightful authority,

and obedience to the true law. The problem for man is,

not to reject all masters, but to accept the rightful One.

            Those who scorn the wisdom from above, seek laboriously

for the wisdom that is beneath. The name "secularist"

is adopted to indicate that they appreciate and study the

knowledge that concerns the present world, and repudiate

as unattainable, or useless, all knowledge that pertains to

another. People sometimes lose their way in words as

they do in mist; and then very vulgar objects seem

mighty castles looming in the darkness. Let it be known,

and remembered, that "secularism" is the Latin for this-

world-ism, and means, attend to the world that you are

now in, and let the next alone. Perhaps this translation

of the name into English may help us to take the measure

of the thing signified. Before we adopt this philosophy

we must be sure that there is no immortality for man.

For, if there be another world, obviously our course here

will affect our condition there, and the view that we take

of eternity will decisively influence our path over time.

Granting even, that it is this world with which men have

now to do, our present view of the world to come exerts

a supreme control over the whole course of our conduct,

and every step of our life. It is by faith in the unseen

that men steer through this shifting sea of time. Cut us

off from the future, and you have left the ship without

 


                               SECULARISM.                              369

 

a chart, and without a star; without a compass to steer

by, and without a harbour to steer for; you have left the

ship an aimless meaningless log lying on the water, to be

tossed up and down by the waves, and driven hither and

thither by the winds, until it fall asunder or sink unseen.

            These seekers of knowledge, who limit their search to

the earth on which they tread, profess great zeal in the

question of education. I am not aware that they do

more in the work of education than others, but they say

loudly, and oft, that the young of the nation should be

educated according to their views. Children in the public

schools, they say, should be thoroughly trained in secular

knowledge, and religious dogmas should be left untouched.

The public schoolmaster should be entirely neutral on the

subject of religion. He should give no judgment for or

against any of its doctrines. Verily, these men seek

knowledge, and find it not. After all their efforts to

learn, they are not yet very wise. They prescribe to the

schoolmaster a task that is palpably impossible. Revealed

religion has touched the world, and been the turning

point of its history in all ages. The Scriptures of the

Old and New Testaments, claiming as they do to be the

inspired record of God's will, have in point of fact influenced

the conduct and history of mankind more than all other

books together. Jesus of Nazareth was, through the

unwilling instrumentality of the Roman, put to death by

the Jewish priesthood, because he made Himself equal

with God; and this event has done more to cast the

civilized world into its present mould, than any or all the

revolutions of kingdoms since the beginning of time. How

 


370                               SECULARISM.

 

is the teacher to dispose of that book, and that event, in 

his complete course of secular instruction? Must he teach

history and leave these things out of it? He may as well

teach the elements of Euclid, omitting all the capital

letters; he may as well weave without a warp, as exhibit

the kingdoms of this world, without taking notice of the

kingdom of God, and of his Christ. The religion of Christ

has grasped the world, and penetrated human history

through and through. If you exclude these topics, your  

disciple comes out of your hands a barbarian; and if you

introduce them, you are compelled to take a side.  For

or against, Christ the teacher must be, and the scholar

too. God has, in providence, not left it possible simply

to pass the Bible by without letting it be known whether

you believe it or not. The question, "What think ye of

Christ?" was of old pressed upon the Jews, though they

desired rather not to commit themselves to an answer;

and by the same sovereign Lord, who rules over all, it is

in these latter days pressed upon men so as to force an

answer out of them whether they will, or be unwilling.

No man can teach the history and condition of this world

without indicating expressly, or by implication, whether

he counts Jesus of Nazareth a blasphemer, or the Son of

God. No man can be in this world without accepting or

rejecting Christ's claim to be the Redeemer of his soul,

and the sovereign of his life. Such have been the effects

of the Bible, and such is the place of Christ among men,

that we must take a side. The decision cannot be avoided;

all depends on making it aright. The liberty of having no

Lord over the conscience is not competent to man. Sub-

 


                                  SECULARISM.                           371

 

mission absolute to the living God, as revealed in the

Mediator, is at once the best liberty that could be, and

the only liberty that is.

            In these days, when the pendulum is often seen swing-

ing from scepticism over to superstition, and from super-

stition back to scepticism again, we would do well to

remember that there is truth between these extremes, and

that in truth alone lies safety for all the interests of men.

We must beware of confounding two questions that are

totally distinct—the existence of truth, and our percep-

tion of it. Although all the men that live on the earth

should awake to-morrow blind, that would not prove that

the sun had ceased to shine. It is fashionable in high

places to laud religious indifference, and stigmatize as

bigotry all earnest belief. This is a great mistake. They

who fall into it cannot read even profane history aright.

Let politicians learn to apply the grand test, "By their

fruits ye shall know them." To believe nothing will pro-

duce as rank intolerance as to believe all the legends of

Rome. Look to the history of modern Europe, and you

will see that those who believed all dogmas and those who

rejected all are equally stained with the blood of the

saints, and have equally impeded the progress of men. To

have no belief; and to believe a lie, are seeds that bear only

bitter fruits. The conceit of the sceptic that outside of

himself there is no truth to believe in, projects into human

life only an empty shadow of liberty; but if He who is

the truth "make you free, ye shall be free indeed."

            I see two men near each other prostrate on the ground

and bleeding, while one man stands between them, with


372                                  SECULARISM.

 

serenest aspect, looking to the skies: who and what are

these? The two prostrate forms are Superstition and

Unbelief.  Superstition bowed down to worship his idol,

and cut his flesh with stones to atone for his soul's sin.

Unbelief scorned to be confined, like an inferior creature,

to the earth, and was ever leaping up in the hope of

standing on the stars. Exhausted by his efforts, he fell,

and the fall bruised him, so that he lay as low as the

neighbour whom he despised. He who stands between

them neither bowed himself to the ground, nor attempted

to scale the heavens. He neither degraded himself be-

neath a man's place, nor attempted to raise himself above

it.  He abode on earth, but he stood erect there. He

did not proudly profess to be, but meekly sought to find

God. This man understands his place and feels his need;

to him therefore knowledge is easy. To him that hath

shall be given. He has the beginning of wisdom, and he

will reach in good time its glad consummation. "Blessed

are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom."


                    FLIGHT, THE SAFETY OF THE WEAK.             373

 

 

                                           LXXXIV.

 

 

                  FLIGHT, THE SAFETY OF THE WEAK.

 

 

"Go from the presence of a foolish man,

        when thou perceived not in him the lips of knowledge." —xiv. 7.

 

 

IN nature some creatures are strong and bold, having both

instincts and instruments for combat: other creatures are

feeble but fleet. It is the intention of their Maker that

they should seek safety, not in fighting but in fleeing. It

would be a fatal mistake if the hare, in a fit of bravery,

should turn and face her pursuers. In the moral conflict

of human life it is of great importance to judge rightly

when we should fight and when we should flee. The

weak might escape if they knew their own weakness, and

kept out of harm's way. That courage is not a virtue

which carries the feeble into the lion's jaws.  I have

known of some who ventured too far with the benevolent

purpose of bringing a victim out, and were themselves

sucked in and swallowed up. To go in among the foolish

for the rescue of the sinking may be necessary, but it is

dangerous work, and demands robust workmen.

            The ordinary rule is, "go from the presence of a foolish

man:" "forsake the foolish and live" (ix. 6). Your

first duty is your own safety. But on some persons at

some times there lies the obligation to encounter danger

for the safety of a neighbour. Man is made his brother's

keeper. It is neither the inclination nor the duty of a


374         FLIGHT, THE SAFETY OF THE WEAK.

 

good man to be among the profane or profligate, but he

sometimes recognises the call of God to go in among them

for the purpose of pulling a brand from the burning. The

specific instruction recorded in scripture for such a case is,

"save with fear, pulling them out of the fire; hating even

the garment spotted by the flesh" (Jude 23). He who

would volunteer for this saving work must "save with

fear"—fear lest the victim perish ere he get him dragged

out, and fear lest himself be scorched by the flame.

We often hear of a miner going down a shaft to save a

brother who has been choked by foul air at the bottom.

It is a work of mercy: but the worker must beware; if he

linger too long in the deadly atmosphere of the pit, in-

stead of saving his neighbour, himself will share his fate.

There may be—there ought to be an effort made to lay

yourself along the drunken, the licentious, the profane,

and so bear them out into safety: but it should be a rush

in and a rush out again. When one begins to dally in

the place of danger he is gone. When your earnest inter-

ference is resisted, fall back upon the rule of scripture:

"go from the presence of the foolish," lest your soul be

polluted by contact with their blasphemy or vice.


                              SYMPATHY.                                 375

 

 

                                 LXXXV.

 

                             SYMPATHY.

 

 

"The heart knoweth his own bitterness;

            and a stranger doth not intermeddle with his joy."—xiv. 10.

 

THE two extreme experiences of a human heart, which

comprehend all others between them, are "bitterness"

and "joy." The solitude of a human being in either

extremity is a sublime and solemnizing thought. Whe-

ther you are glad or grieved, you must be alone. The

bitterness and the joyfulness are both your own. It is

only in a modified sense, and in a limited measure, that

you can share them with another, so as to have less of

them yourself. We speak of sympathy, and sympathy

means community of emotions between two human hearts.

Doubtless there is a reality corresponding to that attrac-

tive name, but the share which another takes is a thin

aerial shadowy thing in comparison with the substantive

experience of your own soul. Sympathy between two

human beings is, after all, little more than a figure of

speech. A physical burden can be divided equally

between two. If you, unburdened, overtake a weary

pilgrim on the way, toiling beneath a load of a hundred

pounds weight, you may volunteer to bear fifty of them

for the remaining part of the journey, and so lighten his

load by a full half.  But a light heart, however willing

it may be, cannot so relieve a heavy one. The cares that

press upon the spirit are as real as the load that lies on


376                              SYMPATHY.

 

the back, and as burdensome; but they are not so tangible

and divisible. We speak of sharing them by sympathy,

and there is some meaning in the words, some reality in

the act; but the participation in kind and effect comes far

short of the actual partition of material weight. The law

of our nature in the last resort is, "Every man must

bear his own burden." The weight that falls upon my

body may be divided with you, but the weight that falls

on my soul must lie all on my soul alone. You may

indeed stand beside me, and hold me by the hand, and I

may be abler to bear because of your presence and your

love, but I alone must bear it all.

