 |
ALONE
WITH GOD
|
|
Spiritual Answers and Reasons
for Faith |
|
|
|
| |
THE
UNCHANGING SAVIOR
"Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, and to-day, and
forever." HEBREWS xiii. 8.
THREE times over in this
chapter, the closing chapter of an Epistle the study of
which has been so pleasant and helpful, the sacred writer
urges his readers to think kindly of those who ruled over
them. The full force of the Greek word is better
represented by the marginal rendering guide, than by the
word rule. But in any case he referred to those who were
the spiritual leaders and teachers of the flock. The three
injunctions are-Remember (ver. 7); Obey (ver. '7); Salute
(ver. 23).
It is a proud name for the Christian
minister to be called a leader. But unless
he has some other claim to it than comes from force of
character, eloquence, or intellectual power, his name will
be an empty sound, the sign of what he might be rather
than of what he is. Those who are qualified to lead other
men must be themselves close followers of Christ; so that
they may be able to turn to others and say, "Be ye
followers of me, even as I also am of Christ;"
"Be followers together with Me."
But the Christian minister must also
watch for souls (ver. 17). He is not sent to his charge to
preach great sermons, to elaborate brilliant orations, or
to dazzle their intellects; but to watch over their souls,
as the shepherd watches over his flocks scattered upon the
downs, while the light changes from the gray morning,
through the deep tints of the noon, into the last delicate
flush of evening far up on the loftiest cliffs. He must
indeed keep careful watch, for he must give an account in
the evening; of his hand every missing one will be
required.
It is told of the holy Melville, that
his wife would sometimes find him on his knees in the cold
winter night; and on asking him to return to bed, he would
reply, "I have got fifteen hundred souls in my
charge, and fear that it is going ill with some of
them." It is not difficult to remember or obey or
salute men like that. They carry their Master's sign upon
their faces. They are among Christ's most precious gifts
to his Church.
But there is this sorrow connected with
all human leaders and teachers. However dear and useful
they are, they are not suffered to continue by
reason of death. One after another they pass away
into the spirit world, to enter upon their loftier
service, to give in their account, to see the Master whom
they have loved. The last sermon lies unfinished on the
study table; but they never come there to complete it. The
final word is spoken. The closing benediction is given.
The ministry is done. But what a relief it is to turn from
men to Christ: from the constant change in human teachers
to the unchanging Master; from the under-shepherds who are
here today but gone tomorrow, to the chief Shepherd and
Bishop of souls who watches his sheep in the evening
shadows of this era, equally as in the first bright beams
of its Pentecostal morning!
This is the meaning of our writer (ver.
7). The verb is in the past tense: "Remember them
which had the rule over you, such as spoke unto you the
word of God: the end of whose life considering, imitate
their faith." Evidently they had been lately called
to witness the end of the life and ministry of some who
had been very precious to them. And, as their hearts were
sorrowing, their attention was turned from the changing
guide and leader to the ever-living, unchanging Lord,
Jesus Christ, who is the same yesterday, to-day, and
forever.
WHAT IS DENIED. It is denied that
either time or mood or circumstances or provocation or
death can alter Jesus Christ our Lord.
Time changes us. Your
portrait, taken years ago, when you were in your prime,
hangs on the walls of your home. You sometimes sadly
contrast it with your present self. Then the eye flashed
with fires which have been quenched with many tears. Then
the hair was raven and thick, which is now plentifully
streaked with the gray symptoms of decay. Then the face
was unseamed by care, unscarred by conflict; but now how
weary and furrowed! The upright form is bent, the step has
lost its spring.
But there is a greater difference
between two mental and two physical portraitures. Opinions
alter. The radical becomes conservative; temper changes,
and affections cool. Names and faces which used to thrill
are recalled without emotion. Faded chaplets lie where
once flowers of rarest texture yielded their breath in
insufficient adoration. Thus is it with those who are born
of woman. Time does for them what hardship and authority
and suffering would fail to effect. And sometimes the
question arises, Can time alter him whose portrait hangs
on the walls of our hearts, painted in undying colors by
the hands of the four Evangelists?
Of course, time takes no effect on God,
who is the f AM; eternal and changeless. But Jesus is man
as well as God. He has tenses in his being: the yesterday
of the past, the to-day of the present, the to-morrow of
the future. It is at least a question whether his human
nature, keyed to the experiences of man, may not carry
with it, even to influence his royal heart, that
sensitiveness to the touch of time which is characteristic
of our race. But the question tarries only for a second.
