{"id":5035,"date":"2009-12-08T23:36:36","date_gmt":"2009-12-09T04:36:36","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/?p=5035"},"modified":"2011-12-07T23:02:33","modified_gmt":"2011-12-08T04:02:33","slug":"the-way-into-the-holiest-expositions-on-the-epistle-to-the-hebrews-1893","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/2009\/12\/08\/the-way-into-the-holiest-expositions-on-the-epistle-to-the-hebrews-1893\/","title":{"rendered":"The Way Into the Holiest: Expositions on the Epistle to the Hebrews, 1893"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>           Title: The Way Into the Holiest<br \/>\n      Creator(s): Meyer, F.B. (1847-1929)<\/p>\n<p>   LC Subjects:<\/p>\n<p>   The Bible<\/p>\n<p>   New Testament<\/p>\n<p>   Special parts of the New Testament<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>THE WAY INTO THE HOLIEST:<\/p>\n<p>  EXPOSITIONS OF THE EPISTLE TO THE<\/p>\n<p>  HEBREWS.<\/p>\n<p>F.B. Meyers B.A.,<\/p>\n<p>    Author of:<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Tried by fire&#8221;;  &#8220;The Life and Light of Men&#8221;;<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;The Psalms: Notes on Readings&#8221;;<\/p>\n<p>    etc., etc.<\/p>\n<p>    Baker Book House<\/p>\n<p>    Grand Rapids Mich.<\/p>\n<p>    1951<\/p>\n<p>   Edited by Larry Hendrickson<\/p>\n<p>   P.O. box 295 Lowell, OR 97452<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>PREFACE.<\/p>\n<p>   This Epistle bears no name of author, or designationof church. But it<br \/>\n   needs neither. In every sentence we can detect the Authorshipof the<br \/>\n   Holy Ghost: and feel that it has a message not to one age, but to all;<br \/>\n   not to one community, but to the universal Church.<\/p>\n<p>   We do not therefore discuss questions which are amply treated in every<br \/>\n   commentary; but set ourselves at once to derive those great spiritual<br \/>\n   lessons which are enshrined in these sublime words.<\/p>\n<p>   And probably there is no better way of vindicating the authority of the<br \/>\n   Pentateuch than by showing that it lay at the basis of the teaching of<br \/>\n   the early Church; and that especially the Book of Leviticus was the<br \/>\n   seed-plot of New Testament Theology.<\/p>\n<p>   There are two strong tendencies flowing around us in the present day:<br \/>\n   the one, to minimize the substitutionary aspect of the death of Christ;<br \/>\n   the other, to exaggerate the importance of mere outward rite. To each<br \/>\n   of these the study of this great Epistle is corrective. We are taught<br \/>\n   that our Lord&#8217;s death was a Sacrifice. We are taught also that we have<br \/>\n   passed from the realm of shadows into that of realities.<\/p>\n<p>   These chapters are altogether inadequate for the treatment of so vast a<br \/>\n   theme; but such as they are, they are sent forth,in dependence on the<br \/>\n   Divine Blessing, in the fervent hope that they may serve to make more<br \/>\n   clear and plain to those who would find and enter it,the Way into the<br \/>\n   Holiest of all.<\/p>\n<p>   F.B. MEYER.<\/p>\n<p>   Editors note.<\/p>\n<p>   I have endeavored to remain true to the original manuscript as was<br \/>\n   delivered to me.  I did, however, make some punctuation correction so<br \/>\n   as to make it more readable to the computer audience.  Namely, I<br \/>\n   replaced a few hyphens where I saw them confusing the text.  I also<br \/>\n   corrected a couple of obvious errors found in the original printing. If<br \/>\n   these changes cause any confusion  I, alone, take full responsibility;<br \/>\n   please e-mail me at  [1]rlarryh@teleport.com and I will make any<br \/>\n   corrections necessary.<\/p>\n<p>   Larry Hendrickson<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>I. THE WORD OF GOD.<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;GOD&#8211;who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the<br \/>\n    fathers by the prophets, hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son.&#8221;<br \/>\n    HEBREWS i. 1,2.<\/p>\n<p>   GOD.&#8221; What word could more fittingly stand at the head of the first<br \/>\n   line of the first paragraph in this noble epistle! Each structure must<br \/>\n   rest on him as foundation; each tree must spring from him as root; each<br \/>\n   design and enterprise must originate in him as source. &#8220;IN THE<br \/>\n   BEGINNING-GOD,&#8221; is a worthy motto to inscribe at the commencement of<br \/>\n   every treatise, be it the ponderous volume or the ephemeral tract. And<br \/>\n   with that name we commence our attempt to gather up some of the glowing<br \/>\n   lessons which were first addressed to the persecuted and wavering<br \/>\n   Hebrews in the primitive age, but have ever been most highly prized by<br \/>\n   believing Gentiles throughout the universal Church. The feast was<br \/>\n   originally spread for the children of the race of Abraham; but who<br \/>\n   shall challenge our right to the crumbs? In our endeavor to gather<br \/>\n   them, be thou, God, Alpha and Omega, First and Last. In the original<br \/>\n   Greek, the word &#8220;God&#8221;is preceded by two other words, which describe the<br \/>\n   variety and multitudinousness of his revelation to man. And the whole<br \/>\n   verse is full of interest as detailing the origin and authority of the<br \/>\n   Word of God, and as illustrating the great law which appears in so many<br \/>\n   parts of the works of God, and has been fitly called the law of VARIETY<br \/>\n   IN UNITY.<\/p>\n<p>   That law operates in Nature.   The earliest book of God. No thoughtful<br \/>\n   man can look around him without being arrested by the infinite variety<br \/>\n   that meets him on every side. &#8220;All flesh is not the same flesh; . . .<br \/>\n   there are celestial bodies, and bodies terrestrial: but the glory of<br \/>\n   the celestial is one; and the glory of the terrestrial is another. . .<br \/>\n   . One star differeth from another star in glory.&#8221; You cannot match two<br \/>\n   faces in a crowd; two leaves in a forest; or two flowers in the<br \/>\n   woodlands of spring. It w~ld seem as if the molds in which natural<br \/>\n   products are being shaped are broken up and cast aside as soon as one<br \/>\n   result has been attained. And it is this which affords such an infinite<br \/>\n   field for investigation and enjoyment, forbidding all fear of monotony<br \/>\n   or weariness of soul.<\/p>\n<p>   And yet, amid all natural variety, there is a marvelous unity. Every<br \/>\n   part of the universe interlocks by subtle and delicate links with every<br \/>\n   other part. You cannot disturb the balance anywhere without sending a<br \/>\n   shock of disturbance through the whole system. Just as in some majestic<br \/>\n   Gothic minster the same idea repeats itself in bolder or slighter<br \/>\n   forms, so do the same great thoughts recur in tree and flower, in<br \/>\n   molecule and planet, in diatom and man. And all this because, if you<br \/>\n   penetrate to Nature&#8217;s heart, you meet God. &#8220;Of him, and through him,<br \/>\n   and to him, are all things.&#8221; &#8220;There are diversities of operations; but<br \/>\n   it is the same God which worketh all in all.&#8221; The unity that pervades<br \/>\n   Nature&#8217;s temple is the result of its having originated from one mind,<br \/>\n   and having been effected by one hand, the mind and hand of God.<\/p>\n<p>   That law also operates throughout the Scriptures. There is as great<br \/>\n   variety there as in Nature. They were written in different ages. some<br \/>\n   in the days of &#8220;the fathers&#8221;; others at &#8220;the end of these days&#8221; for us.<br \/>\n   In the opening chapters, under the guidance of the Spirit of God, Moses<br \/>\n   has embodied fragments of hallowed tradition, which passed from lip to<br \/>\n   lip in the tents of the patriarchs; and its later chapters were written<br \/>\n   when the holy city, Jerusalem, had already been smitten to the ground<br \/>\n   by the mailed hand of Titus.<\/p>\n<p>   They were written in different countries: these in the deserts of<br \/>\n   Arabia; those under the shadow of the pyramids; and others amid the<br \/>\n   tides of life that swept through the greatest cities of Greece and<br \/>\n   Rome. You can detect in some the simple pastoral life of Palestine; in<br \/>\n   others the magnificence of Nebuchadnezzar&#8217;s empire. In one there is the<br \/>\n   murmur of the blue Aegean; and in several the clank of the fetter in<br \/>\n   the Roman prison-cell.<\/p>\n<p>   They were written by men belonging to various ranks, occupations, and<br \/>\n   methods of thought.. shepherds and fishermen, warriors and kings; the<br \/>\n   psalmist, the prophet, and the priest; some employing the stately<br \/>\n   religious Hebrew, others the Chaldaic patois, others the polished<br \/>\n   Greek-every variety of style, from the friendly letter, or sententious<br \/>\n   proverb, to the national history, or the carefully prepared treatise,<br \/>\n   in which thought and expression glow as in the fires&#8211;but all<br \/>\n   contributing their quota to the symmetry and beauty of the whole.<\/p>\n<p>   And yet, throughout the Bible, there is an indubitable unity. What else<br \/>\n   could have led mankind to look upon these sixty-six tractlets as being<br \/>\n   so unmistakably related to each other that they must be bound up<br \/>\n   together under a common cover? There has been something so unique in<br \/>\n   these books that they have always stood and fallen together. To<br \/>\n   disintegrate one has been to loose them all. Belief in one has led to<br \/>\n   belief in all. Their hands are linked and locked so tightly that where<br \/>\n   one goes all must follow. And though wise and clever men have tried<br \/>\n   their best, they have never been able to produce a single treatise<br \/>\n   containing that undefinable quality which gives these their mysterious<br \/>\n   oneness; and to lack which is fatal to the claims of any book to be<br \/>\n   included with them, or to demand the special veneration and homage of<br \/>\n   mankind.<\/p>\n<p>   The world is full of religious books; but the man who has fed his<br \/>\n   religious life upon the Bible will tell in a moment the difference<br \/>\n   between them and the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments. The eye<br \/>\n   can instantly detect the absence of life in the artificial flower; the<br \/>\n   tongue can immediately and certainly detect the absence or presence of<br \/>\n   a certain flavor submitted to the taste; and the heart of man, his<br \/>\n   moral sense, is quick to detect the absence in all other religious<br \/>\n   books of a certain savor which pervades the Bible, from Genesis, the<br \/>\n   book of beginnings, to the Apocalyptic announcements of the quick<br \/>\n   coming of the King.<\/p>\n<p>   And in the possession of this mysterious attribute, the Old and new<br \/>\n   Testaments are one. You cannot say there is more of it in the glowing<br \/>\n   paragraphs of the Apostle Paul than in the splendid prophecies and<br \/>\n   appeals of the great evangelic prophet, Isaiah. It is certainly in the<br \/>\n   Gospels; but it is not less in the story of the Exodus. Throughout,<br \/>\n   there is silence on topics which merely gratify curiosity, but on which<br \/>\n   other professed revelations have been copiously full. Throughout, there<br \/>\n   is no attempt to give instruction on science or nature; but to bend all<br \/>\n   energy in discussing the claims of God on men. Throughout, the crimson<br \/>\n   cord of sacrifice is clearly manifest, on which the books are strung<br \/>\n   together as beads upon a thread. And throughout, there is ever the<br \/>\n   subtle, mysterious, ineffable quality called Inspiration: a term which<br \/>\n   is explained by the majestic words of this opening verse, &#8220;God, having<br \/>\n   spoken of old to the fathers, hath at the end of these days spoken to<br \/>\n   us.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Scripture is the speech of God to man. It is this which gives it its<br \/>\n   unity. &#8220;The Lord, the mighty God, hath spoken, and called the earth.&#8221;<br \/>\n   The amanuenses may differ; but the inspiring mind is the same. The<br \/>\n   instruments may vary; but in every case the same theme is being played<br \/>\n   by the same master-hand. We should read the Bible as those who listen<br \/>\n   to the very speech of God. Well may it be called &#8220;the Word of God.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But the Scripture is God&#8217;s speech in man. The heavenly treasure is in<br \/>\n   vessels of earth. &#8220;He spake unto the fathers in the prophets. . . He<br \/>\n   hath spoken unto us in his Son.&#8221; It is very remarkable to study the<br \/>\n   life of Jesus, and to listen to his constant statements as to the<br \/>\n   source of his marvelous words. So utterly had he emptied himself, that<br \/>\n   he originated nothing from himself; but lived by the Father, in the<br \/>\n   same way as we are to live by him. He distinctly declared that the<br \/>\n   words he spake, he spake not of himself; but that words and works alike<br \/>\n   were the outcome of the Father, who dwelt within. Through those lips of<br \/>\n   clay the eternal God was speaking. Well might he also be called &#8220;the<br \/>\n   Word of God&#8221;!<\/p>\n<p>   And here the words of the prophets in the Old Testament are leveled up<br \/>\n   to the plane of the words of Jesus in the New. Without staying to make<br \/>\n   the least distinction, our writer tell us, beneath the teaching of the<br \/>\n   Spirit, that he who spake in the one spake also in the others. Let us<br \/>\n   then think with equal reverence of the Old Testament as of the New. It<br \/>\n   was our Saviour&#8217;s Bible. It was the food which Jesus loved, and lived<br \/>\n   upon. He was content to fast from all other food, if only he might have<br \/>\n   this. It was his one supreme appeal in conflict with the devil, and in<br \/>\n   the clinching of his arguments and exhortations with men. And here we<br \/>\n   discover the reason. The voice of God spake in the prophets, whose very<br \/>\n   name likens them to the up-rush of the geyser from its hidden source.<\/p>\n<p>   As God spake in men, it is clear that he left them to express his<br \/>\n   thoughts in the language, and after the method, most familiar to them.<br \/>\n   They will speak of Nature just as they have been accustomed to find<br \/>\n   her. They will use the mode of speech whether poem or prose which is<br \/>\n   most habitual to their cast of thought. They will make allusions to the<br \/>\n   events transpiring around them, so as to be easily understood by their<br \/>\n   fellows. But, whilst thus left to express God&#8217;s thoughts in their own<br \/>\n   way, yet most certainly the divine Spirit must have carefully<br \/>\n   superintended their utterances, so that their words should accurately<br \/>\n   convey his messages to men.<\/p>\n<p>   In many parts of the Bible there is absolute dictation, word for word.<br \/>\n   In others, there is divine superintendence guarding from error, and<br \/>\n   guiding in the selection and arrangement of materials: as when Daniel<br \/>\n   quotes from historic records; and Moses embodies the sacred stories<br \/>\n   which his mother had taught him beside the flowing Nile. In all, there<br \/>\n   is the full inspiration of the Spirit of God, by whom all Scripture has<br \/>\n   been given. Holy men spake as they were moved by the Holy Spirit, . . .<br \/>\n   searching what, or what manner of time, the Spirit of Christ which was<br \/>\n   in them did signify&#8221; (2 Tim. iii. i6 ; 2 Pet. i. 20, 21 ; 1 Pet. i.<br \/>\n   ii).<\/p>\n<p>   We need not deny that other men have been illuminated; but the<br \/>\n   difference between illumination and inspiration is as far as the east<br \/>\n   is from the west. Nor do we say that God has not spoken in other men,<br \/>\n   or in these men at other times; but we do say that only in the Bible<br \/>\n   has God given the supreme revelation of his will, and the authoritative<br \/>\n   rule of our faith and practice. The heart of man bears witness to this.<br \/>\n   We know that there is a tone in these words which is heard in no other<br \/>\n   voice. The upper chords of this instrument give it a timbre which none<br \/>\n   other can rival.<\/p>\n<p>   The revelation in the Old Testament was given in fragments (or<br \/>\n   portions). This is the meaning of the word rendered in the Old Version<br \/>\n   sundry times, and in the Revised divers portions. It refers, not to the<br \/>\n   successive ages over which it was spread, but to the numerous<br \/>\n   &#8220;portions&#8221; into which it was broken up. No one prophet could speak out<br \/>\n   all the truth. Each was intrusted with one or two syllables in the<br \/>\n   mighty sentences of God&#8217;s speech. At the best the view caught of God,<br \/>\n   and given to men through the prophets, though true, was partial and<br \/>\n   limited.<\/p>\n<p>   But in Jesus there is nothing of this piecemeal revelation. &#8220;In him<br \/>\n   dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily.&#8221; He hath revealed the<br \/>\n   Father. Whosoever hath seen him hath seen God; and to hear his words is<br \/>\n   to get the full-orbed revelation of the Infinite.<\/p>\n<p>   The earlier revelation was in many forms.  The earthquake, the fire,<br \/>\n   the tempest, and the still small voice-each had its ministry. Symbol<br \/>\n   and parable, vision and metaphor, type and historic foreshadowing, all<br \/>\n   in turn served the divine end; like the ray which is broken into many<br \/>\n   prismatic hues. But in Jesus there is the steady shining of the pure<br \/>\n   ray of his glory, one uniform and invariable method of revelation.<\/p>\n<p>   Oh the matchless and glorious Book, the Word of God to men-to us;<br \/>\n   revealing not only God, but ourselves; explaining moods for which we<br \/>\n   had no cipher; touching us as no other book can, and in moments when<br \/>\n   all voices beside wax faint and still; telling facts which we have not<br \/>\n   been able to discover, but which we instantly recognize as truth; the<br \/>\n   bread of the soul; the key of life; disclosing more depths as we climb<br \/>\n   higher in Christian experience: we have tested thee too long to doubt<br \/>\n   that thou art what Jesus said thou wast, the indispensable and precious<br \/>\n   gift of God.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>II. THE DIGNITY OF CHRIST<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Who being the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his person,<br \/>\n    and upholding all things by the word of his power, when he had by himself<br \/>\n    purged our sins, sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high. Being<br \/>\n    made so much better than the angels.&#8221;   HEBREWS i. 3, 4.<\/p>\n<p>                                       In<\/p>\n<p>   SON.-&#8221; He hath spoken unto us in his Son.&#8221; God has many sons, but only<br \/>\n   one Son. When, on the morning of his resurrection, our Lord met the<br \/>\n   frightened women, he said, &#8220;I ascend unto my Father and your Father,<br \/>\n   and my God and your God.&#8221; But, as he used the words, they meant<br \/>\n   infinitely more of himself than they could ever mean of man, however<br \/>\n   saintly or childlike.  No creature-wing shall ever avail to carry us<br \/>\n   across the abyss which separates all created from all uncreated life.<br \/>\n   But we may reverently accept the fact, so repeatedly emphasized, that<br \/>\n   Jesus is &#8220;the only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father&#8221;<br \/>\n   (John i. i8). He is Son in a sense altogether unique.<\/p>\n<p>   This term, as used by our Lord, and as understood by the Jews, not only<br \/>\n   signified divine relationship, but divine equality. Hence, on one<br \/>\n   occasion, the Jews sought to kill him, because he said that God was his<br \/>\n   Father, making himself equal with God (John v. i8). And he, so far from<br \/>\n   correcting the opinion-as he must have done instantly, had it been<br \/>\n   erroneous, went on to confirm it and to substantiate its truthfulness.<br \/>\n   The impression which Jesus of Nazareth left on all who knew him was<br \/>\n   that of his extreme humility; but here was a point in which he could<br \/>\n   not abate one jot or tittle of his claims, lest he should be false to<br \/>\n   his knowledge of himself, and to the repeated voice of God. And so he<br \/>\n   died, because he affirmed, amid the assumed horror of his judges, that<br \/>\n   he was the Christ, the Son of God. &#8220;He counted it not a prize to be on<br \/>\n   an equality with God.&#8221; It was his right.<\/p>\n<p>   His dignity is still further elaborated in the words which follow. He<br \/>\n   is THE BEAM OF THE DIVINE GLORY, for so might the word translated<br \/>\n   effulgence be rendered. We have never seen the sun, but only its<br \/>\n   far-traveled ray, which left its surface some few minutes before. But<br \/>\n   the ray is of the same constitution as the orb from which it comes; if<br \/>\n   you unravel its texture, you will learn something of the very nature of<br \/>\n   the sun; they live in perpetual and glorious unity. And as we consider<br \/>\n   the intimacy of that union, we are reminded of those familiar words,<br \/>\n   which tell us that though no man hath seen God at any time, yet he has<br \/>\n   been revealed in the Word made flesh. We hear our Master saying again<br \/>\n   the old, deep, mysterious words: &#8220;I and my Father are one. We will come<br \/>\n   and make our abode.&#8221; And we can sympathize with the evening hymn of the<br \/>\n   early Church, sung around the shores of the Bosphorus:<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;Hail! gladdening Light, of his pure glory poured,<\/p>\n<p>   Who is the Immortal Father, Heavenly, Blest.