            There are, indeed, some very intimate unions in human

society, as organized by God, and existing even yet in a

fallen world. The family relations bring heart into very

close contact with heart, and joys or sorrows that abound

in one flow freely over into another. The closest of them

all, wonderful in name and in nature, the two "no longer

twain, but one flesh," is a union of unspeakable value for

such sympathy as is compatible with distinct personality

at all. But when you estimate this union at its highest

value, and take it all into account, there remains a mean-

ing, deep and wide like the ocean, in this one touching

word, "the heart knoweth his own bitterness." The wife

of your bosom can indeed intermeddle with your joys and

sorrows as a stranger cannot do, and yet there are depths

of both in your breast which even she has no line to

sound. When you step into the waters of life's last sor-

row, even she must stand back and remain behind. Each

must go forward alone. The Indian suttee seems nature's


                               SYMPATHY.                                   377

 

struggle against that fixed necessity of man's condition.

But it is a vain oblation. Although the wife burn on

the husband's funeral pile, the frantic deed does not

lighten the solitude of the dark valley. One human

being cannot be merged in another. Man must accept

the separate personality that belongs to his nature. In

his relations to duty and to God, no partnership is per-

mitted, no community of goods is possible.

            But the isolation of every man from his fellow in the

hour of extremity may become the means of pressing the

sufferer nearer another companion, who is able even then

to remain. "There is a friend that sticketh closer than

a brother." Such is the person of Emmanuel, God with

us, that the spiritual life of a believer is not a separate

existence, but a part of His. As a branch in the vine or

a member in the body, so is a disciple in the Lord. The

Christian is one with Christ in such a way as no human

spirit can be with another. When the fangs of the per-

secutor vexed the life of his little ones, the pain throbbed

that moment in the heart of Jesus. The Head on high

cried out when the enemy hurt His member, "Saul, Saul,

why persecutest thou me?" Only Christ's sympathy is

real and complete; all other sympathy is but a pleasant

image. He who suffered for our sins can make himself

partaker of our sorrows. He who went through the

wrath of God to make a safe path for his people, is able to

keep them company in the swelling of Jordan. Long ago

they saw His day, and rejoiced in His perfect sympathy.

"Though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,

I will fear no evil, for thou art with me" (Ps. xxiii. 4).


378                 A MAN IS RESPONSIBLE FOR HIS BELIEF.

 

 

                                                 LXXXVI.

 

 

                      A MAN IS RESPONSIBLE FOR HIS BELIEF.

 

 

"There is a way which seemeth right unto a man,

            but the end thereof are the ways of death."—xiv. 12.

 

 

THE way seems right, but is wrong; and the result ac-

cords, not with the false opinion, but with the absolute

truth of the case. Its issue in death proves that its

direction was erroneous. A tree is known by its fruits,

and a life-course by the end to which it leads. A man

follows a path which he thinks right, but which really is

wrong; if he persist he will perish. This case is of fre-

quent occurrence in the world, both in its material and

its moral departments. Your opinion that the path is

right does not make it right: your sincerity in that erro-

neous opinion does not exempt you from its consequences,

whether these affect more directly the body or the soul.

There is a mercantile company which bulks largely in

the public eye, and turns over vast sums, and spreads its

agencies widely over the world. You think the concern

is solid, and court its alliance. You are accepted; your

interests are bound to its fortune, and are ruined in its

fall. Your favourable opinion of a hollow pretence did

not prevent the loss of your means when the bubble

burst. The law is universal. In the nature of things it

cannot be otherwise. It is a hollow form of philosophy

that deceives some men on this point. They say, surely


      A MAN IS RESPONSIBLE FOR HIS BELIEF.                     379

 

God will not punish a man hereafter who conscientiously

walks up to his convictions, although these convictions

be in point of fact mistaken. They err, knowing neither

the inspired Scriptures nor the natural laws. Do men

imagine that God, who has established this world in such

exquisite order, and rules it by regular laws, will abdi-

cate, and leave the better world in anarchy? This

world is blessed by an undeviating connection between

causes and their effects; will the next be abandoned to

random impulses, and run back to chaos? The idea is

not only false, but impossible and absurd. It is not

even conceivable that the direction of a man's course

should not determine his landing-place.

            But here an element is introduced into the calculation

which, it is thought, essentially modifies the result. In

morals the motive is an effective constituent of every

transaction: and if a man endeavour to form a right

judgment, and yet fall into error, will not his sincerity

exempt him from the consequences of his mistake? This

supposition is contrary both to the testimony of the

word, and to the analogy of nature. It sets up wilful

fancy against uniform fact. A man contracts and pays

for a ship of first-rate material and workmanship. In

due time a vessel is delivered to him of goodly ap-

pearance, but built of unseasoned material, and not

water-tight in the joints. He embarks with his family

and his goods in the treacherous bottom. When be

is out of sight, and the storm has begun to blow,

the truth begins to circulate from lip to lip among his

former neighbours that the ship is not seaworthy, and


380            A MAN IS RESPONSIBLE FOR HIS BELIEF.

 

the question is anxiously discussed whether she can

accomplish the voyage. If one of them should reason

that because the man did his best, and honestly believed

the ship was good, a just God overruling all, would not

permit the innocent to be drowned, while the guilty

stood on dry land safe, the suggestion would be scouted

by common consent as an unsubstantial dream. We all

know that the laws of nature do not turn aside to shield

a man from the consequences of his error, because his in-

tention was good. Every man, also, may, by a little

consideration, come to see that this arrangement is best

for the interests of all. Such is the principle that ope-

rates with undeviating uniformity in all the region which

lies within the view of man; and what ground have we

for believing that order will be exchanged for anarchy in

the government of God, whenever it steps over the

boundary of things seen and temporal?

            Perhaps the secret reason why an expectation, so con-

trary to all analogy, is yet so fondly entertained, is a

tacit unbelief in the reality of things spiritual and eter-

nal We see clearly the laws by which effects follow

causes in time; but the matters on which these laws

operate are substantial realities. If there were a firm

conviction that the world to come is a substance, and not

merely a name, the expectation would necessarily be

generated, that the same principles which regulate the

divine administration of the world now, will stretch

into the unseen and rule it all. On one of the latter

days of a return voyage across the Atlantic, we paced

the level deck beneath a brilliant sun, and on a placid

 

 


       A MAN IS RESPONSIBLE FOR HIS BELIEF.             381

 

sea, in earnest and protracted conversation with a bene-

volent and accomplished Englishman. He was sincerely

religious in his own way: and a part of his confes-

sion was that every man's religion would carry him

to heaven whatever it might be in itself, provided he

sincerely believed it. He accounted it rank bigotry to

doubt the safety of any fellow-mortal on the ground of

erroneous belief.  His creed, although he would probably

have refused to sign it, if he had seen it written out,

was, Safety lies in the sincerity of the believer, without

respect to the truth of what he believes.  We plied him

with the analogy of nature in the form which circum-

stances most readily suggested. We are here coursing

over the ocean at the rate of three hundred miles a day.

We have seen no land since we left the shores of Ame-

rica, nine days ago. We are approaching the coast of

Ireland, and will no doubt pass about a quarter of a mile

on the safe side of Cape Clear. The captain and his

officers have been carefully taking their observations, and

calculating their course. We have confidence in their

capacity and truth. But if they should commit a mis-

take, and cast up an erroneous reckoning, whether by

their own ignorance, or by a false figure in their tables,

or a misplaced mark on their quadrant—whether by their

own fault or the fault of others whom they innocently

trusted—will the sincerity of their belief that they are

in the right course save them and us from the conse-

quences of having deviated into a wrong one? If the

ship is directed right upon a rocky shore, will the rocky

shore not rend the ship asunder, because the master thinks

 


382      A MAN IS RESPONSIBLE FOR HIS BELIEF.

 

he is in the accustomed track? Our friend was silenced,

but he was not convinced. Argument alone will not

remove such an error.  It is not a clearer head that is

needed, but a softer heart. When in conscious unwor-

thiness and godly simplicity we are willing to have it so,

we shall perceive that it is so. "Unto the upright there

ariseth light in the darkness." Even so, Father, for so it

seemed good in thy sight.

            It is fashionable, in some quarters, to deny responsi-

bility for belief, on the ground that a man's opinion is

not under his own control. There is precisely the same

ground for affirming that a man cannot help his actions.

His opinions do no doubt influence his actions, but his

actions also influence his opinions. A bad life deranges

the judgment, and a deranged judgment deteriorates still

more the life. These two act reciprocally as causes, and

emerge alternately as effects.

            Truth shines like light from heaven; but the mind

and conscience within the man constitute the reflector

that receives it. Thence we must read off the impres-

sions, as the astronomer reads the image from the reflector

at the bottom of his tube. When that tablet is dimmed

by the breath of evil spirits dwelling within, the truth is

distorted and turned into a lie. It was because the

man's deeds were evil that he missed the truths He is

responsible for his erroneous opinion as certainly as he

is responsible for his unrighteous act.

            It may be proved, by a large induction of facts, that

among the multitude, those who become infidel in opinion

have previously become vicious in conduct; and in other


      A MAN IS RESPONSIBLE FOR HIS BELIEF.          383

 

classes, where the experience seems to be opposite, the

difference may be only in the outward appearance. Pride,

and other forms of spiritual wickedness in the high places

of the cultivated human intellect, are as hateful to God,

and as adverse to right moral perceptions, as meaner vices

in the low places of ignorant, unrestrained sensuality.

There is no respect of persons with God.

            There is a way which is right, whatever it may seem to

the world, and the end thereof is life. "If any man be in

Christ, he is a new creature." "I am the way, and the

truth, and the life, no man cometh unto the Father but

by me." God's way of coming to us in mercy, is also

our way of coming to Him in peace. Christ is expressly

"the Apostle and High Priest of our profession" (Heb.

iii. 1). He has come forth God's messenger to us, and

returned as our advocate with the Father.


