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ALONE
WITH GOD
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Spiritual Answers and Reasons
for Faith |
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THE THINGS
THAT CANNOT BE SHAKEN
This word, Yet once more, signifieth the removing of
those things that are shaken, as of things that are
made; that those things which cannot be shaken may
remain."-HEBREWS xii. 27.
WHAT majesty there is in these
words! They bear the mint mark of Deity. No man could
presume to utter them; but they become the august speaker.
Their original setting is even more magnificent, as we
find them in the Book of Haggai: "Thus saith the Lord
of hosts; Yet once, it is a little while, and I will shake
the heavens, and the earth, and the sea, and the dry land;
and I will shake all nations, and the Desire of all
nations shall come."
These words were first spoken to
encourage the Jewish exiles on their return from Babylon
to their ruined Temple and city. The elder men wept as
they thought of the departed glories of earlier days, and
God comforted them, as he delights to comfort those who
are cast down. "Be comforted," said he in
effect, "there is a crisis coming, which will test
and overthrow all material structures; and in that
convulsion the outer form will pass away, however fair and
costly it may be, whilst the inner hidden glory will
become more apparent than ever; nay, amid all the sounds
of wreck and change, there will come the Desire of all
nations, the substance of which these material objects are
but the fading and incomplete anticipation."
These Hebrew Christians were living in
the midst of a great shaking. It was a time of almost
universal trial. God was shaking not earth only, but also
heaven. The Jewish tenure of Palestine was being shaken by
the Romans, who claimed it as their conquest. The
interpretation given to the Word of God by the rabbis was
being shaken by the fresh light introduced through the
words and life and death of Jesus. The supremacy of the
Temple and its ritual was being shaken by those who taught
that the true Temple was the Christian Church, and that
all the Levitical sacrifices had been realized in Christ.
The observance of the Sabbath was being shaken by those
who wished to substitute for it the first day of the week.
The first symptoms of this shaking
began when Jesus commenced to teach and preach in the
crowded cities of Palestine, and all people flocked about
him. The successive throes became more obvious when the
Jewish leaders sought to silence the Apostles and stay the
onward progress of the Church. The Book of the Acts of the
Apostles, and the Epistles, are full of evidence of the
intensity of that revolution which must have made many
godly people tremble for the Ark of God. And the climax of
all came in the fearful siege of Jerusalem, when, once and
forever, the Jewish system was shattered, the Temple
burned, the remaining vessels sunk in the Tiber, and the
Jews were driven from the city which was absolutely
essential for the performance of their religious rites.
The whole New Testament is witness to the throes of one of
the mightiest spiritual revolutions that ever happened; as
great in the spiritual sphere as the French Revolution was
in the temporal.
It was amidst these fires that this
Epistle was written. "Take heart," says the
inspired writer; "these shakings come from the hand
of God." Listen to his own words, I shake.
And they shall not last forever, yet this once; nor will
they injure anything of eternal worth and truth. He shakes
all things, that the material, the sensuous, and the
temporal may pass away; leaving the essential and eternal
to stand out in more than former beauty. But not a grain
of pure metal shall be lost in the fires; not a fragment
of heaven's masonry shall crumble beneath the shock.
In such a time we are living now.
Everything is being shaken and tested. But there is a
divine purpose in it all, that his eternal truth may stand
out more clearly and unmistakably, when all human
traditions and accretions have fallen away, unable to
resist the energy of the shock. And who will bewail this
too bitterly? Who shall weep because the winds strip the
trees of their old dead leaves, if only the new spring
verdure may be able to show itself? Who shall lament that
the heavy blow shatters the mold, if only the perfect
image shall stand out in complete symmetry? Who shall
mourn over the passing away of the heaven and the earth,
if, as they break up, they reveal beneath them the
imperishable beauty of the new heavens and the new earth
in which dwells Righteousness?
THEOLOGICAL SYSTEMS ARE BEING SHAKEN.
There was a time when men received their theological
beliefs from their teachers, their parents, or their
Church without a word of question or controversy. There
was none that moved the wing, or opened the mouth, or
chirped. It is not so now; the air is filled with
questionings. Men are putting into the crucible every
doctrine which our forefathers held dear. There is no
veneration shown for time honored creeds or theological
distinctions or doctrinal formularies. The highest themes,
such as the Nature of the Atonement, the Necessity of
Regeneration, the Duration of Future Punishment, are being
criticised in the public press.
Many children of God are very
distressed about this, and fear for the truth of the
Gospel. They speak as if there were no other agents in the
conflict but those of mortal birth. They lose sight of the
eternal issues at stake, and the unseen forces which are
implicated in the conflict. Is it likely that God will
allow his precious Gospel to be overshadowed or robbed of
all essential elements? Has he maintained it in its
integrity for these ages, and is he now suddenly become a
mighty man who cannot save? When it seemed as if
evangelical doctrine had died out of the world in the
sixteenth century, because it lingered only amid some
obscure and humble saints, he raised up one man, who
rolled back the tides of error, and reared once more the
standard of Gospel truth; and can he not do it again?
In these terrible shakings, not one jot
or tittle of God's Word shall perish; not one grain of
truth shall fall to the ground; not one stone in the
fortress shall be dislodged. But they are permitted to
come, partly to test the chaff and wheat as a
winnowing-fan; but chiefly that all which is temporal and
transient may pass away, whilst the simple truth of God
becomes more apparent, and shines forth unhidden by the
scaffolding and rubbish with which the builders have
obscured its symmetry and beauty. "The things which
cannot be shaken shall remain.