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   He is also THE IMPRESS OF THE DIVINE NATURE. The allusion here is to<br \/>\n   the impression made by a seal on molten wax; and as the image made on<br \/>\n   the wax is the exact resemblance, though on another substance, of the<br \/>\n   die, so is Christ the exact resemblance of the Father in our human<br \/>\n   flesh. And thus he was able to say, &#8220;He that bath seen me hath seen the<br \/>\n   Father.&#8221; The Life of Jesus is the Life of God rendered into the terms<br \/>\n   of our human life; so that we may understand the very being and nature<br \/>\n   of God by seeing it reproduced before us, so far as it is possible, in<br \/>\n   the character and life of Jesus. These two images complete each other.<br \/>\n   You might argue from the first, that as the ray is only part of the<br \/>\n   sun, so Christ is only part of God; but this mistake is corrected by<br \/>\n   the second, for an impression must be coextensive with the seal. You<br \/>\n   might argue from the second, that as the impression might be made on a<br \/>\n   very inferior material, so Christ&#8217;s nature was a very unworthy vehicle<br \/>\n   of the divine glory; but this mistake is corrected by the first, for a<br \/>\n   beam is of the same texture as the sun. Coextensive with God, of the<br \/>\n   same nature as God; thus is Jesus Christ.<\/p>\n<p>   He is, therefore, superior to angels (ver. 4).-Lofty as was the esteem<br \/>\n   in which Hebrew believers had been wont to hold those bright and<br \/>\n   blessed spirits, they were not for a moment to be compared with him<br \/>\n   whose majestic claims are the theme of these glowing words.<\/p>\n<p>   He surpasses them in the glory of Divine Nature. Turn to Psalm ii. -one<br \/>\n   of the grandest miniature dramas in all literature. Probably composed<br \/>\n   on some marked episode in the reign of David, there is a glow, a<br \/>\n   sublimity, in the diction which no earthly monarch could exhaust. We<br \/>\n   are not, therefore, surprised to find the early Church applying it to<br \/>\n   Christ (Acts iv. 25). In reading it, we first hear the roar of the mob<br \/>\n   and the calm decision of the throne; and then our attention is centered<br \/>\n   on him who comes forward, bearing the divine autograph to the decree<br \/>\n   which declares him Son. Nothing like this was ever said to angel,<br \/>\n   how-ever exalted in character or devoted in service. It is only<br \/>\n   befitting, then, that the unsinning sons of light should worship him;<br \/>\n   and as we hear the command issued, &#8220;Let all the angels of God worship<br \/>\n   him,&#8221; we are still further impressed by the immense distance between<br \/>\n   their nature and his.<\/p>\n<p>   Do we worship him enough?   During his earthly life he was constantly<br \/>\n   met by expressive acts of homage, which, unlike Peter in the house of<br \/>\n   Cornelius, he did not repress. The almost instinctive act of the little<br \/>\n   group, from which he was parted on the Mount of Olives in his<br \/>\n   ascension, was to worship him (Luke xxiv. 52). And no sooner had he<br \/>\n   passed to his home than there burst from the Church a tide of adoration<br \/>\n   which has only become wider and deeper with the ages. The Epistles, and<br \/>\n   especially the Book of Revelation, teem with expressions of worship to<br \/>\n   Christ. And the death-cries of martyrs must have familiarized the<br \/>\n   heathen mind with the homage paid to Christ by Christians. Of the<br \/>\n   worship offered him in catacombs, or in their secret meetings, amongst<br \/>\n   dens and caves, paganism was necessarily ignorant. But the behavior and<br \/>\n   exclamations of the servants of Jesus, arraigned before heathen<br \/>\n   tribunals, and exposed to the most agonizing deaths, were matters of<br \/>\n   public notoriety.<\/p>\n<p>   Some years ago, beneath the ruins of the Palatine palace, was<br \/>\n   discovered a rough sketch, traced in all probability by the hand of a<br \/>\n   pagan slave in the second century. A human figure, with the head of an<br \/>\n   ass, is represented as fixed to the cross; while another figure, in a<br \/>\n   tunic, stands on one side, making a gesture which was the customary<br \/>\n   pagan expression of adoration. Underneath this caricature ran the<br \/>\n   inscription, rudely written, Alexamenos adores his God. But what a<br \/>\n   tribute to the worship paid in those early days to our Saviour, amidst<br \/>\n   gibes and taunts and persecution!<\/p>\n<p>   The hymns which have come down to us ring with the same spirit. Pliny<br \/>\n   writes to tell the Emperor that the Christians of Asia Minor were<br \/>\n   accustomed to meet to sing praise to Christ as God. As each morning<br \/>\n   broke, the believer of those primitive days repeated in private the<br \/>\n   Gloria in Excelsis, as his hymn of supplication and praise: &#8220;Thou only<br \/>\n   art holy; thou only art the Lord; thou only, O Christ, with the Holy<br \/>\n   Ghost, art most high in the glory of God the Father.&#8221; The early Church<br \/>\n   did not simply admire Christ, it adored him.<\/p>\n<p>   Is not this a great lack in our private devotions?   We are so apt to<br \/>\n   concentrate our thoughts on ourselves; and to thank for what we have<br \/>\n   received. We do not sufficiently often forget our own petty wants and<br \/>\n   anxieties, and launch down our tiny rivulet, until we are borne out<br \/>\n   into the great ocean of praise, which is ever breaking in music around<br \/>\n   the person of Jesus. Praise is one of the greatest acts of which we are<br \/>\n   capable; and it is most like the service of heaven. There they ask for<br \/>\n   naught, for they have all and abound; but throughout the cycles of<br \/>\n   glory the denizens of those bright worlds fill them with praise. And<br \/>\n   why should not earthly tasks be wrought to the same music? We are the<br \/>\n   priests of creation; it becomes us to gather up and express the<br \/>\n   sentiments which are mutely dumb, but which await our offering at the<br \/>\n   altar of God.<\/p>\n<p>   Let a part of our private and public devotion be ever dedicated to the<br \/>\n   praise of Jesus; when we shall break forth into some hymn, or psalm, or<br \/>\n   spiritual song, singing and praising Christ with angels and archangels<br \/>\n   and all the hosts of the redeemed. On that brow, once thorn-crowned,<br \/>\n   let us entwine our laurels. Upon that ear, once familiarized with<br \/>\n   threats and scorn, let us pour the fullness of our adoring devotion. So<br \/>\n   shall we gain and give new thoughts of the supreme dignity of the Lord<br \/>\n   Jesus. &#8220;Thou art worthy to receive&#8230;honor.&#8221;<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>III THE GLORY OF CHRIST&#8217;S OFFICE<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;He hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name.&#8221;  Hebrews i. 4.<\/p>\n<p>   APART from Scripture, we should have been disposed to infer the<br \/>\n   existence of other orders of intelligent and spiritual beings besides<br \/>\n   man. As the order of creation climbs up to man from the lowest living<br \/>\n   organism through many various stages of existence, so surely the series<br \/>\n   must be continued beyond man, through rank on rank of spiritual<br \/>\n   existence up to the very steps of the eternal throne. The divine mind<br \/>\n   must be as prolific in spiritual as it has been in natural forms of<br \/>\n   life.<\/p>\n<p>   But we are not left to conjecture. From every part of Scripture come<br \/>\n   testimonies to the existence of angels. They rejoiced when the world<br \/>\n   was made, and they are depicted as ushering in with songs that new<br \/>\n   creation for which we long. They stood sentries at the gate of a lost<br \/>\n   paradise; and at each of the twelve gates of the New Jerusalem an angel<br \/>\n   stands (Rev. xxi. 12). They trod the plains of Mamre, and sang over the<br \/>\n   fields of Bethlehem. One prepared the meal on the desert sands for<br \/>\n   Elijah; another led Peter out of gaol and a third flashed through the<br \/>\n   storm to stand by the hammock where the Apostle Paul was sleeping (Acts<br \/>\n   xxvii. 23,24).<\/p>\n<p>   But in the mind of the pious Hebrew the greatest work which the angels<br \/>\n   ever wrought was in connection with the giving of the law. The children<br \/>\n   of Israel received the law &#8220;as it was ordained by angels&#8221; (Acts vii.<br \/>\n   53, R.v.). It was necessary, therefore, in showing the superiority of<br \/>\n   the Gospel to the Law, to begin by showing the superiority of him<br \/>\n   through whom the Gospel was given, over all orders of bright and<br \/>\n   blessed spirits, which, in their shining ranks and their twenty<br \/>\n   thousand chariots, went and came during the giving of the decalogue<br \/>\n   from the brow of Sinai (Psalm lxviii. 17).<\/p>\n<p>   It is not difficult to prove the Lord&#8217;s superiority to angels. It is<br \/>\n   twofold: in Nature and in Office.<\/p>\n<p>   In Nature.   &#8220;He hath by inheritance obtained a more excellent name<br \/>\n   than they&#8221; (ver. 4). In verse 7, quoted from Psalm civ. 4 (R.v. marg.),<br \/>\n   where they are distinctly spoken of as messengers and ministers, they<br \/>\n   are compared to winds and flames.-winds, for their swiftness and<br \/>\n   invisibility; flames, because of their ardent love. But how great the<br \/>\n   gulf between their nature, which may thus be compared to the elements<br \/>\n   of creation, and the nature of that glorious Being whom they are bidden<br \/>\n   to worship, and who is addressed in the sublime title of Son! (Heb.i.6;<br \/>\n   Psalm xcvii. 7.)<\/p>\n<p>   In Offce.  In verse 14 they are spoken of as ministering spirits, &#8220;sent<br \/>\n   forth to do service for the sake of them that shall inherit salvation&#8221;<br \/>\n   (R.v.). This liturgy of service is a literal fact. When struggling<br \/>\n   against overwhelming difficulties; when walking the dark, wild<br \/>\n   mountain-pass alone; when in peril or urgent need-we are surrounded by<br \/>\n   invisible forms, like those which accompanied the path of Jesus,<br \/>\n   ministering to him in the desert, strengthening him in the garden,<br \/>\n   hovering around his cross, watching his grave and accompanying him to<br \/>\n   his home. They keep pace with the swiftest trains in which we travel.<br \/>\n   They come unsoiled through the murkiest air. They smooth away the<br \/>\n   heaviest difficulties. They garrison with light the darkest sepulchers.<br \/>\n   They bear us up in their hands, lest we should strike our foot against<br \/>\n   a stone. Many an escape from imminent peril; many an unexpected<br \/>\n   assistance; many a bright and holy thought whispered in the ear, we<br \/>\n   know not whence or how-is due to those bright and loving spirits. &#8220;The<br \/>\n   good Lord forgive me,&#8221; says Bishop Hall, &#8220;for that, amongst my other<br \/>\n   offenses, I have suffered myself so much to forget the presence of his<br \/>\n   holy angels.&#8221; But valuable as their office is, it is not to be<br \/>\n   mentioned in the same breath as Christ&#8217;s, which is set down for us in<br \/>\n   this chapter.<\/p>\n<p>   He Is The Organ of Creation.   &#8220;By whom also he made the worlds.&#8221; To<br \/>\n   make that which is seen out of nothing, that is creation: it is a<br \/>\n   divine work; and creation is attributed to Christ. &#8220;By him were all<br \/>\n   things created that are in heaven and that are in earth.&#8221; &#8220;All things<br \/>\n   were made by him; and without him was not anything made that was made&#8221;<br \/>\n   (Col. i. 16; John i. 3). But the word here and in xi. 3 translated<br \/>\n   worlds means ages. Not only was the material universe made by him, but<br \/>\n   each of the great ages of the world&#8217;s story has been instituted by<br \/>\n   Jesus Christ.<\/p>\n<p>   When genius aspires to immortality, it leaves the artist&#8217;s name<br \/>\n   inscribed on stone or canvas: and so Inspiration, &#8220;dipping her pen in<br \/>\n   indelible truth, inscribes the name of Jesus on all we see-on sun and<br \/>\n   stars, flower and tree, rock and mountain, the unstable waters and the<br \/>\n   firm land; and also on what we do not see, nor shall, until death has<br \/>\n   removed the veil-on angels and spirits, on the city and heavens of the<br \/>\n   eternal world.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   This thought comes out clearly in the sublime quotation made in verse<br \/>\n   10 from Psalm cii. That inspired poem is obviously inscribed to<br \/>\n   Jehovah: &#8220;Thou, Jehovah, in the beginning hast laid the foundation of<br \/>\n   the earth; and the heavens are the work of thy hands.&#8221; But here,<br \/>\n   without the least apology, or hint of accommodating the words to an<br \/>\n   inferior use, it is applied directly to Christ. Mark the certainty of<br \/>\n   this inspired man that Jesus is Jehovah! How sure of the Deity of his<br \/>\n   Lord! And what a splendid tribute to his immutability!<\/p>\n<p>     Mark how the Epistle rings with the unchangeableness of Jesus, in his<br \/>\n   human love (xiii. 8), in his priesthood (vii. 24), and here in his<br \/>\n   divine nature (vv. 10-12). We live in a world of change. The earth is<br \/>\n   not the same today as it was ages ago, or as it will be ages on. The<br \/>\n   sun is radiating off its heat. The moon no longer as of yore burns and<br \/>\n   glows; she is but an immense opaque cinder, reflecting the sunlight<br \/>\n   from her disk. Stars have burnt out, and will. The universe is waxing<br \/>\n   old, as garments which from perpetual use become threadbare. But the<br \/>\n   wearing out of the garment is no proof of the waning strength or<br \/>\n   slackening energy of the wearer. Nay, when garments wear out quickest,<br \/>\n   it is generally the time of robustest youth or manhood. You wrap up and<br \/>\n   lay aside your clothes when they have served their purpose; but you are<br \/>\n   the same in the new suit as in the old. Creation is the vesture of<br \/>\n   Christ. He wraps himself about in its ample folds. Its decay affects<br \/>\n   him not. And, when he shall have laid it all aside, and replaced it by<br \/>\n   the new heavens and the new earth, he will be the same forevermore.<\/p>\n<p>   With what new interest may we not now turn to the archaic record, which<br \/>\n   tells how God created the heavens and the earth. Those sublime<br \/>\n   syllables, &#8220;Light, be!&#8221; were spoken by the voice that trembled in dying<br \/>\n   anguish on the cross. Rolling rivers, swelling seas, waving woods,<br \/>\n   bursting flowers, caroling birds, innumerable beasts, stars sparkling<br \/>\n   like diamonds on the pavilion of night-all newly made; all throbbing<br \/>\n   with God&#8217;s own life; and all very good: but, mainly and gloriously, all<br \/>\n   the work of those hands which were nailed helplessly to the cross,<br \/>\n   which itself, as well as the iron that pierced him, was the result of<br \/>\n   his creative will.<\/p>\n<p>   He Is The God of Providence.  &#8220;Upholding all things by the word of his<br \/>\n   power&#8221; (ver. 3). He is the prop which underpins creation. Christ, and<br \/>\n   not fate. Christ, and not nature. Christ, and not abstract impersonal<br \/>\n   law. Law is but the invariable method of his working. &#8220;In him all<br \/>\n   things live, and move, and have their being.&#8221; &#8220;By him all things<br \/>\n   consist.&#8221; He is ever at work repeating on the large scale of creation<br \/>\n   the deeds of his earthly life. And if he did not do them, they must be<br \/>\n   forever undone. At his word rainwater and dew become grape-juice; tiny<br \/>\n   handfuls of grain fill the autumn barns; storms die away into calm;<br \/>\n   fish are led through the paths of the sea; rills are sent among the<br \/>\n   mountains; and stars are maintained in their courses, so that &#8220;not one<br \/>\n   faileth.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   All power is given unto him in heaven and on earth. Why, then, art thou<br \/>\n   so sad? Thy best Friend is the Lord of Providence. Thy Brother is Prime<br \/>\n   Minister of the universe, and holds the keys of the divine<br \/>\n   commissariat. Go to him with the empty sacks of thy need; he will not<br \/>\n   only fill them, but fill them freely, without money and without price;<br \/>\n   as Joseph did in the old story of the days of the Pharaohs.<\/p>\n<p>   He Is The Saviour of Sinners.   &#8220;He purged our sins.&#8221; We shall have<br \/>\n   many opportunities of dwelling on this glorious fact. Jesus is Saviour,<br \/>\n   Redeemer, and the High-Priest. This is his proudest title; in this work<br \/>\n   no angel or created spirit can bear him rivalry. In the work of<br \/>\n   salvation he is alone. No angel could atone for sin, or plead our<br \/>\n   cause, or emancipate us from the thrall of evil.<\/p>\n<p>   But notice the finality of this act. &#8220;He made purging of sins &#8221; (see<br \/>\n   Greek). It is finished; forever complete; done irrevocably and finally.<br \/>\n   If only we are one with him by a living faith, our sins, which were<br \/>\n   many, are washed out; as an inscription from a slate, as a stain from a<br \/>\n   robe, as a cloud from the azure of heaven. Gone-as a stone into the<br \/>\n   bottomless abyss! Gone-never to confront us here or hereafter! &#8220;Who is<br \/>\n   he that condemneth? It is Christ that died, yea, rather, that is risen<br \/>\n   again; who is even at the right hand of God; who also maketh<br \/>\n   intercession for us&#8221; (Rom. viii. 34).<\/p>\n<p>   He Is Also King.   And on what does his kingdom rest?  What is the<br \/>\n   basis of that Royalty of which we constantly sing, in the noble words<br \/>\n   of the primitive Church?   &#8220;Thou art the King of Glory, Christ.&#8221; It is<br \/>\n   a double basis.<\/p>\n<p>   He is King by right of his divine nature.  &#8220;Thy throne, O God, is<br \/>\n   forever and ever.&#8221; Well might Psalm xlv. be entitled the poem of the<br \/>\n   lilies, as if to denote its pure and choice and matchless beauties. It<br \/>\n   celebrated the marriage of Solomon: but, after the manner of those<br \/>\n   inspired singers, its authors soon passed from the earthly to the<br \/>\n   heavenly; from the transient type of the earthly realm to the eternal<br \/>\n   and imperishable realities of the divine royalty of Christ.<\/p>\n<p>   He is also King as the reward of his obedience unto death.  &#8220;He became<br \/>\n   obedient unto death, even the death of the cross: wherefore, God also<br \/>\n   hath highly exalted him&#8221; (Phil. ii. 8,9). Satan offered him sovereignty<br \/>\n   in return for one act of homage, and Christ refused, and descended the<br \/>\n   mountain to poverty and shame and death; but through these things he<br \/>\n   has won for himself a Kingdom which is yet in its infancy, but is<br \/>\n   destined to stand when all the kingdoms of this world have crumbled to<br \/>\n   dust.<\/p>\n<p>   As Christ emerged from the cross and the grave, where he had purged our<br \/>\n   sins, it seemed as if words were addressed to him which David had<br \/>\n   caught ages before: &#8220;The LORD said unto my Lord, Sit on my right hand,<br \/>\n   until I make thine enemies thy footstool&#8221; (ver. 13; Psalm cx. I). This<br \/>\n   is the interpretation which the Apostle Peter, in the flush of<br \/>\n   Pentecostal inspiration, put upon these words (Acts ii. 34). And,<br \/>\n   accordingly, we are told, &#8220;He was received up into heaven, and sat on<br \/>\n   the right hand of God &#8221; (Mark xvi. 19). &#8220;He sat down on the right hand<br \/>\n   of the Majesty on high&#8221; (ver. 3).<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;He sat down.&#8221;  Love is regnant. The Lamb is in the midst of the<br \/>\n   Throne. Behold his majesty, and worship him with angels and archangels,<br \/>\n   and all the throng of the redeemed. Prostrate yourself at his feet,<br \/>\n   consecrating to him all you are and all you have. Comfort yourself also<br \/>\n   by remembering that he would not sit to rest from his labors in<br \/>\n   redemption, and in the purging away of sins, unless they were so<br \/>\n   completely finished that there was nothing more to do. It is all<br \/>\n   accomplished; and it is all very good. He has ceased from his works,<br \/>\n   because they are done; and therefore he is entered into his rest. And<br \/>\n   that word &#8220;until&#8221; is full of hope. God speaks it, and encourages us to<br \/>\n   expect the time when he shall have put down all rule and all authority<br \/>\n   and power; and when death itself, the last enemy, shall be destroyed (1<br \/>\n   Cor. xv. 24-26).<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>IV. DRIFTING<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;We ought to give the more earnest heed to the things which we have heard,<br \/>\n    lest at any time we should let them slip.&#8221;-HEBREWS ii. 1<\/p>\n<p>   SALVATION is a great word; and it is one of the keywords of this<br \/>\n   Epistle. Heirs of salvation (i.14); so great salvation (ii. 3); Captain<br \/>\n   of salvation (ii. 10); eternal salvation (v. 9); things that accompany<br \/>\n   salvation (vi.9); salvation to the uttermost (vii. 25); and his<br \/>\n   appearance the second time without sin unto salvation (ix. 28).<\/p>\n<p>   Sometimes it is salvation from the penalty of sin that is spoken of.<br \/>\n   The past tense is then used, of that final and blessed act by which,<br \/>\n   through faith in the blood of Jesus, we are forever placed beyond fear<br \/>\n   of judgment and punishment; so that we are to the windward of the<br \/>\n   storm, which spent itself on the head of our Substitute and<br \/>\n   representative on Calvary, and can therefore never break on us. &#8220;By<br \/>\n   grace have ye been saved through faith&#8221; (Eph. ii. 8, R.v.).