384                      THE BACKSLIDER.

 

 

                                  LXXXVII.

 

 

                          THE BACKSLIDER.

 

 

"The backslider in heart shall be filled with his own ways."—xiv. 14.

 

 

IF the secret history of backsliders were written, many

startling discoveries would be made. Whatever the enor-

mity it may end in, backsliding begins unseen in the heart.

The Christian in name, whose fall resounds through the

land, filling the mouths of scorners with laughter, and

suffusing the faces of disciples with shame, did not de-

scend to that depth by one leap from the high place on

which he formerly stood. He does not by a sudden

resolution of mind turn from virtue into vice. He does

not even abandon his Sabbath school, or desert the

prayer-meeting, by a deliberate judgment. A slipping

begins secretly and imperceptibly in his heart, while

appearances on the surface are kept unchanged. He

ceases to watch and pray, He admits vain thoughts,

and gives them encouragement to lodge within him.

Having no hunger for righteousness, he neglects the bread

of life. He grows weary of religious exercises and reli-

gious society. If he continue to attend them, it is a bodily

service, endured for the purpose of maintaining the place

which he has attained. Duties become more irksome, and

forbidden indulgence more sweet.

            There is a weighing beam exposed to public view,

with one scale loaded and resting on the ground,


                      THE BACKSLIDER.                               385

 

while the other dangles high and empty in the air.

Everybody is familiar with the object, and its aspect.

One day the curiosity of the passengers is arrested by

observing that the low and loaded beam is swinging

aloft, while the side which hung empty and light has

sunk to the ground. Speculation is set on edge by the

phenomenon, and set at rest again by the discovery of

its cause. For many days certain diminutive but busy

insects had, for some object of their own, been trans-

ferring the material from the full to the empty scale.

Day by day the sides approached an equilibrium, but no

change took place in their position. At last a grain

more removed from one side, and laid in the other,

reversed the preponderance, and produced the change.

There is a similar balancing of good and evil in a human

heart. The sudden outward change results from a gra-

dual inward preparation.

            All engineering proceeds upon the principle of reach-

ing great heights or depths by almost imperceptible

inclines. The adversary of men works by this wile.

When you see a man who was once counted a Christian

standing shameless on a mountain-top of open impiety, or

lying in the miry pit of vice, you may safely assume that

he has long been worming his way in secret on the spiral

slimy track by which the old serpent marks and smooths

the way to death.

            On the same branch of an apricot-tree that leant

against the south side of a garden wall, I have seen two

fruits, large and luscious, hanging side by side, and ripen-

ing apace in the sun. They were of equal size and equal

 


386                        THE BACKSLIDER.

 

loveliness. Their stainless bosoms peeped from beneath

the leaves, to bask in the noonday heat. Nothing in

nature could be more lovely to look upon, or more rich

in promise. Yet, ere to-morrow's sun is hot, one of them

grows black on the side, and bursts, and collapses, and

becomes a mass of rottenness, while the other remains in

undiminished beauty and fragrance by its side. Whence

the diverse fates of these twin beauties?  Especially,

why did the catastrophe happen so suddenly?  It hap-

pened thus:—yesterday, when you stood looking on the

two, admiring their equal beauty, one of them was hol-

low in the heart. If then you had taken it in your hand,

and turned it round, you would have seen corruption

already pervading its mass.  On the dark side, next the

wall, it has been pierced and entered. Its inside has

been scooped out and devoured, while it continued to

present to the passenger as fair an appearance as ever.

And see, black, crawling, loathsome creatures are nestling

and revellin: in that hollow heart, beneath that beau-

teous skin.

            Thus are fair promises in the garden of the Lord sud-

denly blighted. You have known two, standing long

side by side in a goodly profession, and labouring hand

in hand for the kingdom of Christ. One of them falls

headlong into a pit of vice, and next day the whole

neighbourhood rings with the scandal. Diverse are the

emotions, but all are moved. Christ's enemies sneer, and

his members sigh. How sudden the fall has been, sor-

rowing disciples say to each other in a suppressed whis-

per, when they meet,—how sudden and unexpected! No,


                           THE BACKSLIDER.                          387

 

friends; it was not a sudden fall. In the heart, unseen,

there has been a long preparation of backsliding. Vain

thoughts have lodged within, and vile thoughts have

been welcome visitors. Persons first vain and then vile

have by degrees found their way into his presence, and

charmed him, so that he cannot want them, though he

knows they are stinging serpents. By such a process his

heart has been hollowed out, and inhabited by creatures

more loathsome than crawling vermin, while the skin of  

profession was kept whole, and its fairest side turned to

public view. A cry of wonder rises from the crowd,

when the hollow shell falls in, because they did not know

its hollowness until the fall revealed it.

            There is a warning, in such a case:—beware of back-

sliding in heart; small beginnings may issue in a fearful

end. But there is encouragement even here to disciples

who are humble, and trustful, and watchful. There is

no such thing as a sudden collapse of a sound heart.

"They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their

strength."


388         THE TRUSTFUL AND THE TRUTHFUL.

 

 

                                        LXXXVIII.

 

 

              THE TRUSTFUL AND THE TRUTHFUL.

 

 

"The simple believeth every word:

            but the prudent man looketh well to his going." —xiv. 15.

 

 

"THE simple believeth every word;" and why not? If

it were the universal rule, it would make a happy world.

Trust is a lovely thing; but it cannot stand, unless it get

Truth to lean upon. When its tender hand has been

often pierced by a broken reed of falsehood, it pines away,

and dies of grief.  A man would find it easier to be

trustful, if his neighbours were trust-worthy.

            It is a well-known characteristic of little children to

believe implicitly whatever you tell them. This is one

and not the least, of those features which make up their

beauty, and draw forth our love. It remains a feature

of the child until it is worn off by hard experience of

the world. Perhaps we should recognise in it a broken

remnant of our unfallen state. It is an obvious fact in

nature, that the infant expects truth, until that expecta-

tion is burned out of him by many disappointments. Sus-

picion does not appear until it has been generated by

falsehood.

            A great responsibility is attached to all our intercourse

with children. Offences will come; but woe to him by

whom the offence cometh. The child expects truth; let

him have it. Be not the first to wring his simplicity out


         THE TRUSTFUL AND THE TRUTHFUL.                  389

 

of him by double dealing. A lie told by seniors for their

amusement threw a dark shadow over my childhood, and

took much of the sunshine out of it. Some person in a

military dress, interested in the child for his father's sake,

took me fondly in his arms, when I was between four and

five years of age, and slipped a shilling into my hand.

I either never knew, or have long since forgotten, what

his name was, and what relation he sustained to the

family; but the instant he passed, older children and

grown-up people told me, with an air of seriousness, that

I was enlisted, and that whenever I should be old enough,

the officer would return, and take me off to the wars.

This intimation sank into me, and lay at my heart like

lead, all the period of my childhood. I was afraid to

speak of it, and suffered in silence. The terror was never

taken off by a serious explanation, for no one knew how

great it was. I obtained no relief until my understand-

ing gradually outgrew it. That lie wrought grievous

harm to me. Besides overclouding life at its very dawn,

it left within me, when it departed, a general grudge

against mankind for wantonly wounding the helpless.

When the boy was big enough to shake off the phantom,

he was full of indignation against the world for amusing

itself by torturing a child. The Almighty has consti-

tuted himself the Helper or Avenger of the weak, what-

ever the form of their weakness may be; beware of hurt-

ing a little child by any untruth. It is a great wicked-  

ness when older children or servants torment the little

ones by inventing false terrors. Stand in awe, and speak

only sacred truth to the timid confiding infant, for the


390       THE TRUSTFUL AND THE TRUTHFUL.

 

Almighty Friend of the feeble is looking on. Even in little

things He will carry through the principle, "inasmuch as

ye have done it to one of these little ones, ye have done it

unto me." God has made the infant trustful, and then cast

him upon you: if you take advantage of that trustfulness to

deceive, whether in great things or small, you are mocking

its Author. The child is poor, and lying threats oppress

it:  "He that oppresseth the poor, reproacheth his Maker."

"Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Lord." As

the young of birds instinctively open their mouths for

food, and their mothers never—not even once since the

creation of the world—have thrown in chaff to mock

their hunger; so the trustfulness of children is the open-

ing of their mouth for truth: if we fling falsehood in,

and laugh at their disappointment, the Lord will require

it.  It is not amusement; it is sin. It is both a crime

and a blunder. They are called Goths and Vandals who

deface the precious remnants of Greek statuary that have

descended to our times. What name would fitly desig-

nate the barbarian who, in sheer wantonness, spoils the

beauty of a finer, fairer form—who rubs off by vulgar

lies the lovely trustfulness of a little child?

            "The prudent looketh well to his going;" and good

cause he has so to do. In this world a man is obliged

to be suspicious. Man suffers more from man than from

the elements of nature or the beasts of the field. A time

is coming when this species of prudence will be no longer

needed. When the people shall be all righteous, there

will be no deception on one side, and no distrust on the

other. How sweet even this life would be, if there


         THE TRUSTFUL AND THE TRUTHFUL.         391

 

were no falsehood and no distrust. If every speaker 

were true, and every hearer trustful, already the new

world would have begun. As yet, we must walk cir-

cumspectly at every step, lest a neighbour deceive us. In

the new heavens and new earth, truth will pervade all

like air.  "They shall not hurt nor destroy in all my

holy mountain, saith the Lord." Oh, that will be joyful,

joyful, when there shall be no lie to generate suspicion, and

no suspicion generated by a lie!


392                         THE FOOL'S CONFIDENCE.

 

 

                                              LXXXIX.

 

 

                               THE FOOL'S CONFIDENCE.

 

 

"A wise man feareth, and departeth from evil:

            but the fool rageth, and is confident."—xiv. 16.

 

 

A WISE man fears sin, and distrusts himself He knows

that the enemy is strong, and that his own defences are

feeble. His policy, therefore, is not to brave danger, but

to keep out of harm's way.  He seeks safety in flight.

The character of the wise man may be read most distinctly

in the dark but polished mirror that stands on the other

side—"the fool rageth, and is confident." From the

glossy surface of this intensified folly, the wisdom of

modesty shines brightly out.

