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ALONE
WITH GOD
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Spiritual Answers and Reasons
for Faith |
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CHASTISEMENT
Whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth every
son whom he receiveth."
HEBREWS xii. 6.
IT is hardly possible to
suppose that any shall read these lines who have not drunk
of the bitter cup of affliction. Some may have even
endured a great fight of afflictions. Squadron after
squadron has been drawn up in array, and broken its
regiments on the devoted soul. It has come to us in
different forms, but in one form or another it has come to
us all. Perhaps our physical strength and health have been
weakened in the way; or we have been racked with
unutterable anguish in mind or body; or have been obliged
to see our beloved slowly slipping from the grasp of our
affection, which was condemned to stand paralyzed and
helpless by. In some cases, affliction has come to us in
the earning of our daily bread, which has been procured
with difficulty and pain, whilst care has never been long
absent from our hearts, or want from our homes. In others,
homes which were as full of merry voices as the woods in
spring of sweet-voiced choristers are empty and silent.
Ah, how infinite are the shades of grief! how extended the
gamut of pain! How many can cry with the Psalmist,
"All thy waves and thy billows are gone over me!
We can see clearly the reason of all
this suffering. The course of nature is out of joint.
Man's sin has put not himself only, but the whole course
of nature into collision with the will and law of God; so
that it groans and travails in its pains. Selfishness has
also alienated man from his fellows, inciting him to amass
all that he can lay hands on for himself, oblivious to the
bitter sufferings of those around him, and careless of
their woes. Whilst behind the whole course of nature there
is the incessant activity of malignant spirits, who, as in
the case of Job, may be plotting against us, reveling in
any mischief, which, for some great reasons, they are
permitted to work to our hurt.
There are different ways in which
affliction may be borne. Some despise it (ver. 5).
They refuse to acknowledge any reason in themselves for
its infliction. They reject the lesson it was designed to
teach. They harden themselves in stoical indifference,
resolving to bear it with defiant and desperate courage. Some
faint under it (ver. 5). They become despondent
and dispirited, or lose heart and hope. Like Pliable, they
are soon daunted, and get out of the Slough of Despond
with as little cost as possible to themselves; or, like
Timorous and Mistrust, turn back from the lion's roar. We
ought to be in subjection. Lifting the cup meekly
and submissively to our lips; calmly and trustfully saying
"Amen"to every billow and wave; lovingly trying
to learn the lesson written on the page of trial; and
bowing ourselves as the reeds of the river's edge to the
sweeping hurricane of trial. But this, though the only
true and safe course, is by no means an easy one.
Subjection in affliction is only
possible when we can see in it the hand of the Father of
spirits (ver. 9). So long as we look at the second
causes, at men or things, as being the origin and source
of our sorrows, we shall be filled alternately with
burning indignation and hopeless grief. But when we come
to understand that nothing can happen to us except as our
Father permits, and that, though our trials may originate
in some lower source, yet they become God's will for us as
soon as they are permitted to reach us through the defense
of his environing presence, then we smile through our
tears; we kiss the dear hand that uses another as its rod;
we realize that each moment's pain originates in our
Father's heart; and we are at rest. Judas may seem to mix
the cup, and put it to our lips; but it is nevertheless
the cup which our Father giveth us to drink, and shall we
not drink it? Much of the anguish passes away from life's
trials as soon as we discern our Father's hand; then------
Affliction becomes chastisement.
There is a great difference between these two.
Affliction may come from a malignant and unfriendly
source; chastisement is the work of the Father, yearning
over his little children, desiring to eliminate from their
characters all that is unlovely and unholy, and to secure
in them entire conformity to his character and will. But,
before you can appropriate the comfort of these words, let
me earnestly ask you, my reader, whether you are a child?
None are children in the sense of which we are
speaking now, save those who have been born into the
divine family by regeneration, through the grace of the
Holy Spirit. Of this birth, faith is the sure sign and
token; for it is written: "Those that believe on his
name are born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh,
nor of the will of man, but of God." Are you a child?