<\/p>\n<p>   Sometimes it is salvation from the power of sin. The present tense is<br \/>\n   then employed, of the long and gradual process by which we are set free<br \/>\n   from evil, which has worked itself so deeply into our system. &#8220;Unto us<br \/>\n   which are being saved the word of the cross is the power of God&#8221; (1<br \/>\n   Cor. i. i8, R.v.). Sometimes salvation from all physical and other<br \/>\n   evils is implied. The future tense is then summoned into requisition,<br \/>\n   painting its splendid frescoes on the mists that hang so densely before<br \/>\n   our view, and telling us of resurrection in our Saviour&#8217;s likeness and<br \/>\n   presentation in his home, faultless, with exceeding joy. &#8220;We know that<br \/>\n   when he shall appear we shall be like him; for we shall see him as he<br \/>\n   is&#8221; (i John iii. 2). &#8220;Now is our salvation nearer than when we<br \/>\n   believed: the night is far spent; the day is at hand&#8221; (Rom. xlii. 11,<br \/>\n   12).<\/p>\n<p>   In the above passage the word &#8220;salvation&#8221;includes the entire process,<br \/>\n   from its beginning to its end; though perhaps it is especially<br \/>\n   tinctured with the first thought mentioned above. And if we follow out<br \/>\n   the figure suggested by the rendering of the first verse of this<br \/>\n   chapter in the Revised Version, we may compare salvation to a great<br \/>\n   harbor, past: which we are in danger of drifting through culpable<br \/>\n   neglect. &#8220;We ought to give the more earnest heed to the things that<br \/>\n   were heard, lest haply we drift away from them.&#8221; &#8220;How shall we escape<br \/>\n   if we neglect so great salvation!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   CONSIDER GOD&#8217;S SCHEME OF SALVATION AS A GREAT HARBOR.-After a wild<br \/>\n   night, we have gone down to the harbor, over whose arms the angry waves<br \/>\n   have been dashing with boom of thunder and in clouds of spray. Outside,<br \/>\n   the sea has been tossing and churning; the cloudrack driving hurriedly<br \/>\n   across the sky; the winds howling like the furies of olden fable. But<br \/>\n   within those glorious walls, the barks which had put in during the<br \/>\n   night were riding in safety; the sailors resting, or repairing rents in<br \/>\n   sail and tackle, whilst the waters were unstirred by the storm raging<br \/>\n   without. Such a refuge or harbor is a fit emblem of salvation, where<br \/>\n   tempest-driven souls find shelter and peace.<\/p>\n<p>   It is great in its sweep.   Sufficient to embrace a ruined world. Room<br \/>\n   in it for whole navies of souls to ride at anchor. Space enough for<br \/>\n   every ship of Adam&#8217;s race launched from the shores of time. He is the<br \/>\n   propitiation for the whole world.&#8221; &#8220;Whosoever will.&#8221; Already it is<br \/>\n   becoming filled. There a vessel once manned by seven devils, a pirate<br \/>\n   ship, but captured by our Emmanuel; and at her stem the name, Mary of<br \/>\n   Magdala. And here one dismasted, and almost shattered, rescued from the<br \/>\n   fury of the maelstrom at the last hour; on her stem the words, The<br \/>\n   Dying Thief And there another, long employed in efforts to sap the very<br \/>\n   walls of the harbor, and now flying a pennon from the masthead, Chief<br \/>\n   of Sinners and Least of Saints. And all around a forest of masts, &#8220;a<br \/>\n   multitude which no man can number, of all nations, and kindreds, and<br \/>\n   peoples, and tongues.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   It is great in its foundations.   The chief requisite in constructing a<br \/>\n   sea-wall is to get a foundation which can stand unmoved amid the<br \/>\n   heaviest seas. The shifting sand must be pierced down to the granite<br \/>\n   rock. But this harbor has foundations mighty enough to inspire strong<br \/>\n   consolation in those who have fled to it for refuge; the promise, and<br \/>\n   as if that were not enough, the oath, of God (Heb. vi. 17, 18). Hark,<br \/>\n   how the storm of judgment is rising out there at sea! &#8220;If the<br \/>\n   foundations be destroyed, what shall the righteous do?&#8221; Fear not! there<br \/>\n   is no room for alarm. The waves may wash off some mussel-shells, or<br \/>\n   tear away the green sea-lichen which has incrusted the moldings on the<br \/>\n   walls; but it would be easier to dig out the everlasting hills from<br \/>\n   their base than make one stone in those foundations start.<\/p>\n<p>   It was great in its cost.   By the tubular bridge over the Menai<br \/>\n   Straits stands a column, which records the names of those who perished<br \/>\n   during the construction of that great triumph of engineering skill.<br \/>\n   Nothing is said of the money spent, only of the lives sacrificed. And<br \/>\n   so, beside the harbor of our salvation, near to its mouth, so as to be<br \/>\n   read by every ship entering its inclosure, rises another column, with<br \/>\n   this as its inscription: &#8220;Sacred to the memory of the Son of God, who<br \/>\n   gave his life a sacrifice for the sin of the world.&#8221; It seems an easy<br \/>\n   thing to be saved: &#8220;Look unto me, and be ye saved.&#8221; But we do not<br \/>\n   always remember how much happened before it became so easy-the agony<br \/>\n   and bloody sweat; the cross and passion; the precious death and burial.<\/p>\n<p>   It has been great in its announcement.   The Jews thought much of their<br \/>\n   Law, because of the majesty of its proclamation. Spoken from the<br \/>\n   inaccessible cliffs of Sinai, with its beetling crags, its red<br \/>\n   sandstone peaks bathed in fire; while thunders and lightnings, thick<br \/>\n   clouds and trumpet-notes, were the sublime accessories of the scene. It<br \/>\n   was the authorized belief also that the Law was given through angels<br \/>\n   (Deut. xxxiii. 2 ; Acts vii. 53; Gal. iii. 19 ; Heb. ii. 2). And the<br \/>\n   thought that these strong and sinless beings were the medium of the<br \/>\n   Almighty&#8217;s will served, in the eyes of all devout Hebrews, to enhance<br \/>\n   the sanctity and glory of the Law.<\/p>\n<p>   Compared with this, how simple the accessories of the words of Jesus!<br \/>\n   Spoken in sweet and gentle tones, falling as the soft showers on the<br \/>\n   tender grass, and distilling quietly as the dew; not frightening the<br \/>\n   most sinful, nor startling little babes, they stole as the melody from<br \/>\n   silver bells, borne on a summer wind into the ears of men. The boat or<br \/>\n   hill-slope his pulpit; the poor his audience; the common incidents of<br \/>\n   nature or life his text.<\/p>\n<p>   But in reality there was a vast difference. The announcement of the Law<br \/>\n   was by angels. The announcement of the Gospel was by the Son. If the<br \/>\n   one were august, what must not the other have been! If the one were<br \/>\n   made sure by the most tremendous sanctions, what should not be said of<br \/>\n   the other! Proclaimed by the Lord; confirmed by Apostles and<br \/>\n   eye-witnesses; testified to by the Almighty himself, in signs and<br \/>\n   wonders, and gifts of the Holy Ghost how dare we treat it with<br \/>\n   contumely or neglect? Or, if we do, shall not our penalty be in<br \/>\n   proportion to the magnitude of our offense? &#8220;If the word spoken through<br \/>\n   angels proved steadfast, and every transgression and disobedience<br \/>\n   received a just recompense of reward; how shall we escape, if we<br \/>\n   neglect so great salvation?&#8221; &#8220;Therefore we ought to give the more<br \/>\n   earnest heed to the things that were heard, lest haply we drift away<br \/>\n   from them.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   It will be great in its penalties.   The tendency of our age is to<br \/>\n   minimize God&#8217;s righteous judgment on sin. It seems to be prevalently<br \/>\n   thought that, because our dispensation is one of love and mercy,<br \/>\n   therefore there is the less need to dread the results of sin. But the<br \/>\n   inspired writer here argues in a precisely contrary sense. Just because<br \/>\n   this age is one of such tender mercy, therefore sins against its King<br \/>\n   are more deadly, and the penalties heavier. In the old days no<br \/>\n   transgression, positive, and no disobedience, negative, escaped its<br \/>\n   just recompense of reward; and in these days there is even less<br \/>\n   likelihood of their doing so. The word spoken by the Son is even more<br \/>\n   steadfast (i.e., effective to secure the infliction of the punishment<br \/>\n   it announces) than the word of angels. My readers, beware! &#8220;He that<br \/>\n   despised Moses&#8217; law died without mercy under two or three witnesses; of<br \/>\n   how much sorer punishment shall he be thought worthy who hath trodden<br \/>\n   under foot the Son of God!&#8221; (x. 28, 29.)<\/p>\n<p>   THE DANGER TO WHICH WE ARE MOST EXPOSED.-&#8220;Lest haply we drift away&#8221;<br \/>\n   (ii. 2, R.v.). For every one that definitely turns his back on Christ,<br \/>\n   there are hundreds who drift from him. Life&#8217;s ocean is full of<br \/>\n   currents, any one of which will sweep us past the harbor-mouth even<br \/>\n   when we seem nearest to it, and carry us far out to sea.<\/p>\n<p>   It is the drift that ruins men.   The drift of the religious world. The<br \/>\n   drift of old habits and associations; which, in the case of these<br \/>\n   Hebrew Christians, was setting so strongly toward Judaism, bearing them<br \/>\n   back to the religious system from which they had come out. The drift of<br \/>\n   one&#8217;s own evil nature, always chafing to bear us from God to that which<br \/>\n   is earthly and sensuous. The drift of the pressure of temptation.<\/p>\n<p>   The young man coming from a pious home does not distinctly and<br \/>\n   deliberately say, &#8220;I renounce my father&#8217;s God.&#8221; But he finds himself in<br \/>\n   a set of business associates who have no care for religion; and, after<br \/>\n   a brief struggle, he relaxes his efforts and begins to drift, until the<br \/>\n   coastline of heaven recedes so far into the dim distance that he is<br \/>\n   doubtful if he ever really saw it.<\/p>\n<p>   The business man who now shamelessly follows the lowest maxims of his<br \/>\n   trade was once upright and high-minded. He would have blushed to think<br \/>\n   it possible for such things to be done by him. But he began by yielding<br \/>\n   in very trivial points to the strong pressure of competition; and when<br \/>\n   once he had allowed himself to be caught by the tide, it bore him far<br \/>\n   beyond his first intention.<\/p>\n<p>   The professing Christian who now scarcely pretends to open the Bible or<br \/>\n   pray came to so terrible a position, not at a single leap, but by<br \/>\n   yielding to the pressure of the constant waywardness of the old nature,<br \/>\n   and thus drifted into an arctic region, where he is likely to perish,<br \/>\n   benumbed and frozen, unless rescued, and launched on the warm<br \/>\n   gulf-stream of the love of God.<\/p>\n<p>   It is so easy, and so much pleasanter, to drift. Just to lie back, and<br \/>\n   renounce effort, and let yourself go whither the waters will, as they<br \/>\n   break musically on the sides of the rocking boat. But, ah, how<br \/>\n   ineffable the remorse, how disastrous the result!<\/p>\n<p>   Are you drifting? You can easily tell. Are you conscious of effort, of<br \/>\n   daily, hourly resistance to the stream around you, and within? Do the<br \/>\n   things of God and heaven loom more clearly on your vision? Do the<br \/>\n   waters foam angrily at your prow as you force your way through them? If<br \/>\n   so, rejoice! but remember that only divine strength can suffice to<br \/>\n   maintain the conflict, and keep the boat&#8217;s head against the stream. If<br \/>\n   not, you are drifting. Hail the strong Son of God! Ask him to come on<br \/>\n   board, and stay you, and bring you into port.<\/p>\n<p>   AN UNANSWERABLE QUESTION.  &#8220;How shall we escape, if we neglect?&#8221; The<br \/>\n   sailor who refuses lifeboat and harbor does not escape. The<br \/>\n   self-murderer who tears the bandages from his wounds does not escape.<br \/>\n   The physician who ridicules ordinary precautions against plague does<br \/>\n   not escape. &#8220;How then shall we escape?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Did the Israelite escape who refused to sprinkle the blood upon the<br \/>\n   doorposts of his house? Did the man who gathered sticks on the<br \/>\n   Sabbath-day escape, although he might have pleaded that it was the<br \/>\n   first offense? Did the prince who had taken the Moabitess to wife<br \/>\n   escape, though he bore a high rank? Did Moses and Aaron escape, though<br \/>\n   they were the leaders of the people? No! None of these escaped. &#8220;Every<br \/>\n   transgression and disobedience received its just recompense of reward.&#8221;<br \/>\n   &#8220;How then shall we escape?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Is it likely that we should escape? We have neglected the only Name<br \/>\n   given under heaven among men by which we can be saved. We have added<br \/>\n   contumely to neglect in refusing that which it has cost God so much to<br \/>\n   give. We have flouted his only Son, our Lord; and our disrespect to him<br \/>\n   cannot be a small crime in the eye of the Infinite Father. &#8220;How shall<br \/>\n   we escape?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   No, if you neglect (and notice, that to neglect is to reject), there is<br \/>\n   no escape. You shall not escape the storms of sorrow, of temptation, or<br \/>\n   of the righteous judgment of God. You shall not escape the deserved and<br \/>\n   necessary punishment of your sins. You shall not escape the worm which<br \/>\n   never dies, nor the fire which is never quenched. Out there,<br \/>\n   shelterless amid the rage of the sea; or yonder, driven to pieces on<br \/>\n   the rocks: you shall be wrecked, and go down with all hands on board,<br \/>\n   never sighted by the heavenly watchers, nor welcomed into the harbor of<br \/>\n   the saints&#8217; everlasting rest.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>V. &#8220;WHAT IS MAN?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;We see Jesus,&#8230;crowned with glory and honor.&#8221; {HEBREWS ii. 5-9.<\/p>\n<p>   IN the first great division of this treatise, we have seen the<br \/>\n   incomparable superiority of the Lord Jesus to angels, and archangels,<br \/>\n   and all the heavenly host. But now there arises an objection which was<br \/>\n   very keenly realized by these Hebrew Christians; and which, to a<br \/>\n   certain extent, presses upon us all; Why did the Son of God become man?<br \/>\n   How are the sorrows, sufferings, and death of the Man of Nazareth<br \/>\n   consistent with the sublime glories of the Son of God, the equal and<br \/>\n   fellow of the Eternal?<\/p>\n<p>   These questions are answered during the remainder of the chapter, and<br \/>\n   may be gathered up into a single sentence: he who was above all angels<br \/>\n   became lower than the angels for a little time; that he might lift men<br \/>\n   from their abasement, and set them on his own glorious level in his<br \/>\n   heavenly Father&#8217;s kingdom; and that he might be a faithful and merciful<br \/>\n   High Priest for the sorrowful and tempted and dying. Here is an act<br \/>\n   worthy of a God Here are reasons which are more than sufficient to<br \/>\n   answer the old question, for which Anselm prepared so elaborate a reply<br \/>\n   in his book, &#8220;Cur Deus Homo?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;What is man?&#8221; Those three words in verse 6 are the fit starting point<br \/>\n   of the argument. We need not only a true philosophy of God, but a true<br \/>\n   philosophy of man, in order to right thinking on the Gospel. The<br \/>\n   idolater thinks man inferior to birds and beasts and creeping things,<br \/>\n   before which he prostrates himself. The materialist reckons him to be<br \/>\n   the chance product of natural forces which have evolved him; and before<br \/>\n   which he is therefore likely to pass away. The pseudo-science of the<br \/>\n   time makes him of one blood with ape and gorilla, and assigns him a<br \/>\n   common origin with the beasts. See what gigantic systems of error have<br \/>\n   developed from mistaken conceptions of the true nature and dignity of<br \/>\n   man!<\/p>\n<p>   From all such we turn to that noble ideal of man&#8217;s essential dignity,<br \/>\n   given in this sublime paragraph, which corrects our mistaken notions;<br \/>\n   and, whilst giving us an explanation that harmonizes with all our<br \/>\n   experience and observation, opens up to us vistas of thought worthy of<br \/>\n   God.<\/p>\n<p>   MAN AS GOD MADE HIM. The description given here of the origin and<br \/>\n   dignity of man is taken from Psalm viii., which is doubtless a<br \/>\n   reminiscence of the days when David kept his father&#8217;s sheep; even if it<br \/>\n   were not composed on that very spot over which in after-years the<br \/>\n   heavenly choirs broke upon the astonished shepherds &#8220;abiding in the<br \/>\n   field, keeping watch over their flock by night.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Turn to that Psalm, and see how well it expresses the emotions which<br \/>\n   must well up in devout hearts to God as we consider the midnight<br \/>\n   heavens, the tapestry work of his fingers, and the spheres lit by the<br \/>\n   moon and stars, which he has ordained. How impossible it is for those<br \/>\n   who are given to devout reflection to come in contact with any of the<br \/>\n   grander forms of natural beauty, the far-spread expanse of ocean, the<br \/>\n   outlines of the mountains, the changing pomp of the skies without<br \/>\n   turning from the handiwork to the great Artisan, with some such<br \/>\n   expression as the apostrophe with which the Psalm opens and closes: &#8221;<br \/>\n   LORD, our Lord, how excellent is thy name in all the earth 1&#8243;<\/p>\n<p>   At first sight, man is utterly unworthy to be compared with those vast<br \/>\n   and wondrous spectacles revealed to us by the veiling of the sun. His<br \/>\n   life is but as a breath; as a shadow careering over the mountain-side;<br \/>\n   as the existence of the aphides on a leaf in the vast forests of being.<br \/>\n   What can be said of his character, sin-stained and befouled, in<br \/>\n   contrast with peaks whose virgin snows have never been defiled; with<br \/>\n   sylvan scenes, whose peace has never been ruffled; with silvery<br \/>\n   spheres, whose chimes of perfect harmony have never been broken by<br \/>\n   discord? Four times over is the question asked upon the pages of<br \/>\n   Scripture, &#8220;What is man, that thou art mindful of him?&#8221; (Psalm cxliv.<br \/>\n   3; Job vii. 17, 20; Psalm viii. 4; Heb. ii. 6.)<\/p>\n<p>   Yet it is an undeniable fact that God is mindful of man, and that he<br \/>\n   does visit him. &#8220;Mindful!&#8221; There is not a moment in God&#8217;s existence in<br \/>\n   which he is not as mindful of this world of men as the mother of the<br \/>\n   babe whom she has left for a moment in the next room, but whose<br \/>\n   slightest cry or moan she is quick to catch. &#8220;I am poor and needy; yet<br \/>\n   the Lord thinketh upon me.&#8221; &#8220;How precious are thy thoughts unto me,<br \/>\n   God!&#8221; &#8220;Visiting!&#8221; No cot is so lowly, no heart so wayward, no life so<br \/>\n   solitary, but God visits it. No one shall read these lines, the path<br \/>\n   around whose heart-door is not trodden hard by the feet of him who<br \/>\n   often comes and stands and knocks. We speak as if only our sorrows were<br \/>\n   divine visitations. Alas for us, if it were only so! Every throb of<br \/>\n   holy desire, every gentle mercy, every gift of Providence, is a<br \/>\n   visitation of God.<\/p>\n<p>   But there must be some great and sufficient reason why the Maker of the<br \/>\n   universe should take so much interest in man. Evidently bigness is not<br \/>\n   greatness; a tiny babe is worth more than the tallest mountain; and an<br \/>\n   empress-mother will linger in the one room where her child is ill,<br \/>\n   though she forsake the remainder of her almost illimitable domain. What<br \/>\n   if earth shall turn out to be the nursery of the universe! The true<br \/>\n   clew, however, to all speculation is to be found in the declaration by<br \/>\n   the Psalmist of God&#8217;s original design in making man: &#8220;Thou crownedst<br \/>\n   him. &#8230;Thou madest him to have dominion. . . . Thou hast put all<br \/>\n   things under his feet &#8221; (Psalm viii. 5, 6, R.v.). Nor was this lofty<br \/>\n   ideal first given to the Psalmist&#8217;s poetic vision. It had an earlier<br \/>\n   origin. It is a fragment of the great charta of humanity, which God<br \/>\n   gave to our first parents in Paradise.<\/p>\n<p>   Turn to that noble archaic record, Gen. i. 26-28, which transcends the<br \/>\n   imaginings of modern science as far as it does those legends of<br \/>\n   creation which make the heathen literature with which they are<br \/>\n   incorporated incredible. Its simplicity, its sublimity, its fitness,<br \/>\n   attest its origin and authority to be divine. We are prepared to admit<br \/>\n   that God&#8217;s work in creation was symmetrical and orderly, and that he<br \/>\n   worked out his design according to an ever-unfolding plan. But science<br \/>\n   has discovered nothing as yet to contradict the express statements of<br \/>\n   Scripture, that the first man was not at all inferior to ourselves in<br \/>\n   those intellectual and moral faculties which are the noblest heritage<br \/>\n   of mankind.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;God created man in his own image&#8221; (Gen. i. 27). -There we have the<br \/>\n   divine likeness. Our mental and moral nature is made on the same plan<br \/>\n   as God&#8217;s: the divine in miniature. Truth, love, and purity, like the<br \/>\n   principles of mathematics, are the same in us as in him. If it were not<br \/>\n   so, we could not know or understand him. But since it is so, it has<br \/>\n   been possible for him to take on himself our nature-possible also that<br \/>\n   we shall be one day transformed to the perfect image of his beauty.