            The fool's picture is truthfully sketched here, in few

lines. His character is mainly made up of two features:

he thinks little of danger, and much of himself.  These

two ingredients constitute a foot He stumbles on both

sides alike. That which is strong he despises, and that

which is weak he trusts. The dangers that beset him

are great, but he counts them nothing; the strength that

is in him is as nothing, but he counts it great. Thus, he

is on all hands out of his reckoning, and stumbles at every

step.

            The end of such a fool was described lately in the

newspapers.  Many must have read and shuddered at


                      THE FOOL'S CONFIDENCE.                393

 

the tragic tale. A certain man was employed by the

Zoological Society of London, as a keeper in their collec-

tion of animals. His department was the care of the

serpents. A separate building was appropriated to them,

and stringent regulations laid down for their manage-

ment. The keeper's wages were good and his work was

light. If he had been cautious and careful, his life would

have been safe and his labour easy. Those of the ser-

pents that are venomous must be closely confined and

cautiously tended. The front of the cage is of strong

glass.  It is divided into two equal parts by a partition,

in which there is a door. The serpents lie in one of these

divisions, while the other is empty. It is the duty of the

keeper, at certain times, to introduce an iron rod through

a small opening, and therewith remove them by the door

in the partition from the one compartment into the other.

This done, he makes fast the door, and then enters the

emptied cage, for the purpose of cleaning it and depositing

food. One morning the keeper opened the door, before

the serpents were removed, took one of them in his

hands, hung it around his neck, and thus attired ran after

his companions, sportively pretending to throw it upon

them. He was warned that it might sting, and its sting

might be death. He laughed at the warning. He then

put the creature back into the cage, without having

received any harm. Next he drew out a cobra capella,

and placed it in his bosom beneath his coat, calling out,

"I am inspired; it will not hurt me." Waxing bolder

by impunity, he grasped the deadly reptile by the middle,

and held it up before his face pretending to speak to it.


394              THE FOOL'S CONFEDENCE.

 

Drawing itself back to take aim, the creature made a

sudden dart, and fixed its fangs in his nostrils.  Sobered

by fear, he screamed out, tore the fangs out of his flesh,

and flung the serpent back into the cage. He was car-

ried to an hospital, and died in fearful agony about an

hour afterwards.

            The fool raged and was confident; but he was drunk

at the time, otherwise he would not have taken a venom-

ous snake in his hand and held it up to his face. The

man was not himself: it was strong drink that raged

within him. Yes, he was drunk. His own act brought

madness on, and then the snake plunged its poisonous

fangs in the madman's blood. The snake did not abstain

from stinging him; the poison did not abstain from de-

stroying his life because he was drunk: and will God

abstain from judging him because he was drunk when he

stumbled into eternity? How many in our land, every

year, die as that fool died? They inflame their appetite

by a little strong drink, and then blind the eye of reason

by more. With reason laid asleep, and passions heated

into sevenfold fury, they sally forth and get or give a

mortal wound. Every man who even once maddens

himself by drink is a fool of the same stamp with the

serpent-keeper. He has allowed a snake to coil itself

round his body: no thanks to him if it creep off without

spurting death into his veins. The confidence of fools is

their ruin. The safety of a wise man lies in that modest

sense of his own infirmity, which makes him fear and

depart from evil. Solomon's advice is, "Look not thou

upon the wine when it is red, when it giveth his colour


                      THE FOOL'S CONFIDENCE.                395

 

in the cup, when it moveth itself aright: at the last it

biteth like a serpent and stingeth like an adder" (xxiii.

31, 32).

            We seem as a nation to derive little benefit from the

warnings which reach us through the newspapers by hun-

dreds every year, in the form of frightful deaths caused

by drunkenness. A man will readily resolve, as he reads

these tragedies, that he will neither murder his neighbour

nor walk over a quarry himself: but his resolution may

avail him nothing if he dally with strong drink. This

people are paying a heavy price, and yet they will get no

wisdom in return, if they content themselves with punish-

ing murder and loathing suicide, and continue to think

lightly of drunkenness, which is the most prolific seed of

both. He would be the greatest benefactor of his country,

in all its interests, who should lodge in the public mind an

adequate estimate of drunkenness, as a sin in the sight of

God, an injury to the individual, and a crime against

society. As long as public opinion makes light of this

germ-sin, its fruits will work us heavy woe.

 

 


396                                  WITNESSES.

 

 

                                               XC.

 

 

                                        WITNESSES.

 

 

                     "A true witness delivereth souls."—xiv. 25.

 

 

"TRUTH is great and it will prevail;" but truth in the

abstract is like a disembodied spirit, and cannot exert a

power upon the world. It must be incarnate in a living

witness ere its effect be felt.

            One witness, faithful and true, has appeared among

men, and this witness delivers souls. He is the Truth in

human nature, and the truth makes the captive free. If

the Son make you free, ye shall be free indeed. Of the

sin of men and the holiness of God, of the curse and the

blessing, the fall and the rising again, He is witness. He

is the way and the truth and the life. There is no sal-

vation in any other. If we would see evidence either of

God's anger against sin, or His mercy to sinners, we must

look unto Jesus.

            But in Him, and by Him, and for Him, Christians are

witnesses too. In this respect, "as He is, so are we in

this world" (1 John iv. 17). Every one whom Christ

saves from the world He uses in it. Deserters from the

powers of darkness are, one by one as they come over,

incorporated in the armies of the living God, and sent

back to do battle against their former lord. If you are

a Christian, these two things are true of you: first, you

have need of Christ, and, second, Christ has need of you.

 


                                   WITNESSES.                                397

 

He saves you, and you serve Him. All things are in His

hand. Those who are bought with His blood He loves,

with a love that is wonderful, passing the love of mothers:

He would call them home, and give them rest, if He had

not some needful work for them to do in this outer world.

The very fact of a Christian being here and not in heaven,

is a proof that some work awaits him.

            And the special work for which Christians are left in

the world is to be witnesses. Himself told his disciples

so when He was about to leave them:  "Ye shall receive

power after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you; and

ye shall be witnesses unto me" (Acts i. 8). On high,

whither he was then going, he does not need witnesses.

There they behold his glory. The Lamb is the light of

heaven, and they who bask in His rays need none to

tell them that He is great and good; but in this outfield,

where enmity and ignorance prevail, Christ has need of

witnesses, and He has chosen to this office those who

trust in His salvation and are called by His name.

            He does not send angels to proclaim His message and

wield His power. He does not command the thunders

to pronounce His name, and the lightnings to write His

character on the sky. The epistle in which He desires 

to be read is the life of His disciples. The evidence by

which the Spirit will convince the world is His truth,

uttered from the word, and echoed, still and small, from

the meek and quiet life-course of converted men. It

should be encouraging, stimulating, elevating to the hum-

blest disciple to learn that the Lord who redeemed him

has appointed his time and his path. It is required that

 


398                            WITNESSES.

 

we be witnesses unto Him wherever we are and whoever

may question us. Two qualifications are required in a

witness, truth and love (Eph. iv. 15): these are needed,

but these will do. With these one will chase a thousand,

and two put ten thousand to flight.

            The place of a witness for Christ in the world is

honourable, but arduous. A witness, in contested cases,

after giving evidence in chief, is subjected to cross-

examination. A Christian's profession is, and is under-

stood to be, his direct and positive testimony that he is

bought with a price, and bound to serve the Lord that

bought him: but as soon as this testimony is emitted, the

cross-examination begins. If he be not a true witness,

he will stumble there. Either or both of two persons,

with very different views; may subject a witness to cross-

exaanination—the judge or the adversary. It is chiefly

done by the adversary, and in his interests. The Supreme

himself puts professing disciples to the test before the

public court of the world; but when He so tries his chil-

dren, the truth comes forth purer and brighter by the

trial. He who goes about as a roaring lion, seeking

whom he may devour, tempt, to destroy. He puts the

witness to the question in order to break him down. An

inquirer who saw you at the Lord's table meets you in

the market-place. If he saw the solemnity of a trustful

worshipper there, and feel the gripe of an overreacher

here, he counts your testimony for Christ not true, and

sets his conscience free from the restraints of begun con-

viction. The keen eye of an adversary, sharpened into

more than natural intensity by the reproof which your

 


                                 WITNESSES.                                 399

 

profession administered, tracks you into the world, and

questions you there. Every inconsistency raises a shout

of triumph in the circle who will not have this Man to

reign over them, and draws a sigh in secret from the

broken hearts of the Lord's meek and poor afflicted ones.

            They speak of the evidences of religion, and much has

been done in our day to multiply and confirm them.

But, after all, Christians are the best evidences of Chris-

tianity. Alas, we have for eighteen hundred years been

printing books to prove Christianity true, and living so

as to make men think we do not believe it.  Living wit-

nesses, if they be true, have far more power than dead

letters of a book, however accurate they may be. The

last words of Jesus on the earth were to leave this, charge

upon his members, "Ye shall be witnesses unto me,

both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea, and in Samaria, and

unto the uttermost part of the earth; and when he had

spoken these things, while they beheld, he was taken up,

and a cloud received him out of their sight" (Acts i. 8, 9).

His last command is, in the place where ye happen to be,

and in all the neighbourhood as far as your influence

reaches, and when opportunity occurs to all mankind, be

ye witnesses unto me. After this he departed in a cloud.

He will come again in the clouds, and every eye shall see

Him. Occupy till He come. At His coming we would

like to be found faithful and busy in the very work

which he prescribed. There is no other work worth

living for, or fit for dying in. How much you have

gotten from Christ, and how much you have done for

needy men while passing through life—these are the

 


400                       WITNESSES.

 

only things that will be important when the closing hour

has come. To be saved, and to commend the Saviour,—

this is the double aim fit to fill a human heart and a

human life.

            "A true witness delivereth souls;" and a false witness?

He is the stone over which they stumble. It is not in

the power of any man to be neutral in the conflict be-

tween light and darkness. Good and evil in actual life

are like land and sea on the globe. If you are not on

the one, you must be on the other. There is no belt of

intermediate territory for the irresolute to linger on. Let

no man who bears Christ's name lay the unction to his

soul, that if he does no good he at least does no evil.

