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ALONE
WITH GOD
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Spiritual Answers and Reasons
for Faith |
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THE WORD OF
GOD AND ITS EDGE
"The Word of God is quick and powerful, and
sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the
dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints
and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and
intents of the heart." HEBREWS iv.
12.
WE all have to do with God.
"Him with whom we have to do." You
cannot break the connection. You must do with him as a
rebel, if not as a friend; on the ground of works, if not
on the ground of grace; at the great white throne, if not
in the fleeting days of time. You cannot do without God.
You cannot do as you would if there were no God. You
cannot avoid having to do with him; for even though you
were to say there was no God, doing violence to the
clearest instincts of your being, yet still you would
breathe his air, eat his provender, occupy his world, and
stand at last before his bar.
And, if you will pardon the materialism
of the reference, I will follow the suggestion of my text,
and say that the God with whom we have to do has eyes. "The
eyes of him with whom we have to do." "Thou
art a God that seest" was the startled exclamation of
an Egyptian slave girl whose childhood had been spent amid
the vast statues of gods who had eyes with far-away stony
stare, but saw not. And she was right. "The Lord
looketh from heaven; his eyes behold, his eyelids try, the
children of men."
Those eyes miss no one.
" There is not any creature not manifest in his
sight." The truest goodness is least obtrusive of
itself. It steals unnoticed through the world, filling up
its days with deeds and words of gentle kindness, which
are known only to heaven; and herein it finds its
sufficient reward. It prays behind closed doors; it
exercises a vigorous self-denial in secret; it does its
work of mercy by stealth. Thus the great blatant world of
men, with its trumpets and heralds and newspaper notices,
knows little of it, and cannot find the nooks where God's
wild flowers bloom in inaccessible heights, for his eye
alone. But the Father seeth in secret. The eyes of the
Lord are upon the righteous. His eyes run to and fro
throughout the whole earth, to show himself strong on
behalf of those whose heart is perfect toward him. Do you
want guidance? Look up! those eyes wait to guide by a
glance. Are you in sorrow? they will film with tears. Are
you going astray? they shall beckon you back, and break
your heart, as Peter's. You will come to find your heaven
in the light radiated by the eye of God, when once you
have learned to meet it, clad in the righteousness of
Jesus.
Unconverted reader, remember there
is no screen from the eye of God. His eyes are as a flame
of fire; and our strongest screens crackle up as thinnest
gauze before the touch of that holy flame. Even rocks and
hills are inadequate to hide from the face of him that
sits upon the throne. "Whither shall I go from
thy presence?" That question is unanswered,
and unanswerable. It has stood upon the page of Scripture
for three thousand years, and no one yet of all the
myriads that have read it has been able to devise a reply.
Heaven says, Not here. Hell says, Not
here. It is not among angels, or the lost, or in
the vast silent spaces of eternity. There is no creature
anywhere not manifest to his sight. He who made vultures,
able from immense heights to discern the least morsel on
the desert waste, has eyes as good as they. And think how
terrible are the eyes of God! When Egypt's chivalry had
pursued Israel into the depths of the sea, they suddenly
turned to flee. Why? Not because of thunder or lightning
or voice; but because of a look. "The Lord looked out
of the cloud, and troubled the Egyptians." Ah,
sinner, how terrible will it be for thee to abide under
the frown of God! "With the froward he will show
himself froward."
Those eyes miss nothing.
"All things are naked and opened unto the eyes of him
with whom we have to do." It is said of the Lord
Jesus, on one occasion, that he entered into Jerusalem,
and into the Temple; and when he had looked round
about on all things, he went out. It was his last,
long, farewell look. But note its comprehensiveness.