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;And God said, Have dominion&#8221; (Gen. i. 28). -There you have royal<br \/>\n   supremacy. Man was intended to be God&#8217;s viceregent and representative.<br \/>\n   King in a palace stored with all to please him: monarch and sovereign<br \/>\n   of all the lower orders of creation. The sun to labor for him as a very<br \/>\n   Hercules; the moon to light his nights, or lead the waters round the<br \/>\n   earth in tides, cleansing his coasts; elements of nature to be his<br \/>\n   slaves and messengers; flowers to scent his path; fruits to please his<br \/>\n   taste; birds to sing for him; fish to feed him; beasts to toil for him<br \/>\n   and carry him. Not a cringing slave, but a king crowned with the glory<br \/>\n   of rule, and with the honor of universal supremacy. Only a little lower<br \/>\n   than angels; because they are not, like him, encumbered with flesh and<br \/>\n   blood. This is man as God made him to be.<\/p>\n<p>   MAN AS SIN HAS MADE HIM. &#8220;We see not yet all things subjected to him&#8221;<br \/>\n   (Heb. ii. 8, R.v.). His crown is rolled in the dust, his honor<br \/>\n   tarnished and stained. His sovereignty is strongly disputed by the<br \/>\n   lower orders of creation. If trees nourish him, it is after strenuous<br \/>\n   care, and they often disappoint. If the earth supplies him with food,<br \/>\n   it is in tardy response to exhausting toil If the beasts serve him, it<br \/>\n   is because they have been laboriously tamed and trained; whilst vast<br \/>\n   numbers roam the forest glades, setting him at defiance. If he catch<br \/>\n   the fish of the sea, or the bird of the air, he must wait long in<br \/>\n   cunning concealment.<\/p>\n<p>   Some traces of the old lordship are still apparent in the terror which<br \/>\n   the sound of the human voice and the glance of the eye still inspire in<br \/>\n   the lower creatures, as in the feats of lion-tamer or snake-charmer.<br \/>\n   But for the most part anarchy and rebellion have laid waste man&#8217;s fair<br \/>\n   realm.<\/p>\n<p>   So degraded has he become, that he has bowed before the objects that he<br \/>\n   was to command; and has prostrated his royal form in shrines dedicated<br \/>\n   to birds, and four-footed beasts, and creeping things. It is the<br \/>\n   fashion nowadays to extol heathen philosophy; but how can we compare it<br \/>\n   for a moment with the religion of the Bible, when its pyramids are<br \/>\n   filled with mummies of deified animals, and its temples with the sacred<br \/>\n   bull!<\/p>\n<p>   Where is the supremacy of man? Not in the savage cowering before the<br \/>\n   beasts of the forest; nor in the civilized races that are the slaves of<br \/>\n   lust and sensuality and swinish indulgence; nor in those who, refusing<br \/>\n   to recognize the authority of God, fail to exercise any authority<br \/>\n   themselves. &#8220;Sin hath reigned,&#8221; as the Apostle says most truly (Rom.<br \/>\n   v.21). And all who bow their necks beneath its yoke are slaves and<br \/>\n   menials and cowering subjects, in comparison with what God made and<br \/>\n   meant them to be.<\/p>\n<p>   Do not point to the wretched groups surrounding the doors of the<br \/>\n   gin-palaces in the metropolis of the most Christian people of the<br \/>\n   world, and regard their condition as a stain on the love or power of<br \/>\n   God. This is not his work. These are the products of sin. An enemy hath<br \/>\n   done this. Would you see man as God intended him to be, you must go<br \/>\n   back to Eden, or forward to the New Jerusalem. Sin defiles, debases,<br \/>\n   disfigures, and blasts all it touches. And we may shudder to think that<br \/>\n   its virus is working through our frame, as we discover the results of<br \/>\n   its ravages upon myriads around.<\/p>\n<p>   MAN AS CHRIST CAN MAKE HIM. &#8221; We behold Jesus crowned with glory and<br \/>\n   honor&#8221; (ver. 9). &#8220;What help is that?&#8221; cries an objector; &#8220;of course he<br \/>\n   is crowned with glory and honor, since he is the Son of God.&#8221; But<br \/>\n   notice, the glory and honor mentioned here are altogether different<br \/>\n   from the glory of Heb. i. 3. That was the incommunicable glory of his<br \/>\n   deity. This is the acquired glory of his humanity.<\/p>\n<p>   In John xvii. our Lord himself distinguishes between the two. In verse<br \/>\n   5, the glory which he had with the Father as his right before all<br \/>\n   worlds. In verse 24, the glory given as the reward for his sufferings,<br \/>\n   which he could not have had unless he had taken upon himself the form<br \/>\n   of a servant, and had been made in the fashion of man, humbling<br \/>\n   himself, and becoming obedient to the death of the cross, &#8220;made a<br \/>\n   little lower than the angels, because of the suffering of death;<br \/>\n   crowned with glory and honor: that he, by the grace of God, should<br \/>\n   taste death for every man&#8221; (Phil ii. 7, 8; Heb. ii. 10).<\/p>\n<p>   This is the crown wherewith his Father crowned him in the day of the<br \/>\n   gladness of his heart, when, as man, he came forth victorious from the<br \/>\n   last wrestle with the Prince of hell. All through his earthly life he<br \/>\n   fulfilled the ancient ideal of man. He was God&#8217;s image; and those who<br \/>\n   saw him saw the Father. He was Sovereign in his commands. Winds and<br \/>\n   waves did his bidding. Trees withered at his touch. Fish in shoals<br \/>\n   obeyed his will. Droves of cattle fled before his scourge of small<br \/>\n   cords. Disease and death and devils owned his sway. But all was more<br \/>\n   fully realized when he was about to return to his Father, and said, in<br \/>\n   a noble outburst of conscious supremacy, &#8220;All power is given unto me in<br \/>\n   heaven and in earth.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;We behold him.&#8221; Behold him, Christian reader! The wreaths of empire<br \/>\n   are on his brow. The keys of death and Hades swing at his girdle. The<br \/>\n   mysterious living creatures, representatives of redeemed creation,<br \/>\n   attest that he is worthy. All things in heaven and earth, and under the<br \/>\n   earth, and in the seas, worship him; so do the bands of angels, beneath<br \/>\n   whom he stooped for a little season, on our behalf.<\/p>\n<p>   And as he is, we too shall be.  He is there as the type and specimen<br \/>\n   and representative of redeemed men. We are linked with him in<br \/>\n   indissoluble union. Through him we shall get back our lost empire. We<br \/>\n   too shall be crowned with glory and honor. The day is not far distant<br \/>\n   when we shall sit at his side-joint-heirs in his empire; comrades in<br \/>\n   his glory, as we have been comrades in his sorrows; beneath our feet<br \/>\n   all things visible and invisible, thrones and principalities and<br \/>\n   powers; whilst above us shall be the unclouded empyrean of our Father&#8217;s<br \/>\n   love, forever and forever. Oh, destiny of surpassing bliss! Oh, rapture<br \/>\n   of saintly hearts! Oh, miracle of divine omnipotence!<\/p>\n<p>     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                        VI. &#8220;Perfect through sufferings<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;It became him, for whom are all things, and by whom are all things, in<br \/>\n    bringing many sons unto glory, to make the Captain of their salvation<br \/>\n    perfect through sufferings.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   HEBREWS ii. 10.<\/p>\n<p>   THERE is no book which can stand the test of sorrow and suffering as<br \/>\n   the Bible can. Other books may delight us in sunny hours, when the<br \/>\n   heart is gay; but in dark and overcast days we fling them aside, and<br \/>\n   eagerly betake ourselves to our Bibles. And the reason for this is in<br \/>\n   the fact that this Book was born in the fires. It is soaked with the<br \/>\n   tears, either of those who wrote or of those addressed.<\/p>\n<p>   Take, for instance, this Epistle. It was intended to solace the bitter<br \/>\n   anguish of these Hebrew Christians, who were exposed to the double fury<br \/>\n   of the storm. In the first place, there was the inevitable opposition<br \/>\n   and persecution to be encountered by all followers of the Nazarene; not<br \/>\n   only from the Gentiles, but specially from their fellow-countrymen, who<br \/>\n   accounted them apostates.<\/p>\n<p>   Next, there was the pain of excommunication from the splendid rites of<br \/>\n   the Temple, with its daily service, its solemn feasts, its magnificent<br \/>\n   ceremonial. Only those amongst our-selves who from childhood have been<br \/>\n   wont to worship in some splendid minster, with its pealing organ,<br \/>\n   full-voiced choir, and mystery of architecture, arresting and<br \/>\n   enchaining every sense of beauty, but who have felt constrained to join<br \/>\n   the worship of an obscure handful in some plain meetinghouse, can<br \/>\n   realize how painfully those who were addressed in these words missed<br \/>\n   the religious associations of their early days.<\/p>\n<p>   And then this suffering, thorn-crowned, dying Messiah! It seemed almost<br \/>\n   impossible to realize that he was the Christ of national desire. The<br \/>\n   objections that baffled the faith of the two travelers to Emmaus arose<br \/>\n   in almost irresistible force: &#8220;The chief priests and our rulers have<br \/>\n   crucified him; but we trusted that it had been he which should have<br \/>\n   redeemed Israel&#8221; (Luke xxiv. 20).<\/p>\n<p>   No attempt is made in these words to minimize the sufferings of Christ.<br \/>\n   That were impossible and superfluous. He is King in the realm of<br \/>\n   sorrow; peerless in his pain; supreme in his distress. Though earth be<br \/>\n   full of sufferers, none can vie with our Lord in his. Human nature is<br \/>\n   limited. The confines of its joys or sorrows are soon touched. The<br \/>\n   pendulum swings only hither and thither. But who shall estimate the<br \/>\n   capacity of Christ&#8217;s nature? And because of it, he could taste the<br \/>\n   sweets of a joy beyond his fellows, and of sorrow so excessive as to<br \/>\n   warrant the challenge: &#8220;Behold, and see if there be any sorrow like<br \/>\n   unto my sorrow, wherewith the Lord hath afflicted me in the day of his<br \/>\n   fierce anger.&#8221; If it be true, as Carlyle says, that our sorrow is the<br \/>\n   inverted image of our nobility, how deep must the sorrow have been of<br \/>\n   the noblest of our race! Well may the Greek liturgy, with infinite<br \/>\n   pathos, speak of his &#8220;unknown sorrows.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Shall the sufferings of Christ cause us to reject Christ? Ah, strange<br \/>\n   infatuation! As well reject the heaven because of its sun, or night<br \/>\n   because of the queenly moon; or a diadem because of its regal gem; or<br \/>\n   home because of mother. The sufferings of Christ are the proudest boast<br \/>\n   of the Gospel. He himself wears the insignia of them in heaven; as a<br \/>\n   general, on the day of triumph, chooses his choicest order to wear upon<br \/>\n   his breast. Yes, and it was the deliberate choice of him, &#8220;for whom are<br \/>\n   all things, and by whom are all things &#8220;-and who must, therefore, have<br \/>\n   had every expedient at his command-that the path of suffering should be<br \/>\n   his Son&#8217;s way through our world. Every track through creation is as<br \/>\n   familiar to Omniscience as the tracks across the hills to the<br \/>\n   gray-haired, plaided shepherd. Had he wished, the Father might have<br \/>\n   conducted the Son to glory by another route than the thorny, flint-set<br \/>\n   path of suffering. But the reasons for this experience were so<br \/>\n   overwhelming that he could not evade them. Nothing else had been<br \/>\n   becoming. Those reasons may be stated almost in a sentence.<\/p>\n<p>   Our Father has on hand a work greater than his original creation. He is<br \/>\n   &#8220;bringing many sons unto glory.&#8221; The way may be rugged and tedious; but<br \/>\n   its end is glory. And it is the way along which our Father is bringing<br \/>\n   us; for, since we believe on the Son, we have the right to call<br \/>\n   ourselves sons (John i. 12). And there are many of us. Many sons,<br \/>\n   though only one Son. We do not go solitarily along the narrow way. We<br \/>\n   are but part of a multitude which no man can number. The glory of which<br \/>\n   we have already spoken, and into which Jesus has entered, is not for<br \/>\n   him alone, but for us also. &#8220;Many sons&#8221; are to be his joint-heirs;<br \/>\n   reigning with him on his throne, sharing his unsearchable riches and<br \/>\n   his everlasting reign.<\/p>\n<p>   But all these sons must tread the path of sufering. Since the first sin<br \/>\n   brought suffering to our first parents, and bloodshed into the first<br \/>\n   home, there has been but one lot for those who will live Godly. Their<br \/>\n   road leads to glory; but every inch of it is stained with their blood<br \/>\n   and watered by their tears. It climbs to Hermon&#8217;s summit; but it<br \/>\n   descends immediately into somber and devil-haunted plains. It conducts<br \/>\n   to the Mount of Olives, with its ascension light; but it first<br \/>\n   traverses the glades of Gethsemane, the wine-press of Golgotha, the<br \/>\n   solitude and darkness of the grave.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;The path of sorrow, and that path alone,<\/p>\n<p>   Leads to the land where sorrow is unknown.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   What true soul has not its wilderness of temptation; its conflicts with<br \/>\n   Sadducees and Scribes; its hour of weariness and watching; its tears<br \/>\n   over cities full of rebellious men; its disappointments from friends;<br \/>\n   its persecutions from foes; rejection, agony, friendlessness,<br \/>\n   loneliness, denials, trial, treacheries, deaths, and burials? Such is<br \/>\n   the draught which the noblest and saintliest have drunk from the golden<br \/>\n   chalice of life.<\/p>\n<p>   Foreseeing our needs, our Father has provided for us a Leader. It is a<br \/>\n   great boon for a company of pilgrims to have a Great-heart; for an army<br \/>\n   to have a captain; for an exodus to have a Moses. Courageous,<br \/>\n   sagacious, and strong leaders are God&#8217;s good gifts to men. And it is<br \/>\n   only what we might have expected that God has placed such a One as the<br \/>\n   efficient Leader at the head of the long line of pilgrims, whom he is<br \/>\n   engaged in bringing to glory. The toils seem lighter and the distance<br \/>\n   shorter; laggards quicken their pace; wandering ones are recalled from<br \/>\n   by-paths by the presence and voice of the Leader, who marches,<br \/>\n   efficient, royal, and divine, in the van. heirs of glory, weary of the<br \/>\n   long and toilsome march, remember that ye are part of a great host: and<br \/>\n   that the Prince, at the head of the column, has long since entered the<br \/>\n   city; though he is back again, passing as an inspiration along the<br \/>\n   ranks as they are toiling on.<\/p>\n<p>   Our Leader is perfect. Of course this does not refer to his moral or<br \/>\n   spiritual attributes. In these he is possessed of the stature of the<br \/>\n   perfect Man, and has filled out, in every detail, God&#8217;s ideal of<br \/>\n   manhood. But he might have been all this without being perfectly<br \/>\n   adapted to the work of leading many sons through suffering to glory. He<br \/>\n   might have been perfect in character, and desirous to help us; but, if<br \/>\n   he had never tasted death, how could he allay our fears as we tread the<br \/>\n   verge of Jordan? If he had never been tempted, how could he succor<br \/>\n   those who are tempted? If he had never wept, how could he stanch our<br \/>\n   tears? If he had never suffered, hungered, wearied on the hill of<br \/>\n   difficulty, or threaded his way through the quagmires of grief, how<br \/>\n   could he have been a merciful and faithful High-Priest, having<br \/>\n   compassion on the ignorant and wayward? But, thank God, our Leader is a<br \/>\n   perfect one. He is perfectly adapted to his task. His certificate,<br \/>\n   countersigned by the voice of inspiration, declares him fully<br \/>\n   qualified.<\/p>\n<p>   But this perfect efficiency, as we have seen, is the result of<br \/>\n   suffering. In no other conceivable way could he have been so<br \/>\n   effectively qualified to be our Leader as he has been by the ordeal of<br \/>\n   suffering. Every pang, every tear, every thrill, all were needed to<br \/>\n   complete his equipment to help us. And from this we may infer that<br \/>\n   suffering is sometimes permitted to befall us in order to qualify us to<br \/>\n   be, in our poor measure, the leaders and comforters of our brethren,<br \/>\n   who are faltering in the march. When next we suffer, let us believe<br \/>\n   that it is not the result of chance, or fate, or man&#8217;s carelessness, or<br \/>\n   hell&#8217;s malevolence; but that perhaps God is perfecting our adaptability<br \/>\n   to comfort and succor others.<\/p>\n<p>   Are there not some in your circle to whom you naturally betake yourself<br \/>\n   in times of trial and sorrow? They always seem to speak the right word,<br \/>\n   to give the very counsel you are longing for; you do not realize,<br \/>\n   however, the cost which they had to pay ere they became so skillful in<br \/>\n   binding up gaping wounds and drying tears. But if you were to<br \/>\n   investigate their past history you would find that they have suffered<br \/>\n   more than most. They have watched the slow untwisting of some silver<br \/>\n   cord on which the lamp of life hung. They have seen the golden bowl of<br \/>\n   joy dashed to their feet, and its contents spilt. They have stood by<br \/>\n   ebbing tides, and drooping gourds, and noon sunsets; but all this has<br \/>\n   been necessary to make them the nurses, the physicians, the priests of<br \/>\n   men. The boxes that come from foreign climes are clumsy enough; but<br \/>\n   they contain spices which scent the air with the fragrance of the<br \/>\n   Orient. So suffering is rough and hard to bear; but it hides beneath it<br \/>\n   discipline, education, possibilities, which not only leave us nobler,<br \/>\n   but perfect us to help others. Do not fret, or set your teeth, or wait<br \/>\n   doggedly for the suffering to pass; but get out of it all you can, both<br \/>\n   for yourself and for your service to your generation, according to the<br \/>\n   will of God.<\/p>\n<p>   Suffering educates sympathy; it softens the spirit, lightens the touch,<br \/>\n   hushes the tread; it accustoms the spirit to read from afar the<br \/>\n   symptoms of an unspoken grief; it teaches the soul to tell the number<br \/>\n   of the promises, which, like the constellations of the arctic circle,<br \/>\n   shine most brilliantly through the wintry night; it gives to the spirit<br \/>\n   a depth, a delicacy, a wealth of which it cannot otherwise possess<br \/>\n   itself. Through suffering he has become perfected.<\/p>\n<p>   His sufferings have purchased our pardon. He tasted death for every<br \/>\n   man. But his sufferings have done more in enabling him to understand<br \/>\n   experimentally, and to allay, with the tenderness of one who has<br \/>\n   suffered, all the griefs and sorrows that are experienced by the<br \/>\n   weakest and weariest of the great family of God.<\/p>\n<p>   So far, then, from rejecting him because of his sorrows, this shall<br \/>\n   attract us the more quickly to his side. And, amid our glad songs, this<br \/>\n   note shall predominate: &#8220;It behoved Christ to suffer.&#8221; &#8220;In the midst of<br \/>\n   the throne, a Lamb as it had been slain.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>  VII THE DEATH OF DEATH<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Forasmuch then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, he also<br \/>\n    himself likewise took part of the same; that through death he might destroy<br \/>\n    him that had the power of death, that is, the devil; and deliver them, who<br \/>\n    through fear of death were all their lifetime subject to bondage.&#8221; HEBREWS<br \/>\n    ii. 14, 15.<\/p>\n<p>   WE fear death with a double fear. There is, first, the instinctive fear<br \/>\n   shared also by the animal creation; for the very brutes tremble as the<br \/>\n   moment of death draws near. Surely this fear is not wrong. It is often<br \/>\n   congenital and involuntary, and afflicts some of God&#8217;s noblest saints:<br \/>\n   though doubtless these will some day confess that it was most<br \/>\n   unwarrantable, and that the moment of dissolution was calm and sweet<br \/>\n   and blessed.<\/p>\n<p>   It is a growing opinion among thoughtful men that the moment of death,<br \/>\n   when the spirit passes from its earthly tabernacle, is probably the<br \/>\n   most painless and the happiest moment of its whole earthly story. And<br \/>\n   if this be so generally, how much more must it be the case with those<br \/>\n   on whose sight are breaking the glories of Paradise! The child whose<br \/>\n   eyes feast upon a glowing vista of flower and fruit, beckoning it<br \/>\n   through the garden-gate, hardly notices the rough woodwork of the gate<br \/>\n   itself as it bounds through; and probably the soul, becoming aware of<br \/>\n   the beauty of the King and the glories of its home, is too absorbed to<br \/>\n   notice the act of death, till it suddenly finds itself free to mount<br \/>\n   and soar and revel in the dawning light.<\/p>\n<p>   But there is another fear of death, which is spiritual. dread its<br \/>\n   mystery. What is it? Whither does it lead? Why does it come just now?