One of the heaviest complaints made in the prophets

against Jerusalem for her backsliding, is that she was a

"comfort" to Samaria and Sodom (Ezek. xvi. 54); that

those who had the name and place of God's people, so

lived is to make the wicked feel at ease.  If the salt

retain its saltness, surrounding corruption will be made

uneasy by the contact.  If Christians live as like the

world as they can, the world will think itself safe in its

sin; and those who should have been the deliverers, will

become the destroyers of their neighbours.

 


                  THE PLACE OF REFUGE.                    401

 

 

                                   XCI.

 

 

                   THE PLACE OF REFUGE.

 

 

"In the fear of the Lord is strong confidence;

            and his children shall have a place of refuge."—xiv. 26.

 

 

FEAR is confidence: the words sound strangely. They

are like that blessed paradox of Paul, "when I am weak,

then am I strong." They are strange indeed, but true.

To fear God aright is to be delivered from all fear.

"His salvation is nigh them that fear him." To have

such a neighbour is strong consolation to a human spirit

in this howling wilderness. The fear which brings a

sinner submissive and trustful to the sacrifice and righte-

ousness of the Substitute is itself a confidence. The

great and terrible God becomes the "dwelling-rock" of

the fugitive. Those who went early to the sepulchre

and looked into the empty grave where the Lord lay,

departed from the place with "fear and great joy." A

human soul, made at first in God's image, has great capa-

city still. In that large place fear and great joy can

dwell together. There are different kinds of fear: there

is a fear that "hath torment," and perfect love, when it

comes, casts that kind out (1 John iv. 18). Like fire

and water, these two cannot agree. The fear that hath

torment by its very nature keeps or casts out confidence

from a human heart. But the filial fear of the dear chil-

dren may be known by this, that it takes in beside itself


402                  THE PLACE OF REFUGE.

 

a great joy, and the two brethren dwell together in unity.

When the fear of God, which a sinner feels, is plunged in

redeeming love, the torment is discharged, and confidence

comes in its stead.

            "His children shall have a place of refuge." God is

their refuge and their strength: they will not fear

though the earth be removed. They "are kept by the

power of God through faith unto salvation" (1 Pet. 5).

There are two keepings very diverse from each other,

and yet alike in this, that both employ as their instru-

ments strong walls and barred gates. Great harm accrues

from confounding them, and therefore the distinction

should be made and kept clear. Gates and bars may be

closed around you for the purpose of keeping you in, or

of keeping your enemy out. The one is a prison, the

other a fortress. In construction and appearance the two

places are in many respects similar. The walls are in

both cases high, and the bars strong. In both it is essen-

tial that the guards be watchful and trusty. But they

differ in this—the prison is constructed with a view to

prevent escape from within; the fortress to defy assault

from without. In their design and use they are exact

contraries. The one makes sure the bondage, the other

the liberty of its inmates. In both cases it is a keep,

and in both the keep is strong—the one is strong to

keep the prisoner in, the other strong to keep the

enemy out.

            The fear of the Lord to those who are within, and

have tasted of his grace, is the strong confidence of a for-

tress to defend them from every foe; to those who look


                     THE PLACE OF REFUGE.                        403

 

at it from without, it often seems a frowning prison that

will close out the sunlight from all who go within its

portals, and waste young life away in mouldy dungeons.

Mistakes are common on this point, and these mistakes

are disastrous.

            Life to the Christian is a warfare, all the way. He is

safe, but his safety is not the peace of home. It is the

protection of a strong tower in the presence of enemies.

The children of the kingdom are safe though weak, not

because none seek their hurt, but because greater is He

that is for them, than all that are against them. This

is the condition of all who have turned to the Lord, and

have not yet entered into rest. They are out of the

kingdom of darkness, but have not reached the presence

of God. In all this middle region they are safe, but

their safety cometh from the Lord.

            Danger surrounds them: but they are kept in safety.

Before they were converted they did not desire this

keeping; when they are glorified they will not need it.

But in all this passage through the wilderness, after they

have burst forth from Egypt, and before they have

reached the promised land, "His children" need and get

"a place of refuge."

            This is their best estate on earth, His children though

they be. It is good to know precisely what we have a

right to expect. If we carelessly count on advantages

which have not been promised, and not provided for us.

we shall be thrown off our guard and suffer loss. The

utmost request that Jesus made for His disciples was,

not that they should be taken out of the world, but kept


404                THE PLACE OF REFUGE.

 

from the evil (John xvii. 15). This, therefore, is the

utmost that will be given. Enemies swarm around—

His children are feeble; the safety provided is confidence

in Himself, the strong tower into which the righteous

run.

            But often a trembling fugitive mistakes the fortress

for a prison, and refuses to go in. A single soldier in an

enemy's country is crossing the plain in haste, and making

towards a castle whose battlements appear in relief on

the distant sky. A man who appears a native of the

place joins him from a bypath, and asks with appa-

rent kindness whither he is going. To yonder fortress,

says the soldier, where my Sovereign's army lies in

strength. The stranger, under pretence of friendship,

endeavours to persuade him that it is a prison. He is

an emissary of the enemy, sent to detain the fugitive

until it be too late, and then cut him off. In this way

many are turned back from the place of refuge after they

seemed to have turned their faces thitherwards. Agents

of the enemy, under various disguises, join themselves to

the young, and insinuate that to be seriously religious is

to throw their liberty away. Multitudes, whom no man

can number, are thus cheated and lost. They would like

to be safe, but cannot consent to go into a dungeon yet.

When they grow old, and the appetite for pleasure is

comparatively weak, they think they can submit to the

sombre shade of those towers where the regenerate have

taken refuge; but as yet they love life too well to plunge

into a living death.

            A little religion is a painful thing. It destroys one


                        THE PLACE OF REFUGE.                     405

 

pleasure, and supplies no other in its stead. In this land

of light and of privilege, many go as far forward in a

religious profession as to embitter the joy of the world;

few seem to advance far enough in the "new and living

way" to reach a refuge in the joy of the Lord. Safety

lies in drawing near to God, and the distinguishing mark

of an unbelieving heart is that it departs from Him. If

the fortress were some pile of self-righteousness, or even

a huge, shapely heap of penances and fastings, men

with their corruption all about them would be content to

take shelter there; but since the offered resting-place is

under the eye, and even in the bosom of the Holiest, they

will not and cannot go in, unless they are made willing

to put off the old nature and leave it behind. "His

children shall have a place of refuge," and the refuge is

such that only the children count it a boon. The Great

Teacher told Nicodemus first about seeing the kingdom

of God, and next about entering it (John iii. 3, 5). No

man will go into the kingdom until he has some spiritual

perception of what it is. Though the Refuge is provided,

and the gate standing open, and the invitation free, poor

wanderers stand shivering without, because a suspicion

clings to the guilty conscience, that the “strong tower,”

offered as a safe dwelling-place, will turn out to be a

place of confinement from genial society and human

joys. We must take up Philip's simple prayer, "Lord,

shew us the Father." If the prodigal could know the

Father's love, he would arise and go to the Father's

bosom.


406         ENVY—THE DISEASE AND THE CURE.

 

 

                                           XCII.

 

 

               ENVY—THE DISEASE AND THE CURE.

 

 

"A sound heart is the life of the flesh;

   but envy the rottenness of the bones."—xiv. 30.

 

 

AN object is sometimes so situated that you can see it better

by looking away from it to the surface of a mirror opposite

than by attempting to look directly upon itself.  If you

want to know what is meant by a sound heart, look over

to the other clause, and learn that envy is the rottenness

of the bones. Soundness of heart is generous love to a

brother, kindled there by Christ's love to us. "Love one

another as I have loved you."  When that grace of the

Lord is transferred to a disciple, and written by the Spirit

so deeply upon the fleshly table within, that it can be read

by the passer-by on the man's outer life, the new creature

is sound at heart and vigorous in action. "Perfect love

casteth out fear" in relation to God, and envy in relation

to fellow-men.

            Among the many diseases to which the living body

is liable, some are much more appalling and repulsive

than others, though not more deadly. Perhaps there is

not one of all the ghastly host that casts a deeper shadow

of dismay before it over a human spirit than rottenness

in the bones. The very conception of it in the imagina-

tion is enough to send a cold shudder through the frame.

Such is the tried word chosen by the Spirit to designate


              ENVY—THE DISEASE AND THE CURE.            407

 

envy, an evil disease which is endemic among mankind.

Like other diseases that affect the spirit rather than

the body, its nature is such, that they who are most

deeply tinged by the infection are least alive to the dan-

ger. To arouse the envious out of their indifference, that 

ailment of the soul is named after one of the most fright-

ful maladies that preys upon the human frame and wastes

its life away. New creatures in Christ Jesus, if the

spiritual life be in healthful exercise, dread every tincture

of envy felt working within them as they would dread

the symptoms of incipient caries in their bones.

            Envy is called a passion; and passion means suffering.

The patient who is ill of envy is a sinner and a sufferer

too. He is an object of pity. It is a mysterious and

terrible disease. The nerves of sensation within the man

are attached by some unseen hand to his neighbours all

around him, so that every step of advancement which

they make tears the fibres that lie next his heart. The

wretch enjoys a moment's relief when the mystic cord

is temporarily slackened by a neighbour's fall; but his

agony immediately begins again, for he anticipates an-

other twitch as soon as the fallen is restored to prosperity.

            No species of sensitive pleasure can be greater or purer

than that of the convalescent when the disease has been

cast out, and he walks forth without pain to breathe the

fresh air, and look on the green fields again. Those who

have long pined in disease, and been at last delivered,

relish most keenly the blessing of health. Such is the

delight of being delivered from the tormenting presence

of envy, and emerging into love. It is the sensation of


408           ENVY—THE DISEASE AND THE CURE.

 

renewed health, when rottenness has been purged out of

the bones. They who are led into love walk at liberty.

It is a large place. Your path would never be crossed,

and your person never jostled, although all the world

were beside you there. As to the room that is in him

and about him, a disciple is, according to his capacity,

like his Lord.