The moment it utters itself it is drowned by the great
outburst of voices which exclaim, "He is the same in
the meridian day of the present as he was in the yesterday
of his earthly life; and he will be the same when
to-morrow we shall have left far behind us the shores of
time and are voyaging with him over the tideless,
stormless depths of the ocean of eternity."
If we could ask the blessed dead if
they had found him altered from what they had expected him
to be from the pages of the holy Gospels, they would
reiterate the words of the angels-this same Jesus; they
would tell us that his hair is white as snow, not with
age, but with the light of intense purity; that his face
shines still as the sun in his strength, with no sign of
westering; and that his voice is as full as when he
summoned Lazarus from the grave, as mellifluous as when it
called Mary to recognize him. Time is foiled in Jesus. He
has passed out of its sphere, and is impervious to its
spell.
Moods change us. We know
people who are like oranges one day and lemons the next;
now a summer's day, and, again, a nipping frost; rock and
reed alternately. You have to suit yourself to their
varying mood, asking to-day what you would not dare to
mention to-morrow; and thus there is continual unrest and
scheming in the hearts of their friends.
But it is not so with Jesus. Never
tired, or put out, or variable. Without shadow cast by
turning. In his earthly life, wherever we catch sight of
him-on the mountainside, on the waters of the lake,
beneath the olive trees in the evening; in the synagogue,
or alone; at work in the sunlight, at prayer in the
moonlight, at supper in the upper room, he was always the
same Jesus. And the apparent exceptions when, for a
certain purpose, he entered his manner and made himself
strange, only brought his essential sameness into stronger
relief. And so is he to-day. And we shall become happy and
strong when we remove from all thought of others' moods or
our own, and settlt down under the unchanging empyrean of
his love.
Circumstances change us.
Men who in poverty and obscurity have been accessible and
genial, become imperious and haughty when they become
idolized for their genius and fawned on for their wealth.
The butler who would have done any favor for Joseph in the
prison forgot him when he was reinstated in the palace.
New friends, new spheres, new surroundings, alter men
marvelously.
What a change has passed over Jesus
Christ since mortal eyes beheld him! Crowned with glory
and honor; seated at the right hand of the Father;
occupied with the government of all worlds; worshiped by
the loftiest spirits. Can this be he who trod our world,
confessing his ignorance of times and seasons, surrounded
by a handful of the poor and despised, an outcast and a
sufferer? It is indeed he. But surely it were too much to
expect that he should be quite the same! Nay, but he is.
And one proof of it is that the graces which he shed on
the first age of the Church were of exactly the same
quality as those which we now enjoy.
We know that the texture of light is
unaltered; because the analysis of a ray, which has just
reached us from some distant star, whence it started as
Adam stepped across the threshold of Eden, is of precisely
the same nature as the analysis of the ray of light now
striking on this page. And we know that Jesus Christ is
the same as he was; because the life which throbbed in the
first believers resulted in those very fruits which are
evident in our own hearts and lives, all having emanated
from himself. He has to govern the worlds; but he is still
as accessible to the vilest, as gentle and tender-hearted,
as humble and lovely, as when that Jewish woman could not
restrain her envy of the mother who had borne him, and
when he sat to rest amid the sycamores of Bethany, and the
sisters rested by his feet.
Sin and provocation change us.
We forgive seven times, but draw the line at eight. Our
souls close up to those who have deceived our confidence.
We are friendly outwardly, but there is frost within. We
forgive, but we do not forget; and we are never the same
afterward as before. But sin cannot change Christ's heart,
though it may affect his behavior. If it could do so, it
must have changed his feelings to Peter. But the only
apparent alteration made by that sad denial was an
increased tenderness and considerateness. "Go, tell
my disciples, and Peter, that I am risen." "He
was seen of Cephas, then of the twelve." "He
said unto Peter, Lovest thou me?"
Your sins may be many and aggravated;
and you are disposed to think that you should give up all
profession of being his at all. But you do not know him.
He is not oblivious to your sins; he has noticed each one
with sharp pangs of pain. His eye has followed you in all
your way ward wanderings; but he is absolutely unchanged.
You are as dear to him as when, in the first blush of your
young hope, you knelt at his feet, and were clothed, as
the old warriors used to be, by a stainless tunic over
your armor of proof. Naught that you have said or done has
lessened his love by a single grain, or turned it aside by
a hair's-breadth. He loved you in eternity; he foreknew
all that you would be before he set his heart upon you; he
cannot be surprised by any sudden outburst of your evil.