<br \/>\n   What is the nature of the life beyond? We see the movements on the<br \/>\n   other side of the thick curtain which sways to and fro; but we can<br \/>\n   distinguish no form. The dying ones are conscious of sights and sounds<br \/>\n   for which we strain eye and ear in vain.<\/p>\n<p>   We dread its leave-taking. The heathen poet sang sadly of leaving earth<br \/>\n   and home and family. Long habit endears the homeliest lot and the<br \/>\n   roughest comrades: how much more the true-hearted and congenial-it is<br \/>\n   hard to part from them. If only we could all go together, there would<br \/>\n   be nothing in it. But this separate dropping-off, this departing one by<br \/>\n   one, this drift from the anchorage alone! Who can deny that it is a<br \/>\n   lonesome thing?<\/p>\n<p>   Men dread the after-death.  &#8221; The sting of death is sin.&#8221; The sinner<br \/>\n   dreads to die, because he knows that, on the other side of death, he<br \/>\n   must meet the God against whom he has sinned, and stand at his bar to<br \/>\n   give an account and receive the due reward of his deeds. How can he<br \/>\n   face that burning glory? How can he answer for one of a thousand? How<br \/>\n   can mortal man be just with God? How can he escape hell, and find his<br \/>\n   place amid the happy festal throngs of the Golden City?<\/p>\n<p>   Many of man&#8217;s fears were known to Christ. And he knew that they would<br \/>\n   be felt by many who were to be closely related to him as brethren. If,<br \/>\n   then, he was prompted by ordinary feelings of compassion to the great<br \/>\n   masses of mankind, he would be especially moved to relieve those with<br \/>\n   whom he had so close an affinity, as these marvelous verses unfold. He<br \/>\n   and they are all of one (ver. 11). He calls them brethren through the<br \/>\n   lips of psalmist and prophet (ver. 12). He takes his stand in the<br \/>\n   assembled Church, and sings his Father&#8217;s praise in its company (ver. I<br \/>\n   2). He even associates himself with them in their humble childlike<br \/>\n   trust (ver. 13). He dares to accost the gaze of all worlds, as he comes<br \/>\n   forward leading them by the hand (ver. 13). Oh, marvelous<br \/>\n   identification! Oh, rapturous association! More wondrous far than if a<br \/>\n   seraph should cherish friendship with a worm! But the preciousness of<br \/>\n   this relationship lies in the fact that Jesus will do all he can to<br \/>\n   alleviate that fear of death, which is more or less common to us all.<\/p>\n<p>   But in order to do it, he must die. He could not be the death of death<br \/>\n   unless he had personally tasted death. He needed to fulfill the law of<br \/>\n   death by dying, before he could abolish death. Our David must go into<br \/>\n   the valley of Elah, and grapple with our giant foe, and wrest from him<br \/>\n   his power, and slay him with his own sword. As in the old fable<br \/>\n   Prometheus could not slay the Minotaur unless he accompanied the yearly<br \/>\n   freight of victims, so must Jesus go with the myriads of our race into<br \/>\n   the dark confines of the tomb, that death might do its worst in vain;<br \/>\n   that the grave might lose its victory; and that the grim gaoler might<br \/>\n   be shown powerless to hold the Resurrection and the Life. Had Christ<br \/>\n   not died, it might have been affirmed that, in one place at least,<br \/>\n   death and sin, chaos and darkness, were supreme. &#8220;It behooved him,<br \/>\n   therefore, to suffer, and to rise from the dead the third day.&#8221; And,<br \/>\n   like another Samson, carrying the gates of his prison-house, he came<br \/>\n   forth, demonstrating forever that light is stronger than darkness,<br \/>\n   salvation than sin, life than death. Hear his triumphant cry, as thrice<br \/>\n   the risen and ascended Master exclaims, &#8220;I died, and lo, I am alive<br \/>\n   forevermore, and have the keys of Hades and of death.&#8221; Death and hell<br \/>\n   chose their own battleground, their strongest; and there, in the hour<br \/>\n   of his weakness, our King defeated them, and now carries the trophy of<br \/>\n   victory at his girdle forevermore. Hallelujah!<\/p>\n<p>   But he could only have died by becoming man. Perhaps there is no race<br \/>\n   in the universe that can die but our own. So there may be no other spot<br \/>\n   in the wide universe of God seamed with graves, shadowed by the<br \/>\n   outspread wings of the angel of death, or marked by the plague-spot of<br \/>\n   sin. &#8220;Sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed<br \/>\n   upon all.&#8221; In order then to die, Christ must take on himself our human<br \/>\n   nature. Others die because they are born; Christ was born that he might<br \/>\n   die. It is as if he said: &#8220;Of thee, human mother, must I be born; and I<br \/>\n   must suffer the aches and pains and sorrows of mortal life; and I must<br \/>\n   hasten quickly to the destined goal of human life; I have come into the<br \/>\n   world to die.&#8221; &#8220;Forasmuch as the children are partakers of flesh and<br \/>\n   blood, he also himself likewise took part of the same, in order that<br \/>\n   through death he might destroy him that had the power of death, that<br \/>\n   is, the devil: and deliver them, who through fear of death were all<br \/>\n   their lifetime subject to bondage.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   BY DEATH CHRIST DESTROYED HIM THAT HAD THE POWER OF DEATH. Scripture<br \/>\n   has no doubt as to the existence of the devil. And those who know much<br \/>\n   of their own inner life, and of the sudden assaults of evil to which we<br \/>\n   are liable, cannot but realize his terrible power. And from this<br \/>\n   passage we infer that that power was even greater before Jesus died.<br \/>\n   &#8220;He had the power of death.&#8221; It was a chief weapon in his infernal<br \/>\n   armory. The dread of it was so great as to drive men to yield to any<br \/>\n   demands made by the priests of false religions, with their dark<br \/>\n   impurities and hideous rites. Thus timid sheep are scared by horrid<br \/>\n   shouts and blows into the butcher&#8217;s shambles.<\/p>\n<p>   But since Jesus died, the devil and his power are destroyed. Brought to<br \/>\n   naught, not made extinct. Still he assails the Christian warrior,<br \/>\n   though armed from head to foot; and goes about seeking whom he may<br \/>\n   devour, and deceives men to ruin. Satan is not impotent though chained.<br \/>\n   He has received the wound which annuls his power, but it has not yet<br \/>\n   been effectual to destroy him.<\/p>\n<p>   His power was broken at the cross and grave of Jesus. The hour of<br \/>\n   Gethsemane was the hour and power of darkness. And Satan must have seen<br \/>\n   the Resurrection in despair. It was the knell of his destiny. It sealed<br \/>\n   his doom. The prince of this world was judged and cast out from the<br \/>\n   seat of power (John xii. 31 ; xvi. ii). The serpent&#8217;s head was bruised<br \/>\n   beyond remedy.<\/p>\n<p>   Fear not the devil, child of God; nor death! These make much noise, but<br \/>\n   they have no power. The Breaker has gone before thee, clearing thy way.<br \/>\n   Only keep close behind him. Hark ! He gives thee power over all the<br \/>\n   power of the enemy, and nothing shall by any means hurt thee (Luke x.<br \/>\n   9). No robber shall pluck thee from thy Shepherd&#8217;s hand.<\/p>\n<p>   By DEATH CHRIST DELIVERS FROM THE FEAR OF DEATH. A child was in the<br \/>\n   habit of playing in a large and beautiful garden, with sunny lawns; but<br \/>\n   there was one part of it, a long and winding path, down which he never<br \/>\n   ventured; indeed, he dreaded to go near it, because some silly nurse<br \/>\n   had told him that ogres and goblins dwelt within its darksome gloom. At<br \/>\n   last his eldest brother heard of his fear, and, after playing one day<br \/>\n   with him, took him to the embowered entrance of the grove, and, leaving<br \/>\n   him there terror-stricken, went singing through its length, and<br \/>\n   returned, and reasoned with the child, proving that his fears were<br \/>\n   groundless. At last he took the lad&#8217;s hand, and they went through it<br \/>\n   together, and from that moment the fear which had haunted the place<br \/>\n   fled. And the memory of that brother&#8217;s presence took its place. So has<br \/>\n   Jesus done for us!<\/p>\n<p>   Fear not the mystery Of death! Jesus has died, and has shown us that it<br \/>\n   is the gateway into another life, more fair and blessed than this-a<br \/>\n   life in which human words are understood, and human faces smile, and<br \/>\n   human affections linger still. The forty days of his resurrection life<br \/>\n   have solved many of the problems, and illumined most of the mystery. To<br \/>\n   die is to go at once to be with him. No chasm, no interval, no weary<br \/>\n   delay in purgatory. Absent from the body, present with the Lord, One<br \/>\n   moment here in conditions of mortality; the next beyond the stars.<\/p>\n<p>   Fear not the loneliness of death! The soul in the dark valley becomes<br \/>\n   aware of another at its side, &#8220;Thou art with me.&#8221; Death cannot separate<br \/>\n   us, even for a moment, from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus<br \/>\n   our Lord. In the hour of death Jesus fulfills his own promise, &#8220;I will<br \/>\n   come again and take you unto myself.&#8221; And on the other side we step<br \/>\n   into a vast circle of loving spirits, who welcome the new-comer with<br \/>\n   festal songs (2 Peter i. 11)<\/p>\n<p>   Fear not the after-death! The curse and penalty of sin have been borne<br \/>\n   by him. Death, the supreme sentence on sinners, has been suffered for<br \/>\n   us by our Substitute. In him we have indeed passed on to the other side<br \/>\n   of the doom, which is justly ours, as members of a sinful race. Who is<br \/>\n   he that condemneth? It is Christ that died, yea, rather, that is risen<br \/>\n   again.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Death! How shall they die who have already died in Christ? That which<br \/>\n   others call death, we call sleep. We dread it no more than sleep. Our<br \/>\n   bodies lie down exhausted with the long working-day, to awake in the<br \/>\n   fresh energy of the eternal morning; but in the meanwhile the spirit is<br \/>\n   presented faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding<br \/>\n   joy.<\/p>\n<p>     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>VIII. CHRIST&#8217;S MERCIFUL AND FAITHFUL HELP<\/p>\n<p>    &#8221; merciful and faithful high-priest in things pertaining to God.&#8221;  HEBREWS<br \/>\n    ii. 17.<\/p>\n<p>   DOST thou wonder that thy Lord was tempted and sorrowful? It is indeed<br \/>\n   the marvel of eternity; and yet not so marvelous, when we consider the<br \/>\n   beings whom he elected to succor, help, and save, and of whom each of<br \/>\n   us is one.<\/p>\n<p>   Had he chosen to lay hold of fallen angels, with a view of raising them<br \/>\n   from their lost estate, he would without doubt have taken upon himself<br \/>\n   their nature, and descended into the pit; identifying himself with<br \/>\n   their miseries, and paving, by his sufferings, a pathway across the<br \/>\n   great fixed gulf which intervenes between their lost estate and<br \/>\n   Paradise. But verily he took not hold of angels, but of the seed of<br \/>\n   Abraham; and had no alternative therefore but to assimilate himself in<br \/>\n   all points to the nature of those whom, in infinite mercy and grace, he<br \/>\n   brothered.<\/p>\n<p>   There are two things thou needest, reader; and not thou only, but all<br \/>\n   men, reconciliation, and succor in the hour of temptation. These<br \/>\n   instinctive cravings of the soul are as mighty and as irrepressible as<br \/>\n   the craving of the body for sleep or food; and they are as evident amid<br \/>\n   our luxury and refinement as in primeval forests, or beside the<br \/>\n   historic rivers of antiquity-the Nile, the Indus, the Euphrates.<\/p>\n<p>   To meet these two needs, men have constituted one of their number a<br \/>\n   priest. That word has an ominous sound to our ears, because it has been<br \/>\n   associated with immoralities and cruelty. The world has never seen more<br \/>\n   unscrupulous or rapacious tyrants than its priests, whether of Baal or<br \/>\n   Moloch, of Judaism or the Papacy. All through the ages it has seemed<br \/>\n   impossible for men to receive power in the spiritual realm without<br \/>\n   abusing it to the injury of those who sought their help. Study the<br \/>\n   history of the priesthood, which murdered Christ because he threw too<br \/>\n   strong a light upon its hypocrisies and villainies, and you have the<br \/>\n   history of every priestcraft which has darkened the world with crime,<br \/>\n   and saturated its soil with the blood of the noblest and saintliest of<br \/>\n   men.<\/p>\n<p>   And yet the idea of the priest is a natural and a beautiful one. It is<br \/>\n   natural for men who are conscious of sin barring their access into the<br \/>\n   presence of a holy God, and demanding sacrifice in order to peace, to<br \/>\n   say to one of their fellows, &#8220;Our hands are stained with blood, and<br \/>\n   grimed with toil; our garments spotted with pollution and dust; our<br \/>\n   lives too busy for us to spare time for those rites which alone can fit<br \/>\n   the sinner to stand before the eye of God: do for us what we cannot do<br \/>\n   for ourselves; prepare thyself by holy rite and vigil and fasting from<br \/>\n   sin, so as to be able to stand in the presence-chamber of the All-Holy;<br \/>\n   and when thou hast acquired the right of audience with him, speak for<br \/>\n   us, atone for us, make reconciliation for our sins; and then come forth<br \/>\n   to us, succoring and blessing those who cannot attain to thy position,<br \/>\n   but must ever struggle as best they may with the strong, rough, bad<br \/>\n   world in which they are doomed to live.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   This seems the underlying thought of the vast system which has built<br \/>\n   temples in every land, reared altars on every soil, and constituted a<br \/>\n   priesthood amid the most degraded as well as the most civilized races<br \/>\n   of mankind.<\/p>\n<p>   And there is great beauty in the work and ministry of a true priest.<br \/>\n   Not always engaged in the darker work of sacrificing flocks of fleecy<br \/>\n   sheep, by which alone, in those rude days, the cost of sin could be<br \/>\n   computed; the true priest would have other, and, perhaps, more<br \/>\n   congenial work. He would be the shepherd of the timid souls around him;<br \/>\n   listening to confessions whispered over the heads of the dumb victims;<br \/>\n   feeling compassion for erring and wayward ones; comforting those who<br \/>\n   were passing through scenes of sorrow, till faces shadowed with tears<br \/>\n   began to gleam with holy light; arresting the proud hand of the<br \/>\n   oppressor, as Ambrose did in lawless days, to rescue the poor from the<br \/>\n   mailed blow. Never studying self-interest; never consuting ease or<br \/>\n   pleasure or gain; never resting while one poor wanderer was away in the<br \/>\n   snowdrift or on the wild. Yes, and more: he would be the spokesman of<br \/>\n   souls, praying for those who did not pray for themselves; praying for<br \/>\n   those who knew not what or how to ask; interceding for the whole race<br \/>\n   of man. Ah! how often must such a one have been compelled by the<br \/>\n   pressure of the burden to go apart from the busy crowds to some lone<br \/>\n   spot, that he might pour out before God the long litany of need and<br \/>\n   sorrow and temptation which had been poured into his heart. Lovely<br \/>\n   ideal; ah, how seldom realized!<\/p>\n<p>   All this is Jesus Christ, and more. Words fail indeed to say all that<br \/>\n   he is in himself, or all that he can be to those that trust him. And it<br \/>\n   is because of this that he is able to give such blessed help to all who<br \/>\n   need it. Let us consider that help.<\/p>\n<p>   IT Is SOVEREIGN AND UNEXPECTED HELP. Angels fell. Once they were the<br \/>\n   peers of heaven. They sang its songs, plucked its flowers of amaranth,<br \/>\n   and drank its tranquil bliss. They loved its King, and served him, like<br \/>\n   the sunbeam, with unpolluted brightness and unswerving direction. But,<br \/>\n   alas! they fell from heaven to hell. And for them there is no help, so<br \/>\n   far as we can learn. &#8220;God taketh not hold of angels.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But he has set his heart upon us, the poor children of dust, the<br \/>\n   creatures of the transient moments of time, who had fallen by the same<br \/>\n   sin of self-will. Here is a theme for meditation! We cannot pierce the<br \/>\n   mystery, or understand its full import. But we may, with wondering<br \/>\n   faith and joy, accept the chalice, brimming with unmerited, unexpected,<br \/>\n   undeserved grace, and drain its draughts of bliss.<\/p>\n<p>   IT IS HUMAN HELP. &#8221; Made like unto his brethren.&#8221; The peculiarity of<br \/>\n   this phrase testifies to Christ&#8217;s pre-existence and glory, and<br \/>\n   indicates how great a stoop on his part it involved ere he could be<br \/>\n   like man. He had to be made like man, i.e., he was not like man in the<br \/>\n   original constitution of his being. We cannot solve the mystery of the<br \/>\n   holy incarnation. And yet the thought of it has never been quite<br \/>\n   foreign to the heart of man. Many a Greek and Hindu myth rested on an<br \/>\n   instinctive craving for the presence of God in human flesh, which<br \/>\n   became parent to the belief that such a thing had been, and might be<br \/>\n   again. Even in the highlands of Galatia, the most ready explanation of<br \/>\n   the miracles of Paul was that the gods had come down in the likeness of<br \/>\n   men.<\/p>\n<p>   But though there be such a profound mystery resting on this subject,<br \/>\n   yet the union of the Almighty with a human life is at least not more<br \/>\n   incomprehensible than the union of a spiritual, unmaterial principle,<br \/>\n   as the soul, with a material organism, as the human body. When the<br \/>\n   secrets of our own nature have been unraveled, it will be time enough<br \/>\n   for us to demand of the Almighty that, when he assumes our nature, lie<br \/>\n   should disrobe himself of all mystery. How exquisite is the arrangement<br \/>\n   that God&#8217;s help should come to us through the Son of Man; that our<br \/>\n   Helper should shed true human tears, and feel true human pity Jew<br \/>\n   though he was, child of the most exclusive and intolerant of peoples,<br \/>\n   yet the humanity which is greater than Judaism makes us oblivious to<br \/>\n   all else than that lie is our Brother.<\/p>\n<p>   IT IS HIGH-PRIESTLY HELP. The full meaning of this phrase will appear<br \/>\n   as we proceed. It is sufficient to say here, that all that men have<br \/>\n   sought to realize in human priesthoods, but in vain, is realized with<br \/>\n   transcendent beauty in him. Nor is there any way of weaning men from<br \/>\n   the human priesthoods which deceive, but to present to them the<br \/>\n   all-glorious, immaculate priesthood of Christ.<\/p>\n<p>   It is of little use only to denounce the priests that are coming back<br \/>\n   to Protestant England through a thousand covert channels, or the people<br \/>\n   who go to them. There is a craving in their heart which impels them. It<br \/>\n   is of no use to fight against nature. But satisfy it; give it its true<br \/>\n   nutriment; supply its wants with reality; and it will be content to<br \/>\n   drop the false for the true, the paste diamond for the Golconda<br \/>\n   pebbles, the human for the divine. Men must have a priest; and they are<br \/>\n   going back to the mummeries of Rome, because there has been too scanty<br \/>\n   a presentation in our pulpits of the priesthood of Jesus.<\/p>\n<p>   IT IS MERCIFUL AND FAITHFUL HELP. When we are in need, we want help<br \/>\n   wedded with mercy. The patient in the infirmary does not like to be<br \/>\n   treated as a broken watch. Oh that he were at home again, to be nursed<br \/>\n   by the soft hands of his mother, which ever feel so skillful and gentle<br \/>\n   and soft! We need merciful help, which does not upbraid, is not in too<br \/>\n   great a hurry to listen, and gladly takes all extenuating circumstances<br \/>\n   into account. Such mercy is in the heart of Jesus. And his help is ever<br \/>\n   faithful, too. This word has a fine tint of meaning, almost lost in our<br \/>\n   translation, giving the idea of one who runs up at the first cry of<br \/>\n   distress. He neither slumbers nor sleeps. He watches us with a gaze<br \/>\n   which is not for a moment diverted from us. He sees us through the<br \/>\n   storm. He sits beside the molten metal. He will help us right early<br \/>\n   -i.e., when the day breaks. You may be bereft of all power of<br \/>\n   consecutive thought, unable to utter a single intelligible sentence,<br \/>\n   frantic with agony and remorse; but if you can only moan, he will<br \/>\n   instantly respond. &#8220;He will be very gracious unto thee at the voice of<br \/>\n   thy cry.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   IT IS HELP BASED ON RECONCILIATION FOR SIN. Sin is one of the greatest<br \/>\n   facts in our history. It is impossible to ignore it. You cannot explain<br \/>\n   man unless you take it into account. For this the world has been<br \/>\n   covered with the apparatus of sacrifice; and the cry has rung in a<br \/>\n   monotone of despair, &#8220;How shall man be just with God?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But Jesus met the demands of conscience, echoing those of a broken law,<br \/>\n   when on Calvary, as High-Priest, he offered himself as victim, and made<br \/>\n   an all-sufficient, satisfactory, and complete sacrifice for the sin of<br \/>\n   the world.