            But the cure of envy, as it is wrought by the love of

Christ, is not only a deliverance from pain; it is, even

in the present world, an unspeakable gain.  That man

will speedily grow rich who gets and puts into his bag

not only all his own winnings, but also all the winnings

of his neighbours. Whenever love like Christ's takes

possession of a man, and drives the rottenness from his

bones, the capital of his enjoyment is increased by all

his own prosperity and all the prosperity of others. His

peace, according to the simple and sure imagery of scrip-

ture, is like a river. A river that follows its own course

in solitude does not grow great. The Nile, contrary to

the analogy of other great streams, flows more than a

thousand miles without receiving the waters of a single

tributary; the consequence is, that it grows no greater

as it courses over that vast line. Other rivers are every

now and then receiving converging streams from the right

and left, and thereby their volume continually increases

until it reach the sea. The happiness of a man is like

the flow of water in a river. If you enjoy nothing but

what is your own, your tiny rivulet of contentment, so

far from increasing, grows smaller by degrees, until it

sinks unseen in the sand, and leaves you in a desert of


              ENVY—THE DISEASE AND THE CURE.              409

 

despair; but when all the acquisitions of your neighbours

go to swell its bulk, your enjoyment will flow like a

river enriched by many affluents, growing ever greater

as life approaches its close. It is some such river that

makes glad the city of our God. Envy will be unknown

there. "Faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest

of these is charity." Charity is very pure, and very

great. When the rottenness that mingled with it shall

be all cast out, and charity without spot or wrinkle shall

be the element of heaven, the redeemed will be the happy

inmates of a happy home. If there were no envy, but

only love—if each should count and feel his neighbour's

good to be his own gain, this earth would already be a

heaven.

            To have constituted the world so that envy is as rotten-

ness in the bones, and love is felt like the glow of health

permeating the frame, is a glory to the world's Maker.

Every sensation of glad enlargement enjoyed by a loving

heart, at the sight of a neighbour's prosperity, is a still

small voice, announcing to him who hath an ear that God

is good; and every pang that gnaws the envious, like rot-

tenness in his bones, is the same word, God is good, echoed

unwillingly back from the suffering of sin.


410                          THE MERCIFUL.

 

 

                                          XCIII.

 

 

                                THE MERCIFUL

 

 

"He that oppresseth the poor, reproacheth his Maker;

            but he that honoureth Him hath mercy on the poor."—xiv. 31.

 

 

FAITH in God is the foundation that sustains the goodly

superstructure of relative duties. A greater than Solo-

mon imparted the same instruction to the apostle who

leant on His breast. This commandment have we from

Him:  "That he who loveth God, love his brother also"

(1 John iv. 21). The Almighty casts his shield over

those who have no other help. He espouses the cause

of the poor. To oppress them is to reproach Him. In

the arrangements of His providence, the poor we have

always with us, as tests to try our love, and objects

to exercise it on. Love of God is the root of the matter

in a human heart: but the root, though the chief thing,

is from its nature unseen. It is known by its fruit, and

its fruit is philanthropy. The necessary dependence of

human duty upon divine faith is laid down by Solomon

as clearly as by John:  "He that honoureth Him, hath

mercy on the poor." If the heart is right with God, the

hand will be open to a brother; but a profession of faith

by a merciless man the Most High will repudiate as

hypocrisy. The ancient Church possessed in full the

glorious truth, that of all the real compassion which

flows through human channels, the fountain-head is on

high. He who gets mercy shows it.

 

 


                                 THE MERCIFUL.                              411

 

            In His own teaching on this subject, Jesus said, "These

things have I spoken unto you, that my joy might remain

in you, and that your joy might be full;" and imme-

diately added, "This is my commandment, that ye love

one another" (John xv. 11, 12). The connection be-

tween these two intimations is interesting and obvious.

First, his own joy; next, that joy flowing into his dis-

ciples, so that they shall be full; and then these full

vessels flowing over in streams of Christ-like love on

all the needy within their reach. It is this union to the

Head that will enable—that will compel a disciple to love

his brother.  From this fountain, through this channel, a

love-stream will flow of volume sufficient to carry down

before it a whole legion of obstructing jealousies.

            These are the principles; and now, some suggestions

as to the practice of mercy to the poor.

            1. We must not confine our aim either to the sins of

the soul on the one hand, or to the sufferings of the body

on the other. You cannot effectively or permanently

help your poor brother, if you treat him merely as a body

with life in it. The laws of Providence forbid. Whom

God hath joined, no man can with impunity put asunder.

Soul and body are so united, that the one cannot really be

elevated while the other is left low.  Those who attempt

the material elevation of the species by material means

alone, do and must fail. Soul and body are bound

together for better and for worse. We cannot keep our

brother's body and neglect his soul.  If we would

rescue the falling, we must lay hold of the whole man.

On the other side, we will not succeed in influencing


412                    THE MERCIFUL.

 

the spirits of the wretched, if we are callous to their

bodily sufferings. If we leave behind unnoticed the

body's privations, we shall not reach the soul to deal with

its sins. The avenue to the spirit lies, in part at least,

through the bodily senses. If we do not approach in

that way, we shall be kept out, and our spiritual coun-

sels, however good, will strike against the closed door of

an anguished heart, and rebound in our faces, like an

echo that mocks us from a rock. The double rule for

the whole case is—as to the supply of spiritual destitu-

tion, this ought ye to do; and as to the healing of physi-

cal ailments, that ought ye not to leave undone.

            2. Every one must do his part in the great work of

helping those who cannot help themselves. To prescribe

other people's duty, and neglect our own, is a foolish and

mischievous habit. We must not suppose that philan-

thropists are a few eminent personages, standing out in

high relief on the page of history—men born, like poets,

to their destiny, whose office is to cure human ills on the

stage of a continent, and in sight of an admiring world.

Honour to the greatly good of every age and every coun-

try; but the bulk of mercy's work must everywhere be

done by the many thousands of kind hearts and busy hands

that are never heard of half a mile from home. Most of

the light we work by on the surface of the earth, comes to

us reflected from unnumbered objects near that get it from

the sun; and so the glimpses of compassion that fall in

all directions on the poor, from every heart that basks in

the love of Jesus, constitute, by aggregate of many little

things, the bulk and substance of the effort that mitigates


                              THE MERCIFUL.                            413

 

the sufferings of men. Let every man do his best in the

place which he holds, and with the means at his disposal

            3. Mercy to the poor must be a law operating from

within, and not a system adopted from without.  Where

ever genuine coin is going, counterfeits appear.  There

is a species of charity, got up according to the fashion,

that flourishes in benevolent societies abroad, and comes

home to snarl at a servant who is doing her best to

please. You never find the law of gravitation acting on

a steeple, and forgetting itself in the shaft of a coal-pit

where it is out of sight.  The laws of God never put on

appearances, whether they be the laws that are stamped

on creation, or those that are written by the Spirit on a

renewed heart. If there be truth in the inward parts,

the outward actions will be consistent.  The legs of the

lame are unequal, and he makes no progress in this race

of benevolence. I would estimate at a low price the

philanthropy of the man who has spent ten thousand on

an hospital, and oppresses his own dependents in detail.  

The ills of life are real; we must have a real love to cope

with them. Mercy to man must have its spring in the

heart, that its streams may be ever ready to flow, wher-

ever there is an opening. The sufferings of humanity

cannot be conjured away by a name: a nature is needed

to secure a steady supply of mercy, and that nature must

be new. Howard was a man of great mercy, but he was

not a great man. He was not great, but he was true,

and the secret of his power lay in his truth. It was

conscious union to Christ as a sinner saved that animated,

sustained, and directed him Mercy in him acted by a


414                         THE MERCIFUL.

 

law of the new creature, and it was steady like nature's

other laws. It acted on every object and at every time,

without partiality and without hypocrisy. If the un-

healthful cottages of Cardington had been left wet above

and wet below, while Howard sewed the rents from

their squalid inmates, he would not have been able to

have poured the balm of humanity on the barbarism of

British and continental prisons. Inconsistency, if he had

been guilty of it, would have unnerved his arm and un-

dermined his influence. Neglect of smaller oppressions

near his own dwelling would have shorn the locks of his

strength; and the mighty Philistines whom he met

abroad, instead of falling by his sling, would have put

out his eyes and made sport of his blindness.  It was

love that led him forth, and truth that made him strong.

If a man is not merciful all over, he is not merciful at all.

            4. There must be regulating wisdom as well as motive

power. There must indeed be an impulse in order to

energetic action, but we must not act by impulses. We

need all the power that we possess; it is a pity that any

of it should be wasted. To give alms to little children

sent by profligate parents to enact misery on the street

is money thrown away, and mercy too. Of late years

much has been done to indoctrinate the public mind on

this subject. Whether the public have learned the lesson

yet, I know not; but certainly they have been often

taught that it is. useless and mischievous to give pence

indiscriminately to beggars on the street or the wayside.

This doctrine is true, but it does not contain the whole

truth in regard to that subject. One side of truth may


                           THE MERCIFUL.                              415

 

become practically falsehood. We need the counsels

which have of late been largely addressed to us from

many quarters, to harden us against giving by sudden

impulse to persons unworthy or unknown; but we don't

need any lecture to repress within our hearts the move-

ments of mercy to the poor. I am jealous for myself

and others, lest, in leaning hard over from the side of

lavish expenditure on the unworthy, we should fall, on

the other side, into a callous indifference to human suffer-

ings.  We must not check the impulse because counter-

feit poverty has abused our compassion and wasted our

gifts. Direct it upon genuine poverty, and stimulate it

to the utmost. Such is the constitution of the world,

and the condition of men, that if the relations are rightly

managed, the rich may get more good from the presence of

the poor than the poor get from the gifts of the rich. The

flow of compassion is healthful; obstruction in the channel

breeds disease in the moral system. It is both health

and happiness to a mother to have a helpless, little, living

thing hanging on her breast, and drawing its sustenance

from her body. To want it would be neither a pleasure

nor a profit.  The poor we have always with us, and it

is a double blessedness to give.