You may be, but he cannot be; and he laid his account for
this, and more, when he undertook to redeem. Your sins, 0
child of God, can no more alter your Lord's heart than can
the petulance of a child alter its mother's.
WHAT IS AFFIRMED. He is the same in his
Person (Heb. i. 12). His vesture alters. He has exchanged
the gaberdine of the peasant for the robes of which he
stripped himself on the eve of his incarnation; but
beneath those robes beats the same heart as heaved with
anguish at the grave where his friend lay dead. We shall
yet see, though in resurrection glory, the face on which
stood the bead-drops of bloody sweat; and touch the hands
that were nailed to the cross; and hear the voice of the
Son of man. What does the mystery of the forty days teach
us, except this, that he carried with him from the grave,
and upward to his home, the identical body of his
incarnation-though the corruptible had put on
incorruption, and the mortal had put on immortality? Thus
he is the same as "Jesus."
He is also the same in his once
(Heb. vii. 24). Aaron died on Hor, and all his
successors in mystic procession followed him. Ancient
burying-grounds are closely packed with the remains of
priests, abbots, and fathers. The ashes of the shepherds
are mingled with those of their flocks. The office
remains, but the occupants pass. But Christ, as the
Anointed Priest, is ever the same. Unweariedly he pursues
his chosen work as the Mediator, Priest, and Inter cessor
of men. He does not fail, nor is he discouraged. Though
the great world of men neither knows nor heeds him, yet
does he bear it up upon his heart, as when he first
pleaded for his murderers from his cross. "Forgive
them, Father, forgive them !" is his unwearying
constant cry. And though the age be black with tempest and
red with blood, his pity wells up like one of those
perennial fountains which heat cannot scorch, nor cold
freeze; because they draw their supplies from everlasting
sources. He is the same as "Christ."
WHAT IT IMPLIES. It implies that he is
God. It implies, too, that the Gospels are a leaf out of
his eternal diary, and may be taken as a true record of
his present life. What he was, he is. He still sails with
us in the boat; walks in the afternoon with us to Emmaus;
stands in our rnidst at nightfall, opening to us the
Scriptures. He wakes our children in the morning with his
"Talitha cumi"; calls the boys to his knees;
watches them at their play; and rebukes those who would
forbid their Hosannas. He feeds us with bread and fish;
lights fires on the sands to warm us; shows us the right
side of the ship for our nets; and interests himself with
the results of our toils. He takes us with him to the brow
of the Transfiguration Mount, and into the glades of
Gethsemane.
When we are slow to believe, he is
slower still to anger. He teaches us many things,
graduating his lessons, according to our ability to
understand. When we cannot bear more, he shades the light.
When we strive for high places, he rebukes. When soiled,
he washes our feet. When in peril, he comes across the
yeasty waves to our help. When weary, he leads us aside to
rest.
Oh, do not read the Gospels as a record
merely of the past, but as a transcript of what he is ever
doing. Each miracle and parable and trait is a specimen of
eternal facts, which are taking place by myriads, at every
moment of the day and night; the achievements of the ever-
living, ever-working Lord. No lake without that figure
treading its waters. No storm without that voice mightier
than its roar. No meal without that face uplifted in
blessing, or that hand engaged in breaking. No grave
without that tender heart touched with sorrow. No burden
without those willing shoulders to share the yoke.
Oh, take me not back through the long
ages to a Christ that was! He is! He lives! He is here! I
can never again be alone, never grope in the dark for a
hand, never be forsaken or forlorn. Never need a Guide, a
Master, a Friend, or a Husband to my soul. I have him, who
suffices for uncounted myriads in the dateless noon of
eternity. He who was everything in the yesterday of the
past, and who will be everything in the to-morrow of the
future, is mine to-day; and at each present moment of my
existence-here, and in all worlds.
The Revised Version adds a significant
yea to this verse, to bring out the emphatic accentuation
which the writer lays upon the unchangeableness of Jesus.
It is well placed. And with what a thunder of assent might
that word be uttered! All who are of this opinion answer
YEA. First, the innumerable company of angels utters it;
then the spirits of just men made perfect reaffirm it;
then the universe of created things, the regularity of
whose laws and processes is due to it, bursts forth with
one great Amen. God himself says Amen; "for how many
soever be the promises of God, in him is the yea:
wherefore also through him is the Amen, unto the glory of
God.
|
|
|