<\/p>\n<p>   Burdened one, groaning under the load of sin, remember that he bare thy<br \/>\n   sins in his own body on the tree. Approach the holy God, reminding him<br \/>\n   of that fact, and daring on account of it to stand unabashed and<br \/>\n   accepted in his sight.<\/p>\n<p>   IT IS SYMPATHETIC HELP FOR THE TEMPTED. &#8221; Them that are tempted.&#8221;<br \/>\n   Within that circle we all stand. Each is tempted in subtler, if not in<br \/>\n   grosser, forms; in extraordinary, if not in ordinary, ways. You have<br \/>\n   been trying, oh, so hard, to be good; but have met with some sudden<br \/>\n   gust, and been overcome. Tempted to despair! Tempted to yield to<br \/>\n   Potiphar&#8217;s wife! Tempted to become a brute! No lawn without the<br \/>\n   fowler&#8217;s snare! No day without its sorrow! No night without its noisome<br \/>\n   pestilence! No rose without its thorn!<\/p>\n<p>   Do we not need succor? Certainly; and he is able to succor the tempted,<br \/>\n   because he has suffered the very worst that temptation can do. Not that<br \/>\n   there was ever one symptom or thought of yielding; yet suffering to the<br \/>\n   point of extreme anguish, beneath the test.<\/p>\n<p>   O sufferers, tempted ones, desolate and not comforted, lean your heads<br \/>\n   against the breast of the God-Man, whose feet have trodden each inch of<br \/>\n   your thorny path; and whose experiences of the power of evil well<br \/>\n   qualify him to strengthen you to stand, to lift you up if you have<br \/>\n   fallen, to speak such words as will heal the ache of the freshly gaping<br \/>\n   wound. If he were impassive, and had never wept or fought in the Garden<br \/>\n   shadows, or cried out forsaken on the cross, we had not felt him so<br \/>\n   near as we can do now in all hours of bitter grief.<\/p>\n<p>   O matchless Saviour, on whom God our Father has laid our help, we can<br \/>\n   dispense with human sympathy, with priestly help, with the solace and<br \/>\n   stay of many a holy service; but thou art indispensable to us, in thy<br \/>\n   life, and death, and resurrection, and brotherhood, and sympathizing<br \/>\n   intercession at the throne of God!<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                         IX. A WARNING AGAINST UNBELIEF<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Take heed, brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief,<br \/>\n    in departing from the living God.&#8221; -HEBREWS iii. 12.<\/p>\n<p>     THE contrast between the third and fourth chapters of this epistle is<br \/>\n   very marked. The former is like a drear November day, when all the<br \/>\n   landscape is drenched by sweeping rain, and the rotting leaves fall in<br \/>\n   showers to find a grave upon the damp and muddy soil. The latter is<br \/>\n   like a still clear day in midsummer, when nature revels in reposeful<br \/>\n   bliss beneath the unstinted caresses of the sun. There is as much<br \/>\n   difference between them as between the seventh and eighth chapters of<br \/>\n   the Epistle to the Romans.<\/p>\n<p>   But each chapter represents an experience of the inner Christian life.<br \/>\n   Perhaps the majority of Christians live and die in the third chapter,<br \/>\n   to their infinite loss. Comparatively few pass over into the fourth.<br \/>\n   Yet why, reader, should you not pass the boundary line today, and leave<br \/>\n   behind forever the bitter, unsatisfactory experiences which have become<br \/>\n   the normal rule of your existence? Come up out of the wilderness, in<br \/>\n   which you have wandered so long. Your sojourn there has been due, not<br \/>\n   to any desire on the part of God, or to any arbitrary appointment of<br \/>\n   his, or to any natural disability of your temperament; but to certain<br \/>\n   grave failures on your part, in the regimen of the inner life.<\/p>\n<p>    The antipodes of your hitherto dreary experiences is Christ, the<br \/>\n   unsearchable riches of Christ; to be made a partaker of Christ: for<br \/>\n   Christ is the Promised Land that flows with milk and honey, in which we<br \/>\n   eat bread without scarceness, and gather the grapes and pomegranates<br \/>\n   and olives of rare spiritual blessedness.<\/p>\n<p>   WILDERNESS EXPERIENCES. Never did a nation occupy a prouder position<br \/>\n   than the children of Israel on the morning when they stood victorious<br \/>\n   on the shores of the Red Sea. The power of the tyrant had been broken<br \/>\n   by a series of marvelous miracles. The chivalry of Egypt had sunk as<br \/>\n   lead in the mighty waters of death. And as the sun rose behind the<br \/>\n   mountains of Edom, and struck a flashing pathway across the burnished<br \/>\n   mirror of the sea, it revealed long lines of corpses washed up to the<br \/>\n   water&#8217;s edge. Behind, Egypt left forever. Above, the fleecy cloud,<br \/>\n   chariot of God, tabernacle for his presence. Before, the Land of<br \/>\n   Promise. Many a man was already dreaming of vineyards and olive yards,<br \/>\n   and a settled home, all of which lay within two or three months&#8217; easy<br \/>\n   march.<\/p>\n<p>   But of those six hundred thousand men, flushed with victory and hope,<br \/>\n   two only were destined to see the land flowing with milk and honey; and<br \/>\n   these not until forty weary years had slowly passed away. And what<br \/>\n   became of all the rest? Alas! their carcasses fell in the wilderness.<br \/>\n   Instead of reposing in some family burying-place in the Land of<br \/>\n   Promise, their bodies were taken up one by one and laid in the desert<br \/>\n   waste; the sands their winding-sheet; the solitude their mausoleum. It<br \/>\n   took forty years for them all to die. And to accomplish this there must<br \/>\n   have been a high percentage of deaths. How dreary those incessant<br \/>\n   funerals! How monotonous the perpetual sounds of Oriental grief moaning<br \/>\n   through the camp! What wonder that Psalm xc., written among such<br \/>\n   scenes, is so inexpressibly sad!<\/p>\n<p>   The wilderness experience is emblematic, amongst other things, of<br \/>\n   unrest, aimlessness, and unsatisfied longings. Unrest: the tents were<br \/>\n   constantly being struck to be erected again in much the same spot.<br \/>\n   Theirs a perpetual weariness; and they were not suffered to enter into<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s rest. Aimlessness: they wandered in the wilderness in a desert<br \/>\n   way; they found no city of habitation. Unsatisfied longings: hungry and<br \/>\n   thirsty, their soul fainted in them.<\/p>\n<p>   But how typical of the lives of many amongst ourselves! Life is passing<br \/>\n   away so swiftly from us, but how unideal! How few Christians seem to<br \/>\n   have learned the secret of the inner rest! How many are the victims of<br \/>\n   murmuring and discontent; or are bitten by the serpents of jealousy and<br \/>\n   passion, of hatred and ill-will! The almost universal experience tells<br \/>\n   of broken vows and blighted hopes, of purposeless wanderings, of a<br \/>\n   monotony of failure. Always striking and pitching the camp! Always<br \/>\n   surrounded by the same monotonous horizon, sand, with here and there a<br \/>\n   palm tree! Always fed on the same food, till the soul loathes it! Life<br \/>\n   passes away amid fret and chafing disappointment and weariness of<br \/>\n   existence, till we say with Solomon, &#8220;Vanity of vanities, all is<br \/>\n   vanity.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   One of the scourges of the desert is the sandstorm, when the hot wind<br \/>\n   is laden with light powdery dust, which finds its way into eyes and<br \/>\n   mouth and lungs; penetrating the clothes, stinging the skin, and making<br \/>\n   life almost unbearable. An apt illustration of the small annoyances,<br \/>\n   the petty irritations, the perpetual swarm of gnat-like stings, which<br \/>\n   invade our most comfortable circumstances, and make us question whether<br \/>\n   life is worth living.<\/p>\n<p>   Then there is also the mirage. When from afar green glades seem to<br \/>\n   attract the weary traveler, who, as he reaches them, finds his hopes<br \/>\n   deceived and his thirst mocked. Emblem this of the disappointments to<br \/>\n   which they expose themselves who are ever seeking for some earthly good<br \/>\n   to mitigate the hardships and sorrows of their life, instead of seeking<br \/>\n   the fellowship and blessed help of the living Christ. They travel<br \/>\n   forward, thinking at every step that they are nearing an oasis in their<br \/>\n   desert march; but, as they approach, the fabric of their hopes fades<br \/>\n   away into the air.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;We are made partakers of Christ.&#8221; These words may either mean that all<br \/>\n   believers together partake of the fullness of Jesus, or that they all<br \/>\n   partake with him of the fullness of God. &#8220;Heirs of God, and joint-heirs<br \/>\n   with Christ.&#8221; But whichever be the true rendering, the thought is<br \/>\n   inexpressibly helpful. Jesus Christ is our Promised Land, and our<br \/>\n   Joshua to lead us thither. He gives us rest. In him are orchards and<br \/>\n   vineyards, and all manner of precious things. His comfort for our<br \/>\n   sorrow; his rest for our weariness; his strength for our weakness; his<br \/>\n   purity for our corruption; his ever-present help for our need. Oh,<br \/>\n   blessed Jesus, surely it is the wonder of heaven that we make so little<br \/>\n   of thee!<\/p>\n<p>   THE CAUSE OF THE WILDERNESS EXPERIENCE. They could not enter in because<br \/>\n   of unbelief. See how unbelief raises a barrier which shuts us out of<br \/>\n   blessing. A fortune may have been left you; but if you do not believe<br \/>\n   the intelligence and apply for it, you will not profit by it. A<br \/>\n   regiment of angels may be passing by your home, with blessings in their<br \/>\n   hands that might enrich you forever; but if you do not believe the<br \/>\n   tidings that they are on the march, you will not go out to greet or<br \/>\n   welcome them. A noble character may rear itself in the neighborhood in<br \/>\n   which you live, or the society in which you move; but if you do not<br \/>\n   believe in it, you will derive no stimulus or comfort from its genial<br \/>\n   and helpful influence. So whatever Christ may be, and however near, he<br \/>\n   will be nothing to you unless you have learned to trust him.<\/p>\n<p>   There are three conditions in which unbelief thrives with us, as with<br \/>\n   the children of Israel: they murmured.<\/p>\n<p>   The first outbreak was in the wilderness of Sin (Exod.xvi.), within a<br \/>\n   few days of the Exodus. There was no bread. The provisions hastily<br \/>\n   brought from Egypt were consumed. They had their kneading-troughs, but<br \/>\n   no flour to knead. There was no organized commissariat. &#8220;And the whole<br \/>\n   congregation of the children of Israel murmured against Moses and<br \/>\n   against Aaron in the wilderness: and the children of Israel said unto<br \/>\n   them, Would that we had died by the hand of the Lord in the land of<br \/>\n   Egypt, when we sat by the flesh-pots, when we did eat bread to the<br \/>\n   full; for ye have brought us forth into this wilderness, to kill this<br \/>\n   whole assembly with hunger.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   The second outbreak was at Rephidim (Exod. xvii.). There was no water.<br \/>\n   The scanty desert brooks were heaps of scorching stones, and not a leaf<br \/>\n   of vegetation trembled in the burning sunshine. And again the sullen<br \/>\n   sounds of discontent were heard as the people muttered their belief<br \/>\n   that they had been brought out of Egypt to perish there.<\/p>\n<p>   But the most serious outbreak occurred shortly after they left Sinai<br \/>\n   (Num. xiii.). The green hills of Palestine at last appeared in view,<br \/>\n   and spies were sent forward to search the land. After forty days they<br \/>\n   returned laden with luscious fruits; but they had a story to tell of<br \/>\n   the strength and fortifications of the Canaanites, which filled the<br \/>\n   people with dismay; and &#8220;all the people murmured against Moses and<br \/>\n   against Aaron, and said, Would God that we had died in the land of<br \/>\n   Egypt.&#8221; &#8220;Yea, they despised the pleasant land, they believed not his<br \/>\n   word; but murmured in their tents, and hearkened not unto the voice of<br \/>\n   the Lord. Therefore he lifted up his hand unto them, that he would<br \/>\n   overthrow them in the wilderness&#8221; (Psa. cvi. 24-26). A murmuring,<br \/>\n   complaining heart is one which has already commenced to disbelieve in<br \/>\n   the wise and loving lead of Christ, and in which unbelief will thrive.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;They departed from the living God.&#8221; God is the Home and Source of<br \/>\n   life. From him, as from a fountain, all things derive their being,<br \/>\n   strength, and beauty. If Israel had remained in living union with him,<br \/>\n   there would have been no failure in their supplies; and there would<br \/>\n   have been sufficient grace to make the people calm and restful and<br \/>\n   strong amid these privations and difficulties. But they departed from<br \/>\n   him. They thought they could do better for themselves. They forsook the<br \/>\n   Fountain of living water, and went up into the hills to hew out for<br \/>\n   themselves broken, i.e., cracked cisterns, which could hold no water.<br \/>\n   Of the Rock that begat them they grew unmindful; and so became as the<br \/>\n   desert tamarisk, which inhabits dull and uninhabited wastes, in<br \/>\n   contrast to the tree whose roots are fed by rivers, and whose arms<br \/>\n   shadow generations.<\/p>\n<p>   Let us ask ourselves whether there has been any declension in our<br \/>\n   heart-religion, less prayerfulness, less closeness in our walk with<br \/>\n   God, less enjoyment in the worship of his house; for, if so, unbelief<br \/>\n   is sure to manifest itself, as the fungus which grows fat on the damp<br \/>\n   and foetid soil. Unbelief cannot live in the sunlight of fellowship<br \/>\n   with God.<\/p>\n<p>   They failed to learn the lessons of the past. They did not deny the<br \/>\n   past. They would have told you with flashing eyes the wonderful story<br \/>\n   of deliverance. But they did not trust God&#8217;s love and wisdom; they did<br \/>\n   not rely on his repeated promises that he would most certainly bring<br \/>\n   them in as he had already brought them out; they did not find in the<br \/>\n   past a guarantee that he would not fail nor forsake them. At Sin they<br \/>\n   should have said, &#8220;He gave us these bodies with these appetites and<br \/>\n   needs: we may trust him to provide them with food. &#8216;Our heavenly Father<br \/>\n   knows that we have need of all these things.'&#8221; At Marah they should<br \/>\n   have said, &#8220;He gave us manna, surely he can supply our thirst.&#8221; At<br \/>\n   Paran they should have said, &#8220;God has promised to give us the land; and<br \/>\n   so, though the Canaanites are strong, and their cities walled to<br \/>\n   heaven, we will dare believe in him.&#8221; Instead of this they cried, &#8220;He<br \/>\n   smote the rock, and the waters gushed out; and the streams overflowed.<br \/>\n   Can he give bread also? Can he give flesh for his people?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   As we pass through life we should carefully store our hearts with the<br \/>\n   memory of God&#8217;s great goodness, and fetch from past deliverances the<br \/>\n   assurances that he will never leave, neither forsake. Has he conveyed<br \/>\n   us across the Atlantic to leave us to drown in a ditch? Has he been<br \/>\n   with us in six troubles to desert us in the seventh? Has he saved, and<br \/>\n   can he not keep? Has he redeemed us from hell, and can he not bring us<br \/>\n   to heaven?<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;His love in time past forbids us to think<\/p>\n<p>   He&#8217;ll leave us at last in trouble to sink;<\/p>\n<p>   Each sweet Ebenezer we have in review<\/p>\n<p>   Confirms his good pleasure to help us right through.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   If we would guard against unbelief, we should reinforce our faith by<br \/>\n   constantly recapitulating the story of God&#8217;s past dealings; and thus<br \/>\n   through the stream of memory the uplands of our life will send their<br \/>\n   deposits of blessed helpfulness to reinforce us in our daily anxieties<br \/>\n   and perplexities. &#8220;The Lord hath been mindful of us, he will bless us.&#8221;<br \/>\n   &#8220;If, when we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of<br \/>\n   his Son, much more, being reconciled, we shall be saved by his life.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   You were happy in your childhood; your early days were set in a golden<br \/>\n   frame; but dear ones have vanished, as the oak&#8217;s shadow from the forest<br \/>\n   undergrowth, and you feel unprotected and lonely: but the God of your<br \/>\n   childhood will not be less thoughtful of you than in those happy bygone<br \/>\n   days.<\/p>\n<p>   You have stepped out on the waters, and as the storm threatens you, you<br \/>\n   almost wish yourself back; but he who was with you in the fair haven<br \/>\n   will be as near you when the winds rave and the waves lift up their<br \/>\n   voice. You are on the point of exchanging the flesh-pots of Egypt for<br \/>\n   the new land of Canaan, with its blessed promise; and on the way, heart<br \/>\n   and flesh fail at the new and untried scenes that daunt and perplex:<br \/>\n   but he who delivered you from Pharaoh can shield you from Amalek; he<br \/>\n   who cleft the Red Sea will divide the Jordan.<\/p>\n<p>   INSPIRED CAUTIONS. &#8221; Take heed lest there be in any one of you an evil<br \/>\n   heart of unbelief in departing from the living God.&#8221; Unbelief is the<br \/>\n   child, not of the head, but of the heart. It is always well to know the<br \/>\n   source of disease, then the physician can attack it in its citadel. If<br \/>\n   unbelief were the creature of our intellect, we must needs meet it<br \/>\n   there with argument; but since it is the product of a wrong state of<br \/>\n   heart, of an evil heart, we must meet it there.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;This,&#8221; says William Law, &#8220;is an eternal truth, which you cannot too<br \/>\n   much reflect upon, that reason always follows the state of the heart;<br \/>\n   and what your heart is, that is your reason. If your heart is full of<br \/>\n   sentiments, of penitence, and of faith, your reason will take part with<br \/>\n   your heart; but if your heart is shut up in death and dryness, your<br \/>\n   reason will delight in nothing but dry objections and speculations.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Guard against an evil heart. If the heart were in a right condition,<br \/>\n   faith would be as natural to it as flowers in spring; or as smiles on<br \/>\n   the face of healthy, innocent childhood. As soon as the heart gets into<br \/>\n   an evil state-harboring sin; cherishing things which you would not<br \/>\n   excuse in others, but condone in yourself; permitting unholy thoughts<br \/>\n   and desires to remain unchecked and unjudged, then, beware! for such a<br \/>\n   heart is no longer able to believe in God. Its head turns dizzy; its<br \/>\n   eyes are blinded; and it is in imminent peril of falling irretrievably.<\/p>\n<p>   Take heed, then; watch and pray; examine yourselves whether ye be in<br \/>\n   the faith; prove your own selves! Expose yourselves to the searching<br \/>\n   light of God&#8217;s Spirit. Cultivate the honest and good heart. Most of the<br \/>\n   infidelity of the present day arises from man&#8217;s disinclination to<br \/>\n   retain God in his knowledge. More skepticism may be traced to a<br \/>\n   neglected prayer closet than to the arguments of infidels or the halls<br \/>\n   of secularists. First, men depart from God; then they deny him. And,<br \/>\n   therefore, for the most part, unbelief will not yield to clever sermons<br \/>\n   on the evidences, but to home thrusts that pierce the points of the<br \/>\n   harness to the soul within. &#8220;Keep thy heart beyond all keeping, since<br \/>\n   out of it are the issues of life.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Guard especially against heart-hardening. Hard hearts are unbelieving<br \/>\n   ones; therefore beware of ossification of the heart. The hardest hearts<br \/>\n   were soft once, and the softest may get hard. The chalk which now holds<br \/>\n   the fossil shells was once moist ooze. The horny hand of toil was once<br \/>\n   full of soft dimples. The murderer once shuddered when, as a boy, he<br \/>\n   crushed a worm. Judas must have been once a tender and impressionable<br \/>\n   lad.<\/p>\n<p>   But hearts harden gradually, like the freezing of a pond on a frosty<br \/>\n   night. At first the process can be detected by none but a practiced<br \/>\n   eye. Then there is a thin film of ice, so slender that a pin or needle<br \/>\n   would fall through. At length it will sustain a pebble, and, if winter<br \/>\n   still hold its unbroken sway, a child, a man, a crowd, a cart will<br \/>\n   follow. We get hard through the steps of an unperceived process.<\/p>\n<p>   The constant hearing the truth without obeying it. The knowing a better<br \/>\n   and doing the worse. The cherishing of unholy things that seem fair as<br \/>\n   angels. The refusal to confess the wrong and to profess the right. All<br \/>\n   these things harden. Beware of the deceitfulness of sin! Take heed to<br \/>\n   yourselves! Exhort one another daily.