            The discovery of abuses should induce us not to seal

the fountain, but to direct the stream. Where no water

runs, no ships, with their precious burdens, navigate the

interior of a country. Even where there is it stream

constant and strong, it does not follow that you can have

safe and profitable inland navigation. If the water turn

sharply round a corner here, and leap white and frothing


416                           THE MERCIFULL.

 

over a rock there, it will be better to entrust no ship to

its impetuous movements. What then? Then neither

entrust your floating treasures to that wayward stream,

nor let the country lie lean for want of commerce. Dig

a canal.  Your canal will do nothing for you dry, and

your river will do nothing for you although it is filled to

the brim; but let, the river into the canal, and forthwith

ply your traffic. The whole neighbourhood will be en-

riched. Let us beware of either checking or wasting any

impulse of humanity; we need it all, and more. Direct

it wisely, and let it flow.

            5. Another important rule for the practice of mercy

to the poor is, whatever share you may be able to take

in the wholesale benevolence of organized societies, you

should also carry on a retail business, by personal contact

with the sufferers. Societies and pecuniary contributions

are necessary, in their own place; but even although they

should satisfy the wants of the receive; the greater bless-

ing to the giver cannot come through these channels.

Personal contact—face to face, heart to heart, hand to

hand—this is the best way to do good, and get good.

We are indebted to our Father in heaven for all the good

that we enjoy; and as our goodness reacheth not unto

Him, He has made the account payable to the poor. No

man has any right to lift himself up in pride; no man

has any right even to count that he condescends, when he

enters the houses, and listens to the tale of the sufferers.

He is only owning, we cannot say paying, a lawful debt.

It is simply the act of honouring his Maker. When he

has done all, he is an unprofitable servant.


                    THE TWO DEPARTURES, ETC.        417

 

 

                                           XCIV.

 

        THE TWO DEPARTURES—THE HOPEFUL AND

                                 THE HOPELESS.

 

 

"The wicked is driven away in his wickedness:

            but the righteous hath hope in his death."—xiv. 32.

 

 

THE peculiarities of the Hebrew proverb shine conspicu-

ously in this specimen. The two arms of the sentence

are nicely balanced, and move round a common centre.

There is a mixture of similarity and difference, which

makes the meaning perspicuous and the expression me-

morable. But if there is peculiar beauty in the words,

there is terrible sublimity in the thoughts which they

convey. Unspeakably great are the two things which

the two balanced branches of this proverb hold in their

hands. These two arms, outstretched and opposite, direct

the observer, by their piercing finger-points, to Death on

this side, and Life on that—endless both. Looking this

way, you read the doom of the wicked; that way, you

descry the hope of the just.

            1. The doom, of the wicked—He "is driven away in

his wickedness." As smoke is driven by the wind, so will

the wicked perish in the day of wrath. I think I hear

arguments fitfully muttering through pauses of the blast,

that "God would not make creatures, and then tor-

ment them." The smoke complains that it is hard to be

driven by the wind; and yet it is driven by the wind.


418                   THE TWO DEPARTURES—

 

This very word will justify the Judge, and shut the con-

vict's mouth. It comes to warn the wicked, that he may

turn and live. If he come out of his wickedness at

God's invitation, he will not be driven away in it by His

wrath.

            We are not able to form a right conception of what it

is to be and abide in wickedness. Because it is so near

us, we do not know it. If it were a body standing be-

fore us, we could examine its proportions, and describe its

appearance; but because it is a spirit transfused through

us, we remain ignorant of its character and power. To

be in sin is a fearful condition; yet he who is in it may

be at ease. A ship is lying in a placid river when win-

ter comes, and is gradually frozen in. The process was

gentle, and almost imperceptible. There was no commo-

tion and no crash. The ice crept round, and closed in

upon the ship without any noisy note of warning. If it

had been a foreign body brought by human hands to

bind the ship withal, the operation would have been ob-

served. If men, whether professing to be friends or foes,

had carried trees or stones, and piled them round the

ship, suspicion would have been aroused; the owners

would have heaved their anchors, and worn her down to

the sea for safety. As it was, no one approached the

ship. Her own element, the water on which she lay,

closed and held her. It was not possible to prevent that

lockfast, except by taking the ship out of the river in

time.

            But what is the effect? The ship is not shaken.  No

creaking is heard—no strain is felt. She feels firm and


                THE HOPEFUL AND THE HOPELESS.           419

 

easy. Even when the pines of the neighbouring forest

are bending to the blast, she sits unmoved in her solid

bed.  That bed she has made for herself, and therefore it

fits her.  This is very like the wicked in his iniquity,

and before he is driven away. When it closed round

him, he was not afraid. It was not some danger threat-

ening from without, and pressed forward by another. It

was his own; it was what he had always been in. It

was his element.  Silently and surely, that which he lived

in congealed and locked him fast. Nor is he in any way

alarmed. In its closing embrace, it does not thwart him.

It humours him all round. It yields to every feature of

his character, only it holds him fast. He is more at ease

now than others, or than himself was before. His neigh-

bours may be sometimes agitated, but he is at peace.

He stands steady in his element, and no ripple disturbs

its surface.

            When the ice of the river goes away, the imbedded

ship goes with it.  It is a dreadful departure. The rup-

ture of the ice on a large river is one of the sublimest

scenes in nature. The water swells beneath; the ice 

holds by the crooked banks a while; but after a period

of suspense, the flood prevails, and the trembling rending

mass gives way. Reeling icebergs and foaming yellow

waves tumble downward in tumultuous heaps, and the

ship is swept away like a feather on a flood.

            If we had a sense for perceiving spiritual things, the

most heart-rending sight in the world would be a sinner

set fast in his element, and the flood, of wrath secretly

swelling from beneath. They speak of angels weeping,


420                     THE TWO DEPARTURES—

 

and the figure may in its own place be useful; but we

do not need the aid of such a supposition here. The

Lord of angels wept indeed, when he saw sinners fixed

and easy in their sin, with the tide of divine vengeance

rolling forward to drive them away. That same Jesus

looks in pity now on the wicked in their wickedness, and

continues sweetly calling, "Come unto me."

            No remedy is possible to the wicked in his wickedness;

and the remedy which consists in bringing him out, he is

not willing to accept.  For all who are sinners—that is,

for all men—a rending is prepared. Every one must

either be riven out of his wickedness, or driven away in

it. This tearing or that every one must endure. The

alternative is, Come out of her, my people; or, Be par-

taker of her plagues. Pain there must be; either the

pain of the new birth, or that of the final judgment.  A

process is ready for drawing the victims out. The power

is Christ's love; the means the gospel message. Some

lie locked fast in wickedness, who know that wrath is

coming, and yet refuse to let the line of that Almighty

love be laid about their souls. Why do they choose

death rather than life? Because they are so closely

bedded in their element, that to be drawn out of it is to

be torn asunder. Such is the feeling of the captive soul:

and the answer which the possessing spirit suggests is,

"What have we to do with thee, thou Jesus; art thou

come to torment us before the time?" But the love of

Christ, when a repentant sinner casts himself confidently

upon it, melts the fastenings away, and makes the out,

gorne easy. When from the iron icy bondage, hope, the


             THE HOPEFUL AND THE HOPELESS.             421

 

anchor of the soul, goes out, and up, and into Jesus our

Advocate within the veil, not only is ultimate safety

secured, but present severance accomplished.  Down the

line of hope's hold flows a melting heat from the Sun of

righteousness, which loosens the gripe of sin, and sets the

soul at liberty. But the sentence remains sure; he who

is not so drawn out of wickedness, will be driven away

in it.

            2. The hope of the just.—"The righteous hath hope in

his death." Certain it is that the faithful in ancient

times believed God, and it was counted to them for

righteousness; but at this distance of time we are not

able to determine how far their faith was like an appetite

of the renewed nature, and how far it attained to under-

standing also. The regenerate in the childhood state of

the Church were alive, and lived upon the sincere milk 

of the word, and grew thereby, whatever the measure of

their knowledge or their ignorance may have been. The

righteousness that justified Abraham was the same as

that which Paul put on. The righteous of those days

knew that, by birth-right and personal desert, he was on

the same standing with the wicked, and that the difference

was due to redeeming love. If Israel's first-born were not

destroyed like Egypt's, it was because of the Lamb's blood

marking their dwellings. On the ground of a perfect

righteousness imputed, an actual obedience begins. He is

bought with a price, and therefore serves the Lord. By

birthright he was a child of wrath: he has been "be-

gotten again into a living hope." This man has hope at

the time when humanity needs it most--when death draws


422               THE TWO DEPARTURES—

 

near. A friend in need is a friend indeed. Stars are a

grateful mitigation of the darkness; but we do not want

them by day. Hope, always lovely, is then sweetest

when it beams from heaven through the gloom that

gathers round the grave.

            There are diversities in this department of the Spirit's

ministry.  Some even of the children depart under a

cloud, and others in sunlight, softer at the setting than it

was at noon. Some are glad when they are passing

through the flood, and others do not begin their song till

they are safe on the farther shore. The various notes of

their varied experience, when the redeemed tell the story

of their life, will give richer music to the hymns of

heaven.

            There is one class of experiences of which many ex-

amples occur. A youth who has been seeking first the

kingdom of God with alternate hope and fear, but without

violent emotions on either side, comes suddenly and un-

expectedly in sight of death. There is at first, and for a

time, a very great tumult of alarm. When that tumult

subsides, a peace that passeth all understanding keeps the

heart and mind, until the spirit is released from flesh, and

darts away.

            The ship has set sail, and kept on her course many

days and nights, with no other incidents than those that

are common to all. Suddenly land appears; but what

the character of the coast may be, the voyagers cannot

discern through the tumult.   The first effect of a neat

approach to land is a very great commotion in the water,

It is one of the coral islands of the. South Pacific, en-

 

 


            THE HOPEFUL AND THE HOPELESS.              423

 

circled by a ring of fearful breakers at some little dis-

tance from the shore. Forward the ship must go. The

waves are higher and angrier than any they have seen in

the open sea. Partly through them, partly over them,

they are borne at a bound; strained and giddy, and

almost senseless, they find themselves within that sentinel

ridge of crested waves that guard the shore, and the por-

tion of sea that still lies before them is calm and clear like

glass.  It seems a lake of paradise, and not an earthly

thing at all. It is inexpressibly sweet to lie on its bosom,

after the long voyage and the barrier ridge. All the

heavens are mirrored in the water, and along its edge

lies a flowery land. Across the belt of sea the ship glides

gently, and gently touches soon that lovely shore.