ECCLESIASTICAL SYSTEMS ARE BEING
SHAKEN. It is not enough that any religious system should
exist; it is asked somewhat rudely to show cause why it
should continue to exist. The spirit of the age is
utilitarian, and is reluctant to consider any plea for
mercy which is not based on a clear evidence of service
rendered to its pressing necessities.
The signs of this are abundantly
evident. Now it is the Disestablishment of the Church
which is proposed; a proposal which fills with horror
those who regard it as necessary for the maintenance of
Christianity in our midst. Teachers of religion are
challenged to show reason for assuming their office, or of
claiming special prerogatives. Methods of work are being
weighed in the balances; missionary plans trenchantly
criticised; religious services metamorphosed. Change is
threatening the most time-honored customs; and all this is
very distressing to those who have confused the essence
with the form, the jewel with the casket, the spirit with
the temple in which it dwells. But let us not fear. All
this is being permitted for the wisest ends. There is a
great deal of wood, hay, and stubble in all our structures
which needs to be burned up; but not an ounce of gold or
silver will ever be destroyed. The waves may wash off the
weed which has attached itself to the harbor wall; but
they will fail to start one constituent stone. The
simplicity of early Church life has been undoubtedly
covered over with many accretions which hinder the
progress of the Church and impede her work; and we may
hail any visitation, however drastic, which shall set her
free. But the Church herself is founded on a rock, and the
gates of hell shall never prevail against her.
Well was it for the Church of Christ
when the days of persecution lay sorely on her. Never was
she so pure, so spiritually powerful, as then. And if such
days should ever be allowed to return, and God were to
shake her fabric with the fierce whirlwinds of martyrdom,
there would be no need for anxiety. The time-servers, the
mere professors, the creatures of fashion would stand
revealed; but those who had experienced the work of God in
their souls would endure to the end, and their true
character would be manifested. "The things that
cannot be shaken will remain."
OUR CHARACTERS AND LIVES ARE CONSTANTLY
BEING SHAKEN. What a shake that sermon gave us which
showed that all our righteousnesses, on which we counted
so fondly, were but withered leaves! What a shake was that
commercial disaster which swept away in one blow the
savings and credit of years, that were engrossing the
heart, and left us only what we had of spiritual worth!
What a shake was that temptation which showed that our
fancied sinlessness was an empty dream, and that we were
as sensitive to temptation as those over whom we had been
vaunting ourselves.
What has been the net result of all
these shakings? Has a hair of our heads perished? The old
man has perished; but the inward man has been daily
renewed. The more the marble has wasted, the more the
statue has grown. As the wooden centers have been knocked
down, the solid masonry has stood out with growing
completeness. "The things which could not be shaken
have remained."
"Go on, great Spirit of God: shake
with thine earthquakes even more violently these
characters of ours, that all which is not of thee, but of
us, and therefore false and selfish, may be revealed and
overthrown, so that we may learn our true possessions. And
as we see them saved to us from the general wreck, we
shall know that, having been given us by thyself, they
must partake of thine own permanence and eternity. Let us
learn the worst of ourselves, that we may learn to prize
thy best." At the most these shakings are
temporary. "Only this once," child of God! Then,
nevermore!
THERE ARE A FEW THINGS WHICH CANNOT BE
SHAKEN. God's Word. Heaven and earth may
pass away; but God's Word-never! All flesh is grass, and
all the glory of man, his opinions, his pretensions, his
pomp and pride, as the flower of grass, beautiful, but
evanescent; but the Word of the Lord shall stand forever,
and this is the Word which by the Gospel is being
preached. Let us not fear modern criticism; it cannot rob
us of one jot or tittle of God's truth. Scripture will
shake it off, as the Apostle did the viper which fastened
on his hand, and felt no hurt.
God's Love. Our friends'
love may be shaken by a rumor, a moment's neglect, a
change in our estate; but God's love is like himself,
immutable. No storm can reach high enough to touch the
empyrean of his love. He never began to love us for
anything in ourselves, nor will he cease to love us
because of what he discovers us to be. The love of God,
which is in Jesus Christ our Lord, is unassailable by
change or shock.
God's Eternal Kingdom.
"We receive a kingdom which cannot be shaken."
Amid all our revolutions and political changes that
Kingdom is coming. It is assuming body and shape and
power. It is now in mystery, but it shall soon be
revealed. And it cannot be touched by any sudden attack or
revolt of human passion. "The God of heaven shall set
up a kingdom, which shall never be destroyed."
Let us count up our inalienable and
imperishable treasures; and though around us there is the
terror of the darkness or the pestilence of the noontide,
we shall be kept in perfect peace; as when some petty
sovereign eyes with equanimity the mob arising to sack his
palace, because long ago he sent all his treasures to be
kept in the strong cellars of the Bank of England.
This world of change and earthquake is
not our rest or home. These await us where God lives, in
the city which hath foundations, and in the land where the
storm rages not, but the sea of glass lies peacefully at
the foot of the throne of God. We may well brace ourselves
to fortitude and patience, to reverence and Godly fear;
since we have that in ourselves and yonder which partakes
of the nature of God, and neither thieving time can steal
it, nor moth corrupt, nor change affect.
It is out of a spirit like this that we
are able to offer service that pleases God. Too often
there is a self-assumption, a vainglory, an energy of the
flesh, that must be in the deepest degree objectionable to
his holy, loving eye. It partakes so much of the unrest
and chafe of the world around. But when once we breathe
the Spirit of the Eternal and Infinite, our hand becomes
steadier, our heart quieter, and we learn to receive his
grace. We do not agonize for it; we claim and use it, and
we serve God with acceptance, through the merits of Jesus
Christ our Lord.
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