<\/p>\n<p>   Guard against a fickle heart. This is the sin which this epistle<br \/>\n   especially opposes. There are many around us who eagerly embrace a<br \/>\n   novelty; but when the stress comes, as it always does, like the<br \/>\n   settling of a house, there is a slackening off. We must hold fast our<br \/>\n   boldness and the glorying of our hope steadfast to the end. We can only<br \/>\n   become partakers of Christ if we hold fast the beginning of our<br \/>\n   confidence firm to the end.<\/p>\n<p>   We should see not only to our own heart, but to the heart of our<br \/>\n   brethren; and exhort one another daily, watching over each other, and<br \/>\n   seeking to revive drooping piety and reanimate fainting hope. Let us<br \/>\n   take heed to these things today. Now is God&#8217;s time. The Holy Ghost<br \/>\n   saith, Today. Every day of delay is dangerous, because the hardening<br \/>\n   process becomes more habitual. Today restore what you have taken<br \/>\n   wrongfully; adjust a wrong, promote a right. Today renounce some evil<br \/>\n   habit, some unhallowed pastime, some unlawful friendship. Today reach<br \/>\n   out after some further realization of the fair ideal whch beckons you.<br \/>\n   Today leave the wilderness forever, and enter by faith the Land of<br \/>\n   Promise.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                             X. THE GOSPEL OF REST<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;There remaineth therefore a rest to the people of God.  &#8220;-HEBREWS iv. 9.<\/p>\n<p>   THE keynote of this chapter is Rest. In the second verse it is spoken<br \/>\n   of as a gospel, or good news. And is there any gospel that more needs<br \/>\n   preaching in these busy, weary days, through which our age is rushing<br \/>\n   to its close, than the Gospel of Rest? On all hands we hear of strong<br \/>\n   and useful workers stricken down in early life by the exhausting<br \/>\n   effects of mental toil. The tender brain tissues were never made to<br \/>\n   sustain the tremendous wear and tear of our times. There is no<br \/>\n   machinery in human nature to repair swiftly enough the waste of nervous<br \/>\n   energy which is continually going on. It is not, therefore, to be<br \/>\n   wondered at that the symptoms of brain tiredness are becoming familiar<br \/>\n   to many workers, acting as warning signals, which, if not immediately<br \/>\n   attended to, are followed by some terrible collapse of mind or body, or<br \/>\n   both.<\/p>\n<p>   And yet it is not altogether that we work so much harder than our<br \/>\n   forefathers; but that there is so much more fret and chafe and worry in<br \/>\n   our lives. Competition is closer. Population is more crowded. Brains<br \/>\n   are keener and swifter in their motion. The resources of ingenuity and<br \/>\n   inventiveness, of creation and production, are more severely and<br \/>\n   constantly taxed. And the age seem&#8217;s so merciless and selfish. If the<br \/>\n   lonely spirit trips and falls, it is trodden down in the great onward<br \/>\n   rush, or left behind to its fate; and the dread of the swoop of the<br \/>\n   vultures, with rustling wings, from unknown heights upon us as their<br \/>\n   prey, fills us with an anguish which we know by the familiar name of<br \/>\n   care. We could better stand the strain of work if only we had rest from<br \/>\n   worry, from anxiety, and from the fret of the troubled sea that cannot<br \/>\n   rest, as it moans around us, with its yeasty waves, hungry to devour.<br \/>\n   Is such a rest possible?<\/p>\n<p>   This chapter states that such a rest is possible. &#8220;Let us labor<br \/>\n   therefore to enter into that rest.&#8221; Rest? What rest? His rest, says the<br \/>\n   first verse; my rest, says the third verse; God&#8217;s rest, says the fourth<br \/>\n   verse. And this last verse is a quotation from the earliest page of the<br \/>\n   Bible, which tells how God rested from all the work that he had made.<br \/>\n   And as we turn to that marvelous apocalypse of the past, which in so<br \/>\n   many respects answers to the apocalypse of the future given us by the<br \/>\n   Apostle John, we find that, whereas we are expressly told of the<br \/>\n   evening and morning of each of the other days of creation, there is no<br \/>\n   reference to the dawn or close of God&#8217;s rest-day; and we are left to<br \/>\n   infer that it is impervious to time, independent of duration,<br \/>\n   unlimited, and eternal; that the ages of human story are but hours in<br \/>\n   the rest-day of Jehovah; and that, in point of fact, we spend our years<br \/>\n   in the Sabbath-keeping of God. But, better than all, it would appear<br \/>\n   that we are invited to enter into it and share it; as a child living by<br \/>\n   the placid waters of a vast fresh water lake may dip into them its cup,<br \/>\n   and drink and drink again, without making any appreciable diminution of<br \/>\n   its volume or ripple on its expanse.<\/p>\n<p>   What is meant by God resting? Surely not the rest of weariness! &#8220;He<br \/>\n   fainteth not, neither is weary.&#8221; Though he had spread forth the<br \/>\n   heavens, and laid the foundations of the earth, and weighed the<br \/>\n   mountains in scales, and the hills in a balance, and had invented ten<br \/>\n   thousand differing forms of being, yet his inventiveness was as fresh,<br \/>\n   his energy as vigorous as ever. Surely not the rest of inactivity. &#8220;My<br \/>\n   Father worketh hitherto,&#8221; said our Lord. &#8220;In him we live, and move, and<br \/>\n   have our being.&#8221; True, he is not now sending forth, so far as we know,<br \/>\n   suns, or systems, or fresh types of being. But his power is ever at<br \/>\n   work, repairing, renewing, and sustaining the fabric of the vast<br \/>\n   machinery of the universe. No sparrow falls to the ground without him.<br \/>\n   The cry of the young lion and the lowing of the oxen in the pastures<br \/>\n   attract his instant regard. &#8220;In him all things consist.&#8221; It was the<br \/>\n   rest of a finished work. He girded himself to the specific work of<br \/>\n   creation, and summoned into being all that is; and when it was finished<br \/>\n   he said it was very good: and at once he rested from all his work which<br \/>\n   he had created and made. It was the rest of divine complacency, of<br \/>\n   infinite satisfaction, of perfect content. It was equivalent to saying,<br \/>\n   &#8220;This creation of mine is all that I meant it to be, finished and<br \/>\n   perfect. I am perfectly satisfied; there is nothing more to be done; it<br \/>\n   is all very good.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   This, then, is the rest which we are invited to share. We are not<br \/>\n   summoned to the heavy slumber which follows over-taxing toil, nor to<br \/>\n   inaction or indolence; but to the rest which is possible amid swift<br \/>\n   activity and strenuous work; to perfect equilibrium between the<br \/>\n   outgoings and incomings of the life; to a contented heart; to peace<br \/>\n   that passeth all understanding; to the repose of the will in the will<br \/>\n   of God; and to the calm of the depths of the nature which are<br \/>\n   undisturbed by the hurricanes which sweep the surface, and urge forward<br \/>\n   the mighty waves. This rest is holding out both its hands to the weary<br \/>\n   souls of men throughout the ages, offering its shelter as a harbor from<br \/>\n   the storms of life.<\/p>\n<p>   But is it certain that this rest has not already been entered and<br \/>\n   exhausted by the children of men? That question is fully examined and<br \/>\n   answered in this wonderful paragraph. The Sabbath did not realize that<br \/>\n   rest (ver. 3). We cannot prize its ministry too highly. Its law is<br \/>\n   written, not only in Scripture, but in the nature of man. The godless<br \/>\n   band of French Revolutionists found that they could not supersede the<br \/>\n   week by the decade, the one-day-in-seven by the one-day in-ten. Like a<br \/>\n   ministering angel it relieves the monotony of labor, and hushes the<br \/>\n   ponderous machinery of life, and weaves its spell of rest; but it is<br \/>\n   too fitful and transient to realize the rest of God. It may typify it,<br \/>\n   but it cannot exhaust it. Indeed, it was broken by man&#8217;s rebellion as<br \/>\n   soon as God had sanctified and hallowed it. Canaan did not realize that<br \/>\n   rest (ver. 8). The Land of Promise was a great relief to the marchings<br \/>\n   and privations of the desert. But it was constantly interrupted, and at<br \/>\n   last, in the Captivity, broken up; as the forms of the mountains in the<br \/>\n   lake by a shower of hail. Besides, in the Book of Psalms, written four<br \/>\n   hundred years after Joshua had led Israel across the Jordan, The Holy<br \/>\n   Spirit, speaking by David, points onward to a rest still future (Psalm<br \/>\n   xcv. 7). Surely, then, if neither of these events has realized the rest<br \/>\n   of God, it remains still, waiting for us and all the people of God.<br \/>\n   &#8220;There remaineth, therefore,&#8221; unexhausted and unrealized, &#8220;a<br \/>\n   Sabbath-keeping to the people of God.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   And there is yet a further reason for this conviction of God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   unexhausted rest. Jesus, our Forerunner and Representative, has entered<br \/>\n   into it for us. See what verse 10 affirms: &#8220;He that is entered into his<br \/>\n   rest; &#8221; and who can he be but our great Joshua, Jehovah-Jesus? He also<br \/>\n   has ceased from his own work of redemption, as God did from his of<br \/>\n   creation. After the creative act, there came the Sabbath, when God<br \/>\n   ceased from his work, and pronounced it very good; so, after the<br \/>\n   redemptive act, there came the Sabbath to the Redeemer. He lay, during<br \/>\n   the seventh day, in the grave of Joseph, not because he was exhausted<br \/>\n   or inactive, but because redemption was finished, and there was no more<br \/>\n   for him to do. He sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on High;<br \/>\n   and that majestic session is a symptom neither of fatigue nor of<br \/>\n   indolence. He ever liveth to make intercession; he works with his<br \/>\n   servants, confirming their words with signs; he walks amid the seven<br \/>\n   golden candlesticks. And yet he rests as a man may rest who has arisen<br \/>\n   from his ordinary life to effect some great deed of emancipation and<br \/>\n   deliverance; but, having accomplished it, returns again to the ordinary<br \/>\n   routine of his former life, glad and satisfied in his heart. Nor is<br \/>\n   this rest for Christ alone; but for us also, who are forever identified<br \/>\n   with him in his glorious life. We have been raised up together with him<br \/>\n   in the mind and purpose of God, and have been made to sit with him in<br \/>\n   the heavenlies; so that in Jesus we have already entered into the rest<br \/>\n   of God, and have simply to appropriate it by a living faith.<\/p>\n<p>   How, then, may we practically realize and enjoy the rest of God ?-( 1)<br \/>\n   We must will the will of God. So long as the will of God, whether in<br \/>\n   the Bible or in providence, is going in one direction and our will in<br \/>\n   another, rest is impossible. Can there be rest in an earthly household<br \/>\n   when the children are ever chafing against the regulations and control<br \/>\n   of their parents? How much less can we be at rest if we harbor an<br \/>\n   incessant spirit of insubordination and questioning, contradicting and<br \/>\n   resisting the will of God! That will must be done on earth as it is in<br \/>\n   heaven. None can stay his hand, or say, What dost thou? It will be done<br \/>\n   with us, or in spite of us. If we resist it, the yoke against which we<br \/>\n   rebel will only rub a sore place on our skin; but we must still carry<br \/>\n   it. How much wiser, then, meekly to yield to it, and submit ourselves<br \/>\n   under the mighty hand of God, saying, &#8220;Not my will, but thine be done!&#8221;<br \/>\n   The man who has learned the secret of Christ, in saying a perpetual<br \/>\n   &#8220;Yes&#8221;to the will of God; whose life is a strain of rich music to the<br \/>\n   theme, &#8220;Even so, Father&#8221;; whose will follows the current of the will of<br \/>\n   God, as the smoke from our chimneys permits itself to be wafted by the<br \/>\n   winds of autumn, that man will find rest unto his soul.<\/p>\n<p>   We must accept the finished work of Christ. He has ceased from the work<br \/>\n   of our redemption, because there was no more to do. Our sins and the<br \/>\n   sins of the world were put away. The power of the adversary was<br \/>\n   annulled. The gate of heaven was opened to all that believe. All was<br \/>\n   finished, and was very good. Let us, then, cease from our works. Let us<br \/>\n   no longer feel as if we have to do aught, by our tears or prayers or<br \/>\n   works, to make ourselves acceptable to God. Why should we try to add<br \/>\n   one stitch to a finished garment, or append one stroke to the signed<br \/>\n   and sealed warrant of pardon placed within our hands? We need have no<br \/>\n   anxiety as to the completeness or sufficiency of a divinely finished<br \/>\n   thing. Let us quiet our fears by considering that what satisfies<br \/>\n   Christ, our Saviour and Head, may well satisfy us. Let us dare to stand<br \/>\n   without a qualm in God&#8217;s presence, by virtue of the glorious and<br \/>\n   completed sacrifice of Calvary. Let us silence every tremor of unrest<br \/>\n   by recalling the dying cry on the cross, and the witness of the empty<br \/>\n   grave.<\/p>\n<p>   We must trust our Father&#8217;s care. &#8220;Casting all your care upon him, for<br \/>\n   he careth for you.&#8221; Sometimes like a wild deluge, sweeping all before<br \/>\n   it, and sometimes like the continual dropping of water, so does care<br \/>\n   mar our peace. That we shall some day fall by the hand of Saul; that we<br \/>\n   shall be left to starve or pine away our days in a respectable<br \/>\n   workhouse; that we shall never be able to get through the difficulties<br \/>\n   of the coming days or weeks; household cares, family cares, business<br \/>\n   cares; cares about servants, children, money; crushing cares, and cares<br \/>\n   that buzz around the soul like a swarm of gnats on a summer&#8217;s day, what<br \/>\n   rest can there be for a soul thus beset? But, when we once learn to<br \/>\n   live by faith, believing that our Father loves us, and will not forget<br \/>\n   or forsake us, but is pledged to supply all our needs; when we acquire<br \/>\n   the holy habit of talking to him about all, and handing over all to<br \/>\n   him, at the moment that the tiniest shadow is cast upon the soul; when<br \/>\n   we accept insult and annoyance and interruption, coming to us from<br \/>\n   whatever quarter, as being his permission, and, therefore, as part of<br \/>\n   his dear will for us, then we have learned the secret of the Gospel of<br \/>\n   Rest.<\/p>\n<p>   We must follow our Shepherd&#8217;s lead. &#8221; We which have believed do enter<br \/>\n   into rest&#8221; (ver. 3). The way is dark; the mountain track is often<br \/>\n   hidden from our sight by the heavy mists that hang over hill and fell;<br \/>\n   we can hardly discern a step in front. But our divine Guide knows. He<br \/>\n   who trod earth&#8217;s pathways is going unseen at our side. The shield of<br \/>\n   his environing protection is all around; and his voice, in its clear,<br \/>\n   sweet accents, is whispering peace. Why should we fear? He who touches<br \/>\n   us, touches his bride, his purchased possession, the apple of his eye.<br \/>\n   We may, therefore, trust and not be afraid. Though the mountains should<br \/>\n   depart, or the hills be removed, yet will his loving kindness not<br \/>\n   depart from us, neither will the covenant of his peace be removed. And<br \/>\n   amid the storm, and darkness, and the onsets of our foes, we shall hear<br \/>\n   him soothing us with the sweet refrain of his own lullaby of rest: &#8220;My<br \/>\n   peace I give unto you; in the world ye shall have tribulation, but in<br \/>\n   me ye shall have peace.&#8221;<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                        XI. THE WORD OF GOD AND ITS EDGE<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;The Word of God is quick and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged<br \/>\n    sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the<br \/>\n    joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the<br \/>\n    heart.&#8221;   HEBREWS iv. 12.<\/p>\n<p>   WE all have to do with God. &#8220;Him with whom we have to do.&#8221; You cannot<br \/>\n   break the connection. You must do with him as a rebel, if not as a<br \/>\n   friend; on the ground of works, if not on the ground of grace; at the<br \/>\n   great white throne, if not in the fleeting days of time. You cannot do<br \/>\n   without God. You cannot do as you would if there were no God. You<br \/>\n   cannot avoid having to do with him; for even though you were to say<br \/>\n   there was no God, doing violence to the clearest instincts of your<br \/>\n   being, yet still you would breathe his air, eat his provender, occupy<br \/>\n   his world, and stand at last before his bar.<\/p>\n<p>   And, if you will pardon the materialism of the reference, I will follow<br \/>\n   the suggestion of my text, and say that the God with whom we have to do<br \/>\n   has eyes. &#8220;The eyes of him with whom we have to do.&#8221; &#8220;Thou art a God<br \/>\n   that seest&#8221; was the startled exclamation of an Egyptian slave girl<br \/>\n   whose childhood had been spent amid the vast statues of gods who had<br \/>\n   eyes with far-away stony stare, but saw not. And she was right. &#8220;The<br \/>\n   Lord looketh from heaven; his eyes behold, his eyelids try, the<br \/>\n   children of men.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Those eyes miss no one. &#8221; There is not any creature not manifest in his<br \/>\n   sight.&#8221; The truest goodness is least obtrusive of itself. It steals<br \/>\n   unnoticed through the world, filling up its days with deeds and words<br \/>\n   of gentle kindness, which are known only to heaven; and herein it finds<br \/>\n   its sufficient reward. It prays behind closed doors; it exercises a<br \/>\n   vigorous self-denial in secret; it does its work of mercy by stealth.<br \/>\n   Thus the great blatant world of men, with its trumpets and heralds and<br \/>\n   newspaper notices, knows little of it, and cannot find the nooks where<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s wild flowers bloom in inaccessible heights, for his eye alone.<br \/>\n   But the Father seeth in secret. The eyes of the Lord are upon the<br \/>\n   righteous. His eyes run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to show<br \/>\n   himself strong on behalf of those whose heart is perfect toward him. Do<br \/>\n   you want guidance? Look up! those eyes wait to guide by a glance. Are<br \/>\n   you in sorrow? they will film with tears. Are you going astray? they<br \/>\n   shall beckon you back, and break your heart, as Peter&#8217;s. You will come<br \/>\n   to find your heaven in the light radiated by the eye of God, when once<br \/>\n   you have learned to meet it, clad in the righteousness of Jesus.<\/p>\n<p>   Unconverted reader, remember there is no screen from the eye of God.<br \/>\n   His eyes are as a flame of fire; and our strongest screens crackle up<br \/>\n   as thinnest gauze before the touch of that holy flame. Even rocks and<br \/>\n   hills are inadequate to hide from the face of him that sits upon the<br \/>\n   throne. &#8220;Whither shall I go from thy presence?&#8221; That question is<br \/>\n   unanswered, and unanswerable. It has stood upon the page of Scripture<br \/>\n   for three thousand years, and no one yet of all the myriads that have<br \/>\n   read it has been able to devise a reply. Heaven says, Not here. Hell<br \/>\n   says, Not here. It is not among angels, or the lost, or in the vast<br \/>\n   silent spaces of eternity. There is no creature anywhere not manifest<br \/>\n   to his sight. He who made vultures, able from immense heights to<br \/>\n   discern the least morsel on the desert waste, has eyes as good as they.<br \/>\n   And think how terrible are the eyes of God! When Egypt&#8217;s chivalry had<br \/>\n   pursued Israel into the depths of the sea, they suddenly turned to<br \/>\n   flee. Why? Not because of thunder or lightning or voice; but because of<br \/>\n   a look. &#8220;The Lord looked out of the cloud, and troubled the Egyptians.&#8221;<br \/>\n   Ah, sinner, how terrible will it be for thee to abide under the frown<br \/>\n   of God! &#8220;With the froward he will show himself froward.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Those eyes miss nothing. &#8220;All things are naked and opened unto the eyes<br \/>\n   of him with whom we have to do.&#8221; It is said of the Lord Jesus, on one<br \/>\n   occasion, that he entered into Jerusalem, and into the Temple; and when<br \/>\n   he had looked round about on all things, he went out. It was his last,<br \/>\n   long, farewell look. But note its comprehensiveness. Nothing escaped<br \/>\n   it. We look only on parts of things, and often look without seeing. But<br \/>\n   the Lord seeth not as man seeth; for man looketh on the outward<br \/>\n   appearance, but the Lord looketh on the heart. &#8220;Naked and opened.&#8221; This<br \/>\n   is a sacrificial phrase, indicating the priestly act of throwing the<br \/>\n   victim on its back before him, so that it lay, exposed to his gaze,<br \/>\n   helpless to recover itself, ready for the knife. Ah, how eagerly we try<br \/>\n   to hide and cloak our sin! We dare not pen a truthful diary; we dread<br \/>\n   the illness which would unlock our tongues in wholesale chatterings; we<br \/>\n   shrink from the loving gaze of our dearest. We deceive man, and<br \/>\n   sometimes ourselves; but not our great High-Priest. He sees all, that<br \/>\n   secret sin; that lurking enmity; that closed chamber; that hidden<br \/>\n   burglar; that masked assassin; that stowaway; that declension of heart;<br \/>\n   that little rift within the lute; that speck of decay in the luscious<br \/>\n   fruit. And thus it is that men are kept out of the Canaan of God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   rest, because he sees the evil heart of unbelief which departs from<br \/>\n   himself; and on account of which he swears now, as of old, &#8220;they shall<br \/>\n   not enter into my rest.