Does the Spirit witness with your spirit that you are born
of God? Can you look up into his face and cry, "Abba,
Father"? If so, you are surrounded by your Father's
tender, loving care. Nothing can reach you without passing
through the cordon of his protection. If, therefore,
affliction does lay its rough hand upon your arm,
;arresting you, then be sure that it must first have
obtained permission from One who loves you infinitely, and
who is willing to expose both you and himself to pain
because of the vast profit on which he has set his heart.
All chastisement has a
Purpose. There is nothing so absolutely
crushing in sorrow as to feel one's self drifting at the
mercy of some chance wave, sweeping forward to an unknown
shore. But a great calm settles down upon us when we
realize that life is a schoolhouse, in which we are being
taught by our Father himself, who sets our lessons as he
sees we require them. The drill-sergeant has a purpose in
every exercise; the professor of music, an object in every
scale; the farmer, an end in every method of husbandry.
"He does not thresh fitches with a sharp threshing
instrument, neither is a cart-wheel turned about upon
cummin; but the fitches are beaten out with a staff, and
the cummin with a rod." So God has a purpose in every
pain he permits us to feel. There is nothing fortuitous or
empirical or capricious in his dealings with his own.
The purposes which chastisement
subserves are very various. Of course we know that the
penalty of our sins has been laid on the head of our great
Substitute; and that, therefore, we are forever relieved
from their penal consequences. But though that is so, yet
often chastisement follows on our wrong-doing; not that we
expiate the wrong-doing by suffering, but that we may be
compelled to regard it in its true light. Amid the pain we
suffer we are compelled to review our past. The
carelessness, the unwatchfulness, the prayerlessness which
have been working within us pass slowly before our minds.
We see where we had been going astray for long months or
years. We discover how deeply and incessantly we had been
grieving God's Holy Spirit. We find that an alienation had
been widening the breach between God and our souls, which,
if it had proceeded further, must have involved moral
ruin. Perhaps we never see our true character until the
light dies off the landscape, and the clouds overcast the
sky, and the wind rises moaningly about the house of our
life.
Times of affliction lead to heart-searchings,
and we become increasingly aware of sins of which we had
hardly thought at all. And even though the offense may be
confessed and put away, so long as affliction lasts there
is a subdued temper of heart and mind, which is most
favorable to religious growth. We cannot forget our sin so
long as the stroke of the Almighty lies on our soul; and
we are compelled to maintain a habit of holy watchfulness
against its recurrence.
It is also in affliction that we learn
that fellowship with the sufferings of Christ and that
sympathy for others which are so lovely in true
Christians. That is not the loftiest type of character
which, like the Chinese pictures, has no background of
shadow. Even Christ could only learn obedience by the
things that he suffered, or become a perfect High-Priest
by the ordeal of temptation. And how little can we enter
into the inner depths of his soul, unless we tread the
shadowed paths, or lie prostrate in the secluded glades of
Gethsemane! We who attempt to assuage the griefs of
mankind must ourselves be acquainted with grief, and
become men of sorrows.
Be sure, then, that not one moment's
pain is given you to bear that could have been dispensed
with. Each has been the subject of divine consideration
before permitted to come, and each will be removed
directly its needed mission is fulfilled.
Special discipline is evidence of
special love (ver. 6). It costs us much less to
fling our superfluities on those we love than to cause
them pain. Indulgence is a sign not of intense but of
slender love. The heart that really and wisely loves will
bear the pain of causing pain, will incur the risk of
being misjudged, will not flinch from misrepresentation
and reproach; from all of which a less affection would
warily shrink. It is because our Father loves us that he
chastens us. He would not take so much trouble over us if
we were not dear to his heart. It is because we are sons
that he sets himself to scourge us. But oh, how much he
suffers as he wields that scourge of small cords! Yet,
hail each blow; for each sting and smart cries to thee
that thou art being received into the inner circle of
love.