Nothing escaped it. We look only on parts of things, and
often look without seeing. But the Lord seeth not as man
seeth; for man looketh on the outward appearance, but the
Lord looketh on the heart. "Naked and
opened." This is a sacrificial phrase,
indicating the priestly act of throwing the victim on its
back before him, so that it lay, exposed to his gaze,
helpless to recover itself, ready for the knife. Ah, how
eagerly we try to hide and cloak our sin! We dare not pen
a truthful diary; we dread the illness which would unlock
our tongues in wholesale chatterings; we shrink from the
loving gaze of our dearest. We deceive man, and sometimes
ourselves; but not our great High-Priest. He sees all,
that secret sin; that lurking enmity; that closed chamber;
that hidden burglar; that masked assassin; that stowaway;
that declension of heart; that little rift within the
lute; that speck of decay in the luscious fruit. And thus
it is that men are kept out of the Canaan of God's rest,
because he sees the evil heart of unbelief which departs
from himself; and on account of which he swears now, as of
old, "they shall not enter into my rest."
Is it not a marvel that he who
knows so much about us should love us still? It
were indeed an inexplicable mystery, save for the truth of
the words which so sweetly follow: "Seeing, then,
that we have a great High-Priest." He has a priest's
heart. His scrutiny is not one of morbid or idle
curiosity, but of a surgeon, who intently examines the
source of disease with pity and tenderness, and resolves
to extirpate it as quickly and as painlessly as possible.
Is it not frequently the case that fuller knowledge will
beget love, which once seemed impossible? There are some
people whose faces are so hard, and their eyes so cold,
that we are instantly repelled; but if we knew all, how
they have been pierced and wounded, and disappointed, we
should begin to pity them, and pity is close kinsman to
love. The Saviour has known us from all eternity, our
downsittings and uprisings, our secret possibilities of
evil, our unfathomed depths of waywardness and depravity;
and yet he loves us, and will love us.
"He knows all, But loves us better
than he knows."
And out of this love, which wells up
perennially in the heart of Jesus, unfrozen by the winter
of our neglect, Unstanched by the demands of our
fickleness, there comes the stern discpline of which
this passage proceeds to speak. In majestic
phrase, the Apocalyptic seer tells how he beheld the Word
of God ride forth on his snow-white steed, arrayed in
crimson robes, whilst the many crowns of empire flashed
upon his brow. Two features are specially noted in his
appearance. His eyes were as a flame of fire; this
characteristic looks back over the words we have
considered. Out of his mouth goeth a sharp two-edged
sword; this looks forward to the words which now
invite us. We must never divorce these two. The eyes and
the sword. Not the eyes only; for of what use would it be
to see and not strike? Not the sword only; for to strike
without seeing would give needless pain, this would be
surgery blindfolded. But the searching tender vision,
followed by the swift and decisive flash of the sword of
amputation and deliverance. Oh, who will now submit to
that stroke, wielded by the gentle hand that often carried
healing and blessing, and was nailed to the cross; guided
by unerring wisdom, and nerved by Almighty strength? Not
death, but life and fruitfulness, freedom and benediction,
are all awaiting that one blow of emancipation. That sword
is the Word of God.
THE WORD OF GOD IS LIVING. The words he
speaks are spirit and life (John vi. 63). Wherever they
fall, though into dull and lifeless soil, they begin to
breed life, and produce results like themselves. They come
into the heart of an abandoned woman; and straightway
there follow compunction for the past, vows of amendment,
and the hasty rush to become an evangelist to others. They
come into the heart of a dying robber; and immediately he
refrains from blasphemy, and rebukes his fellow, and
announces the Messiahship, the blamelessness, the
approaching glory, of the dying Saviour. They come into
hearts worn out with the wild excesses of the great pagan
ages, and ill-content, though enriched with the spoils of
art and refinement and philosophy in the very zenith of
their development; and lo! the moral waste begins to
sprout with harvests of holiness, and to blossom with the
roses of heaven. If only those words, spoken from the lips
of Christ, be allowed to work in the conscience, there
will be forthwith the stir of life.
THE WORD OF GOD IS ACTIVE, i.e.,
energetic. Beneath its spell the
blind see, the deaf hear, the paralyzed are nerved with
new energy, the dead stir in their graves and come forth.