            It is thus that I have seen a true pilgrim thrown into

a great tumult when the shore of eternity suddenly ap-

peared before him. A great fear tossed and sickened

him for some days; but when that barrier was passed,

he experienced a peace deeper, stiller, sweeter, than any

be ever knew before. A little space of life's voyage

remained, after the fear of death had sunk into a calm,

and before the immortal felt the solid of eternal rest.  On

life's sea, as yet, was the spirit lying, but the shaking had

ceased; and when at last the spirit passed from a peace-

ful sea to a peaceful land, the change seemed slight. The

righteous had hope in his death. "Blessed hope!"

 


424                  THE TRUTH IN LOVE.

 

 

                                       XCV.

 

 

                        THE TRUTH IN LOVE.

 

 

"A soft answer turneth away wrath;

            but grievous words stir up anger."—xv. 1.

 

 

WE greatly need an instrument capable of turning away

wrath, for there is much wrath in the world to be turned

away. It is assumed here that the anger is sinful in

character, or excessive in degree; but there are occasions

in which a good man may do well to be angry. It is

recorded of Jesus once, in the days of his flesh, that He

was angry; but the explanation is immediately added,

He was "grieved for the hardness of their hearts" (Mark

iii. 5). It is safe for a disciple "to follow the Lamb

whithersoever He goeth." If all our anger were grief

for sin, and grief for sin our only anger, the emotion

wound neither displease God nor disturb men. If our

love were like Christ's, our anger would be like his too.

In the meantime, most of the anger that prevails is sin-

ful and dangerous. On that side there is especial need

for watching and prayer, lest we enter into temptation.

            We are on dangerous ground when we are contending

in our own cause. A man may indeed, through divine

grace, rule his spirit aright even there; but it is his wis-

dom to be jealous of himself.  Self-love ties a bandage

on the eyes of the understanding, and then leads the

blind astray. A great part of the danger lies in the sud-

denness of the explosion. To obtain a delay of a few

 


                   THE TRUTH IN LOVE.                         425

 

moments is half of the victory.  "He that is slow to

wrath is of great understanding; but he that is hasty of

spirit exalteth folly" (xiv. 29).  Some knowledge of

human nature is displayed in the advice once given to a

passionate man, to count a hundred after he felt the fire

burning within, before he permitted it to blaze forth by

his lips. The monitor shrewdly calculated that in many

instances the passion would cool down during the inter-

val, and the explosion be altogether prevented. An im-

provement on that method might be suggested. Instead of

securing merely an empty interval, fill it with an air that

the flame of anger cannot live in—fill  it up with prayer.

Employ the same space of time in prayer for yourself and

for the offenders. Nehemiah adopted this method to

subdue another passion. He was oppressed by fear.

The Jewish captive betrayed his patriotism before the

despot, and symptoms of the royal displeasure appeared.

"Then was very sore afraid." Then and there, how-

ever, notwithstanding the monarch's presence, Nehemiah

"prayed to the God of heaven." Courage came, and

wisdom with it. He asked skilfully, and obtained his

desire (Neh. ii) The same resource would afford deliver-

ance when anger is the passion that suddenly assails.

After praying to "our Father" for your offending brother

and yourself; you may speak to him safely. "The

Christian's vital breath" is fatal to all the spawn of the

serpent. Pass your resentment through a period of com-

munion with Him who bought you with his blood, and it

will come out like Christ'' a simple grief for a brother's

sin, and a holy jealousy for truth.

 


426                      THE TRUTH IN LOVE.

 

            In some such way should we treat our aim anger; but

how shall we meet the anger of other people. Turn it

away by a soft answer.  In man as he is, a sally of wrath

from another seems to produce a similar sally in return,

as naturally as a mountain-side gives back an echo of

the sound that strikes it. If you listen to the quarrel of

two men or women who have neither been purified by

Christian principle, nor smoothed by a liberal education,

you will observe the working of the natural law. Wrath

generates grievous words, and grievous words aggravate

the wrath that produced them. The reciprocating series

goes on, until some accident break the chain, or the sounds

die away from the exhaustion of the combatants.

            There is an instrument for receiving anger on, so as to

make it harmlessly expend its force, like lightning led

by a conducting rod into the ground; and even if there

be a rebound at first, the force gradually melts away, like

a dying echo from a single sound. That patent shield

for warding off the sharp strokes of wrath, is "a soft

answer." Christianity makes it of the solid metal, and

education supplies at a cheaper rate a plated article, use-

ful as long as it lasts, and as far as it goes. The prin-

ciple: of softness increasing the strength of a defence is

common to the physical and moral departments of the

world. The Roman battering ram, when it had nearly

effected a breach in walls of solid stone, was often baffled

by bags of chaff and beds of down skilfully spread

out to receive its stubborn blow. By that stratagem  

the besieged obtained a double benefit, and the be-

siegers suffered a double disappointment. The strokes

 


                       THE TRUTH IN LOVE;                            427

 

that were given proved harmless, and the engine was

soon withdrawn. In our department a similar law

exists, and a similar experience will come out of it.  If

the person assailed hang out in time his soft answer;

the first stroke will not hurt him; and the second will

never come.  

            In the effort to avoid one extreme, however, we must

beware lest we fall into another.  Mere softness will not

do. The down beds of the besieged. Jews within Jeru-

salm would have been no defence against the battering

rams of Titus, if there had not been a solid wall of

masonry behind them. A glove of velvet should cover

the hand of iron, but an iron hand should be within the

velvet glove. Faithfulness naked, may in its effect be

little better than vulgar obstinacy; and gentleness un-

supported, may, in the miscellaneous strife of time, count  

for nothing more than lack of courage; but when faith-

fulness is gentle in its form, and gentleness faithful in its

substance, these two meet helps, made one in a marriage

union, constitute the best preparation which man's im-

perfect state permits, for meeting rough jostling in the

moving crowd of life. Truth alone may be hated; and

love alone despised: men will flee from the one, and

trample on the other; but when truth puts on love, and

love leans on truth, in that hallowed partnership lies the

maximum of defensive moral power within the reach of

man in the present world.

            There is a contrivance to prevent the destructive colli-

sion of carriage against carriage in a railway train, which

human beings might profitably imitate.  On the outer

 


428                  THE TRUTH IN LOVE.

 

extremities, where they are liable to strike against each

other, there is a soft spongy covering. Within, and at

the very centre, is a spring, strong, but yielding; yield-

ing, but strong. There is both a soft surface without,

and an elastic spring in the heart. If the impact of an-

other body were met by mere hard unyielding strength,

both would fly into splinters at the first shock. On the

other hand, if there were in one of the carriages softness

only, with no recuperative spring, the others would soon

drive it from the rails, or crush it to pieces. The de-

stroyed carriage would be lost to the owners, and its

debris would cause additional mischief These machines

move in company like ourselves, and they move quickly,

and jostle each other by the way. The managers have

marked the danger, and made skilful provision for esca-

ing it. They take advantage of the great pervasive law,

that firmness and softness united in each is the best

arrangement for the safety of all.

            The apparatus employed to keep these mute racers off

each other, in the swift course of life, might almost be

counted a modification of our great law, "speaking the

truth in love." Although the two departments lie so

far asunder, a parallelism is plainly perceptible in their

laws. One inventing mind is at the fountainhead of

creation, and the so-called discoveries, in the various de-

partments, are so many drops from its diverging streams.

It seems a reversal of the usual order, and yet we are

assured the rule is reasonable and useful;—observe how

carriages on a railway keep their own places, kindly

meeting, yet firmly repelling every blow from a neigh-

 


                         THE TRUTH IN LOVE.                        429

 

hour in the rapid race. Observe how they do, and do

likewise.

            A little girl came to her mother one day and inquired,

in a tone which showed that the words were not words

of course, if every word of the Bible is true. "Yes, child;

but wherefore do you ask?" "Because the Bible says, a

soft answer turneth away wrath; and when Charlotte

spoke to me in a rage, I gave her a soft answer, but it

did not turn away her wrath." It was a natural, but a

childish thought. It is true that such is the tendency of

a soft answer,—in that direction it puts forth a power;

but, alas, that power is often exerted without effect on a

callous heart.  "The goodness of God," says the Scrip-

ture, "leadeth thee to repentance" (Romans ii. 4). Many

who distinctly feel its drawing refuse to follow it. The

obstinate perish unrepentant, and yet the word is true.

            The most important practical rule, for our guidance

under provocation, is to consider, not how hard a blow

we can deal in return, consistently with a character for

Christian meekness, but how far we can yield, without

being faithless to truth and to God. In view of our own

corruption, and the temptations that abound, a leaning to

this side seems the safest for a Christian man. But when

all rules fail to reach the case, let us have recourse to

the great Example. He walked over our life-path, in

order that we might have His foot-prints to guide us.

Alike in love of good, and resentment against evil, the

Master's conduct is the disciple's rule.

            "Be ye followers of God, as dear children" (Eph. v. 1).

The word is "imitators," and we know what that means

 


430                     THE TRUTH IN LOVE.

 

in the instincts and habits a loved and loving child.

Our Father in heaven has given us an example, and if we

have the spirit of dear children, Our constant impulse and

tendency will be to do as. He has done.  This lifts out

eyes at once to the deepest counsel of eternity—the

greatest event of time. To the enmity against Himself,

which reigned and raged in human kind, God replied by

sending His Son, to seek and save them. Look unto

Jesus, and learn, the answer from heaven to the auger of

earth. Jesus is God's answer to the wrath of man. The

answer is soft, and yet it is the greatest power that can

be applied—the only power that will prevail to turn the

wrath away, and win the wrathful back to love.

 

 

Please report any errors to Ted Hildebrandt: 

                                      ted.hildebrandt@gordon.edu