When suppliants for his healing help
came to our Lord, for the most part he hastened to their
side. But on one occasion he lingered yet two days in the
place where he was. He dared to face the suspicion of
neglect and the loving impeachment of bereaved love,
because he loved Martha and her sister and
Lazarus. He loved them too much to be satisfied with doing
small things for them, or revealing only fragments of his
great glory. He longed to enrich them with his precious
revelation of resurrection life. But his end could only be
reached at the cost of untold sorrow, even unto death.
Lazarus must die, and lie for two days in the grave,
before his mightiest miracle could be wrought. And so he
let the thunder-cloud break on the home lie loved, that he
might be able to flash on it light which broke into a
rainbow of prismatic glory.
If you are signally visited with
suffering, such as you cannot connect with persistence in
carelessness or neglect, then take it that you are one of
Heaven's favorites. It is not, as men think, the child of
fortune and earthly grace, dowered with gifts in prodigal
profusion, who is best beloved of God; but oftenest the
child of poverty and pain and misfortune and heart-break.
"If ye be without chastisement, whereof all are
partakers, then ye are bastards and not sons." Oh, ye
who escape the rod, begin seriously to ask whether indeed
ye be born again!
Pain is fraught with precious
results (vv. 10, ii). " Not joyous but
grievous: nevertheless afterward." How full of
meaning is the "afterward." Who shall estimate
the hundredfold of blessing from each moment of pain? The
Psalms are crystallized tears. The Epistles were in many
cases written in prison. The greatest teachers of mankind
have learned their most helpful lessons in sorrow's
school. The noblest characters have been forged in a
furnace. Acts which will live forever, masterpieces of art
and music and literature, have originated in ages of storm
and tempest and heart-rending agony. And so also is it
with our earthly discipline. The ripest results are
sorrow-born. "The path of sorrow, and that path
alone, Leads to the land where sorrow is unknown."
Holiness is the
product of sorrow, when sanctified by the grace of God.
Not that sorrow necessarily makes us holy, because that is
the prerogative of the divine Spirit; and, as a matter of
fact, many sufferers are hard and complaining and
unlovely. But that sorrow predisposes us to turn from the
distractions of earth to receive those influences of the
grace of God which are most operative where the soul is
calm and still, sitting in a veiled and darkened room,
whilst suffering plies body or mind. Who of us does not
feel willing to suffer, if only this precious result shall
accrue, that we may be "partakers of his
holiness" ?
Fruit is another product
(ver. 11). Where, think you, does the Husbandman of souls
most often see the fruit he loves so well, and hear the
tones of deepest trust? Not where his gifts are most
profuse, but where they are most meager. Not within the
halls of successful ambition or satiated luxury, but in
cottages of poverty, and rooms dedicated to ceaseless
pain. Genial almost to a miracle is the soil of sorrow.
Necessary beyond all count is the pruning-knife of pain.
Count, if you will, the precious kinds
of fruit. There is patience, which endures
the Father's will; and trust that sees the Father's
hand behind the rough disguise; and peace, that
lies still, content with the Father's plan; and righteousness,
that conforms itself to the Father's requirements; and
love, that clings more closely than ever to
the Father's heart; and gentleness, which
deals leniently with others, because of what we have
learned of ourselves.
Nor is it for very long. Jesus, who
endured the cross and shame and spitting, is now set down
on the right hand of the throne of God. Ere long we too
shall come out of the great tribulation, to sit by his
side. Every tear kissed away; every throb of anguish
stayed; every memory of pain allayed by God's anodyne of
bliss. The results will be ours forever. But sorrow and
sighing, which may have been our daily comrades to the
gates of the celestial city, will flee away as we step
across its threshold, unable to exist in that radiant
glory. "And God shall wipe away all tears from their
eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow nor
crying; neither shall there be any more pain."
"For I reckon that the sufferings of this present
time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which
shall be revealed in us." "For our light
affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a
far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory."
"Wherefore lift up the hands that hang down, and the
feeble knees."
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