There are few things more energetic than life. Put a seed
into the fissure of a rock, and it will split it in twain
from top to bottom. Though walls and rocks and ruins
impede the course of the seedling, yet it will force its
way to the light and air and rain. And when the Word of
God enters the heart, it is not as a piece of furniture or
lumber. It asserts itself and strives for mastery, and
compels men to give up sin; to make up long standing
feuds; to restore ill-gotten gains; to strive to enter
into the strait gate. "Now ye are pruned," said
our Lord, "through the word that I have spoken to
you." The words of Christ are his winnowing-fan, with
which he is wont to purge his flour, whether in the heart
or the world. We are not, therefore, surprised that a
leading tradesman in a thriving commercial center said
that the visit of two evangelists, who did little else
than reiterate the Word of God, was as good as a revival
of trade, because it led so many people to pay up debts
which were reckoned as lost.
THE WORD OF GOD IS SHARP. Its sharpness
is threefold. It is sharp to pierce. On the
day of Pentecost, as Peter wielded the sword of the
Spirit, it pierced three thousand to the heart; and they
fell wounded to the death before him, crying, "What
shall we do?" Often since have strong men been
smitten to the dust under the effect of that same sword,
skillfully used. And this is the kind of preaching we
need. Men are urged to accept of the gift of God, and many
seem to comply with the invitation; but in the process of
time they fall away. Is not the cause in this, that they
have never been wounded to the death of their self-esteem,
their heart has never been pierced to the letting of the
blood of their own life, they have never been brought into
the dust of death? Oh for Boanerges! able to pierce the
armor of excuses of vain hopes, behind which men shield
themselves, that many may cry with Ahab, pierced between
the joints of the harness "Turn thine hand, and carry
me out of the battle, for I am wounded!"
It is sharp to divide.
With his sharp knife the priest was accustomed to dissect
the joints of the animal, and to open to view even the
marrow of the bones. Every hair was searched, every limb
examined; and thus the sacred gift was passed, and
permitted to be offered in worship. And God's scrutiny is
not satisfied with the external appearance and profession.
It goes far deeper. It enters into those mysterious
regions of the nature where soul and spirit, purpose,
intention, motive, and impulse, hold their secret court,
and carry on the hidden machinery of human life. Who can
tread the mysterious confines where soul and spirit touch?
What is the line of demarkation? Where does the one end,
and the other begin? We cannot tell; but that mystic Word
of God could cut the one from the other, as easily as the
selvage is divided from the cloth. It is at home in
distinctions which are too fine drawn and minute for human
apprehension. It assumes an office like that which Jesus
refused when he said, "Who made me a judge and
divider over you?"
It is sharp to criticise and
judge. "Quick to discern the thoughts and
intents of the heart." Christ is eager about these.
Because what a man thinks and intends in his heart, that
he will be sooner or later in life. We must expect to have
our most secret thoughts, relations, and purposes
questioned, criticised, and measured by the Word of God.
No court of inquiry was ever presided over by a more exact
inquisitor than this. The corpses of the dead past are
exhumed; the old lumber-rooms with their padlocked boxes
are explored; the accounts of bygone years are audited and
taxed. God is critic of all the secrets of the heart. As
each thought or intention passes to and fro, he searches
it. He is constantly weighing in the balance our thoughts
and aims, though they be light as air.
On one occasion, when Saul had spared
the spoils of a doomed city, together with its monarch,
the latter came to Samuel, not as a criminal, but
delicately, as a pampered friend. And Samuel said,
"As thy sword has made women childless, so shall thy
mother be childless among women. And Samuel hewed Agag in
pieces before the Lord." Thus it is that we have
spared too many of our sins, at the risk of our
irreparable rejection from the throne of true manhood and
righteousness. How much better to let Christ do his work
of amputation and excision! If we do not know ourselves,
let us ask him to search us. If we cannot cut off the
offending member, let us look to him to rid us of it.
Do not fear him; close after these
terrible words, as the peal of bells after the crash of
the storm on the organ at Freiburg, we are told that
"he was tempted in all points like as we are,"
and that " we have not a High~Priest who cannot be
touched with the feeling of our infirmities."
"Does she sing well?" asked the trainer of a new
operatic singer. "Splendidly," was the reply;
"but if I had to bring her out, I would first break
her heart." He meant that one who had not been broken
by sorrow could not touch the deepest chords of human
life. Ah! there is no need for this with our Lord Jesus;
reproach broke his heart. He understands broken hearts,
and is able to soothe and save all who come unto God by
him.
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