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Is it not a marvel that he who knows so much about us should love us<br \/>\n   still? It were indeed an inexplicable mystery, save for the truth of<br \/>\n   the words which so sweetly follow: &#8220;Seeing, then, that we have a great<br \/>\n   High-Priest.&#8221; He has a priest&#8217;s heart. His scrutiny is not one of<br \/>\n   morbid or idle curiosity, but of a surgeon, who intently examines the<br \/>\n   source of disease with pity and tenderness, and resolves to extirpate<br \/>\n   it as quickly and as painlessly as possible. Is it not frequently the<br \/>\n   case that fuller knowledge will beget love, which once seemed<br \/>\n   impossible? There are some people whose faces are so hard, and their<br \/>\n   eyes so cold, that we are instantly repelled; but if we knew all, how<br \/>\n   they have been pierced and wounded, and disappointed, we should begin<br \/>\n   to pity them, and pity is close kinsman to love. The Saviour has known<br \/>\n   us from all eternity, our downsittings and uprisings, our secret<br \/>\n   possibilities of evil, our unfathomed depths of waywardness and<br \/>\n   depravity; and yet he loves us, and will love us.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;He knows all, But loves us better than he knows.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   And out of this love, which wells up perennially in the heart of Jesus,<br \/>\n   unfrozen by the winter of our neglect, Unstanched by the demands of our<br \/>\n   fickleness, there comes the stern discpline of which this passage<br \/>\n   proceeds to speak. In majestic phrase, the Apocalyptic seer tells how<br \/>\n   he beheld the Word of God ride forth on his snow-white steed, arrayed<br \/>\n   in crimson robes, whilst the many crowns of empire flashed upon his<br \/>\n   brow. Two features are specially noted in his appearance. His eyes were<br \/>\n   as a flame of fire; this characteristic looks back over the words we<br \/>\n   have considered. Out of his mouth goeth a sharp two-edged sword; this<br \/>\n   looks forward to the words which now invite us. We must never divorce<br \/>\n   these two. The eyes and the sword. Not the eyes only; for of what use<br \/>\n   would it be to see and not strike? Not the sword only; for to strike<br \/>\n   without seeing would give needless pain, this would be surgery<br \/>\n   blindfolded. But the searching tender vision, followed by the swift and<br \/>\n   decisive flash of the sword of amputation and deliverance. Oh, who will<br \/>\n   now submit to that stroke, wielded by the gentle hand that often<br \/>\n   carried healing and blessing, and was nailed to the cross; guided by<br \/>\n   unerring wisdom, and nerved by Almighty strength? Not death, but life<br \/>\n   and fruitfulness, freedom and benediction, are all awaiting that one<br \/>\n   blow of emancipation. That sword is the Word of God.<\/p>\n<p>   THE WORD OF GOD IS LIVING. The words he speaks are spirit and life<br \/>\n   (John vi. 63). Wherever they fall, though into dull and lifeless soil,<br \/>\n   they begin to breed life, and produce results like themselves. They<br \/>\n   come into the heart of an abandoned woman; and straightway there follow<br \/>\n   compunction for the past, vows of amendment, and the hasty rush to<br \/>\n   become an evangelist to others. They come into the heart of a dying<br \/>\n   robber; and immediately he refrains from blasphemy, and rebukes his<br \/>\n   fellow, and announces the Messiahship, the blamelessness, the<br \/>\n   approaching glory, of the dying Saviour. They come into hearts worn out<br \/>\n   with the wild excesses of the great pagan ages, and ill-content, though<br \/>\n   enriched with the spoils of art and refinement and philosophy in the<br \/>\n   very zenith of their development; and lo! the moral waste begins to<br \/>\n   sprout with harvests of holiness, and to blossom with the roses of<br \/>\n   heaven. If only those words, spoken from the lips of Christ, be allowed<br \/>\n   to work in the conscience, there will be forthwith the stir of life.<\/p>\n<p>   THE WORD OF GOD IS ACTIVE, i.e., energetic. Beneath its spell the blind<br \/>\n   see, the deaf hear, the paralyzed are nerved with new energy, the dead<br \/>\n   stir in their graves and come forth. There are few things more<br \/>\n   energetic than life. Put a seed into the fissure of a rock, and it will<br \/>\n   split it in twain from top to bottom. Though walls and rocks and ruins<br \/>\n   impede the course of the seedling, yet it will force its way to the<br \/>\n   light and air and rain. And when the Word of God enters the heart, it<br \/>\n   is not as a piece of furniture or lumber. It asserts itself and strives<br \/>\n   for mastery, and compels men to give up sin; to make up long standing<br \/>\n   feuds; to restore ill-gotten gains; to strive to enter into the strait<br \/>\n   gate. &#8220;Now ye are pruned,&#8221; said our Lord, &#8220;through the word that I have<br \/>\n   spoken to you.&#8221; The words of Christ are his winnowing-fan, with which<br \/>\n   he is wont to purge his flour, whether in the heart or the world. We<br \/>\n   are not, therefore, surprised that a leading tradesman in a thriving<br \/>\n   commercial center said that the visit of two evangelists, who did<br \/>\n   little else than reiterate the Word of God, was as good as a revival of<br \/>\n   trade, because it led so many people to pay up debts which were<br \/>\n   reckoned as lost.<\/p>\n<p>   THE WORD OF GOD IS SHARP. Its sharpness is threefold. It is sharp to<br \/>\n   pierce. On the day of Pentecost, as Peter wielded the sword of the<br \/>\n   Spirit, it pierced three thousand to the heart; and they fell wounded<br \/>\n   to the death before him, crying, &#8220;What shall we do?&#8221; Often since have<br \/>\n   strong men been smitten to the dust under the effect of that same<br \/>\n   sword, skillfully used. And this is the kind of preaching we need. Men<br \/>\n   are urged to accept of the gift of God, and many seem to comply with<br \/>\n   the invitation; but in the process of time they fall away. Is not the<br \/>\n   cause in this, that they have never been wounded to the death of their<br \/>\n   self-esteem, their heart has never been pierced to the letting of the<br \/>\n   blood of their own life, they have never been brought into the dust of<br \/>\n   death? Oh for Boanerges! able to pierce the armor of excuses of vain<br \/>\n   hopes, behind which men shield themselves, that many may cry with Ahab,<br \/>\n   pierced between the joints of the harness &#8220;Turn thine hand, and carry<br \/>\n   me out of the battle, for I am wounded!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   It is sharp to divide. With his sharp knife the priest was accustomed<br \/>\n   to dissect the joints of the animal, and to open to view even the<br \/>\n   marrow of the bones. Every hair was searched, every limb examined; and<br \/>\n   thus the sacred gift was passed, and permitted to be offered in<br \/>\n   worship. And God&#8217;s scrutiny is not satisfied with the external<br \/>\n   appearance and profession. It goes far deeper. It enters into those<br \/>\n   mysterious regions of the nature where soul and spirit, purpose,<br \/>\n   intention, motive, and impulse, hold their secret court, and carry on<br \/>\n   the hidden machinery of human life. Who can tread the mysterious<br \/>\n   confines where soul and spirit touch? What is the line of demarkation?<br \/>\n   Where does the one end, and the other begin? We cannot tell; but that<br \/>\n   mystic Word of God could cut the one from the other, as easily as the<br \/>\n   selvage is divided from the cloth. It is at home in distinctions which<br \/>\n   are too fine drawn and minute for human apprehension. It assumes an<br \/>\n   office like that which Jesus refused when he said, &#8220;Who made me a judge<br \/>\n   and divider over you?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   It is sharp to criticise and judge. &#8220;Quick to discern the thoughts and<br \/>\n   intents of the heart.&#8221; Christ is eager about these. Because what a man<br \/>\n   thinks and intends in his heart, that he will be sooner or later in<br \/>\n   life. We must expect to have our most secret thoughts, relations, and<br \/>\n   purposes questioned, criticised, and measured by the Word of God. No<br \/>\n   court of inquiry was ever presided over by a more exact inquisitor than<br \/>\n   this. The corpses of the dead past are exhumed; the old lumber-rooms<br \/>\n   with their padlocked boxes are explored; the accounts of bygone years<br \/>\n   are audited and taxed. God is critic of all the secrets of the heart.<br \/>\n   As each thought or intention passes to and fro, he searches it. He is<br \/>\n   constantly weighing in the balance our thoughts and aims, though they<br \/>\n   be light as air.<\/p>\n<p>   On one occasion, when Saul had spared the spoils of a doomed city,<br \/>\n   together with its monarch, the latter came to Samuel, not as a<br \/>\n   criminal, but delicately, as a pampered friend. And Samuel said, &#8220;As<br \/>\n   thy sword has made women childless, so shall thy mother be childless<br \/>\n   among women. And Samuel hewed Agag in pieces before the Lord.&#8221; Thus it<br \/>\n   is that we have spared too many of our sins, at the risk of our<br \/>\n   irreparable rejection from the throne of true manhood and<br \/>\n   righteousness. How much better to let Christ do his work of amputation<br \/>\n   and excision! If we do not know ourselves, let us ask him to search us.<br \/>\n   If we cannot cut off the offending member, let us look to him to rid us<br \/>\n   of it.<\/p>\n<p>   Do not fear him; close after these terrible words, as the peal of bells<br \/>\n   after the crash of the storm on the organ at Freiburg, we are told that<br \/>\n   &#8220;he was tempted in all points like as we are,&#8221; and that &#8221; we have not a<br \/>\n   High~Priest who cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities.&#8221;<br \/>\n   &#8220;Does she sing well?&#8221; asked the trainer of a new operatic singer.<br \/>\n   &#8220;Splendidly,&#8221; was the reply; &#8220;but if I had to bring her out, I would<br \/>\n   first break her heart.&#8221; He meant that one who had not been broken by<br \/>\n   sorrow could not touch the deepest chords of human life. Ah! there is<br \/>\n   no need for this with our Lord Jesus; reproach broke his heart. He<br \/>\n   understands broken hearts, and is able to soothe and save all who come<br \/>\n   unto God by him.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                          XII. TIMELY AND NEEDED HELP<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that we may obtain<br \/>\n    mercy, and find grace to help in time of need.&#8221;-HEBREWS iv. 16.<\/p>\n<p>   NEED! Time of need! Every hour we live is a time of need; and we are<br \/>\n   safest and happiest when we feel our needs most keenly. If you say that<br \/>\n   you are rich, and increased in goods, and have need of nothing, you are<br \/>\n   in the greatest destitution; but when you know yourself to be wretched,<br \/>\n   miserable, poor, blind, and naked, then the traveling merchantman is<br \/>\n   already standing on your doorstep, knocking (Rev. iii. 17-20). It is<br \/>\n   when the supply runs short, that Cana&#8217;s King makes the vessels brim<br \/>\n   with wine.<\/p>\n<p>   Have you been convinced of your need? If not, it is quite likely that<br \/>\n   you will live and die without a glimpse of the rich provision which God<br \/>\n   has made to meet it. Of what use is it to talk of rich provisions and<br \/>\n   sumptuous viands to those already satiated? But when the soul, by the<br \/>\n   straits of its necessity, has been brought to the verge of desperation,<br \/>\n   when we cry with the lepers of old, &#8220;If we say we will enter into the<br \/>\n   city, then the famine is in the city, and we shall die there; and if we<br \/>\n   sit still here, we die also&#8221;, then we are on the verge of discovering<br \/>\n   the rich provision that awaits us (2 Kings vii. 8): all spiritual<br \/>\n   blessings in the heavenlies (Eph. i. 3); and all things that pertain to<br \/>\n   life and godliness (2 Pet. i. 3). There are two causes, therefore, why<br \/>\n   many Christians are living such impoverished lives: they have never<br \/>\n   realized their own infinite need; and they have never availed<br \/>\n   themselves of those infinite resources which hang within their reach,<br \/>\n   like fruit from the stooping boughs of an orchard in autumn.<\/p>\n<p>   Our needs are twofold. We need mercy. This is our fundamental need.<br \/>\n   Mercy when we are at our worst, yes, and at our best; mercy when the<br \/>\n   pruning knife cuts deep, yes, and when we are covered with foliage,<br \/>\n   flower, or fruit; mercy when we are broken and sore vexed, yes, and<br \/>\n   when we stand on the paved sapphire work upon the mountain summit to<br \/>\n   talk with God. The greatest saint among us can no more exist without<br \/>\n   the mercy of God than the ephemeral insects of a summer&#8217;s noon can live<br \/>\n   without the sun.<\/p>\n<p>   We need grace to help. Help to walk through the valleys; and to walk on<br \/>\n   the high places, where the chamois can hardly stand. Help to suffer, to<br \/>\n   be still, to wait, to overcome, to make green one tiny spot of garden<br \/>\n   ground in God&#8217;s great tillage. Help to live and to die.<\/p>\n<p>   Each Of these is met at the throne. Come, let us go to it. It is not<br \/>\n   the great white throne of judgment, but the rainbow-girt throne of<br \/>\n   grace. &#8220;No,&#8221; you cry, &#8220;never! I am a man of unclean lips and heart; I<br \/>\n   dare not face him before whom angels veil their faces; the fire of his<br \/>\n   awful purity will leap out on me, shriveling and consuming. I<br \/>\n   exceedingly fear and quake; or, if I muster courage enough to go once,<br \/>\n   I shall never be able to go as often as I need, or to ask for the<br \/>\n   common and trivial gifts required in daily living.&#8221; Hush, soul! thou<br \/>\n   mayest approach as often and as boldly as thou wilt; for we have a<br \/>\n   great High Priest, who is passed through the heavens, and not one who<br \/>\n   cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities.<\/p>\n<p>   A PRIEST.-Deep down in the heart of men there is a strong and<br \/>\n   instinctive demand for a priest, to be daysman and mediator, to lay one<br \/>\n   hand on man and the other on God, and to go between them both. Wit and<br \/>\n   sarcasm may launch their epithets on this primordial craving; but they<br \/>\n   might as well try to extinguish by the same methods the craving of the<br \/>\n   body for food, of the understanding for truth, of the heart for love.<br \/>\n   And no religion is destined to meet the deepest yearnings of the race,<br \/>\n   which does not have glowing at the heart the provision of a priest to<br \/>\n   stand before the throne of grace; as, of old, the priest stood before<br \/>\n   the mercy seat, which was its literal prefigurement under the<br \/>\n   dispensation of the Levitical law.<\/p>\n<p>   A curious proof of this human craving for a priest is given in the book<br \/>\n   of Judges. On the ridge of the hills of Ephraim stood the ancestral<br \/>\n   home of a wealthy family, containing within its precincts a private<br \/>\n   sanctuary, where though there were teraphim, ephod, and vestments, yet<br \/>\n   there was no priest. Nothing, however, could compensate for that fatal<br \/>\n   lack. And Micah said to a Levite, who happened to pass by: &#8220;Dwell with<br \/>\n   me, and be unto me a father and a priest.&#8221; And when he, nothing loath,<br \/>\n   consented, Micah comforted himself by saying, &#8220;Now know I that the Lord<br \/>\n   will do me good, seeing I have a Levite to my priest.&#8221; But the same<br \/>\n   feelings that actuated him were shared by a portion of the tribe of<br \/>\n   Dan, on their way to colonize a remote part of the country. They, too,<br \/>\n   must have a priest; and so, while six hundred armed warriors stood<br \/>\n   around the gate, five men stole through the court, broke into the<br \/>\n   little chapel, carried off its images and other apparatus for worship,<br \/>\n   bribed the priest, by the offer of higher wage, to accompany them; and,<br \/>\n   long before the theft was discovered, the whole party had resumed their<br \/>\n   journey, and were far upon their way.<\/p>\n<p>   All families of mankind have followed the same general programme.<br \/>\n   Wherever they have built homes for themselves, they have erected the<br \/>\n   wigwam, the pagoda, the parthenon, the obelisk guarded temple, the<br \/>\n   Gothic minster fashioned after the model of the forest glade, a leafy<br \/>\n   oracle petrified to stone; and they have chosen one of themselves, set<br \/>\n   apart from ordinary work, and sanctified by special rites to minister,<br \/>\n   treading its floors, and pleading at its altars, interceding for them<br \/>\n   in times of famine, pestilence, and plague; blessing their arms as they<br \/>\n   went forth to fight, and receiving their spoils of victory; making<br \/>\n   propitiation for sin, and assuring of forgiveness.<\/p>\n<p>   This craving was most carefully met in that venerable religion in which<br \/>\n   these Hebrew Christians had been reared. The sons of Aaron were the<br \/>\n   priests of Israel. They wore a special dress, ate special food, and<br \/>\n   lived in special towns; whilst every care was taken to accentuate their<br \/>\n   separation to transact the spiritual concerns of the nation. For<br \/>\n   sixteen centuries this system had prevailed, relying around it the<br \/>\n   deepest and most sacred emotions; and, like ivy, entwining itself<br \/>\n   around the oak of the national life. And, as we have seen, it was no<br \/>\n   small privation for these new converts to wrench themselves from such a<br \/>\n   system, and accept a religion in which there was no visible temple,<br \/>\n   ceremonial, or priest.<\/p>\n<p>   But here we learn that Jesus Christ is the perfect answer to these<br \/>\n   instinctive cravings which blindly pointed to him in all ages of human<br \/>\n   and Hebrew history. This is the aim of these opening chapters, and by<br \/>\n   two lines of proof we have been led to the same conclusion. Before us<br \/>\n   stand two mighty columns: the one is in chapters i. and ii. of this<br \/>\n   Epistle; the other is in iii. and iv. They have a common base from<br \/>\n   which they spring, the Sonship of Christ. The first column is called,<br \/>\n   Christ superior to Angels; and this is the scroll around its capital,<br \/>\n   that Jesus, as man&#8217;s representative, has entered into the glories<br \/>\n   promised in the eighth Psalm. The second column is called, Christ<br \/>\n   superior to Moses; with this scroll around its capital, that Jesus, as<br \/>\n   our representative, has entered into the Rest of God. And each of them<br \/>\n   helps to support a common chapiter, the Priesthood of Christ. The first<br \/>\n   two chapters end with a description of the merciful and faithful High<br \/>\n   Priest, who makes reconciliation for the sins of the people (ii. I 7, I<br \/>\n   8). The next two chapters close with the words on which we are dwelling<br \/>\n   now, concerning the Great High-Priest (iv. 14). In the mouth of two<br \/>\n   witnesses every word is established. We need no human priests. Their<br \/>\n   work is done, their office is superseded, their functions are at an<br \/>\n   end. To arrogate any priestly functions of sacrifice, of absolution, or<br \/>\n   of imparting sacramental grace, is to intrude sacrilegiously on ground<br \/>\n   which is sacred to the Son of God; and, however royal such are in mien<br \/>\n   or intellect, they must be withstood, as Azariah withstood<br \/>\n   Uzziah-saying, &#8220;It appertaineth not unto thee to burn incense unto the<br \/>\n   Lord, but to Jesus, our Great High-Priest; go out of his office, for<br \/>\n   thou hast trespassed; neither shall it be for thine honor from the Lord<br \/>\n   God.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   A HIGH PRIEST. A Priest of priests, able to sacrifice, not only for the<br \/>\n   people, but for all the priests of his house; and alone responsible for<br \/>\n   the rites of the great day of Atonement, when every other priest was<br \/>\n   banished from the precincts of the Temple, while the high priest, clad<br \/>\n   in simple white, made an atonement for the sins of himself, his family,<br \/>\n   and his people.<\/p>\n<p>   We have been made priests unto God; but our priestly work consists in<br \/>\n   the offering of the incense of prayer and praise, and the gifts of<br \/>\n   surrendered lives. We have nothing to do with atonement for sin; which<br \/>\n   is urgently required by us, not only for our sins as ordinary members<br \/>\n   of the congregation, but for those which, consciously or unconsciously,<br \/>\n   we commit in the exercise of our priestly office. Our penitential tears<br \/>\n   need to be sprinkled by the blood of Jesus; our holiest hours need to<br \/>\n   be accepted through his merits; our noblest service would condemn us,<br \/>\n   save for his atoning sacrifice.<\/p>\n<p>   A GREAT HIGH PRIEST. All other high priests were inferior to him. He is<br \/>\n   as much superior to the high priests as any one of them was to the<br \/>\n   priests of his time. But this does not exhaust his greatness. He does<br \/>\n   not belong to their line at all, but to an older, more venerable, and<br \/>\n   grander one; of which that mysterious personage was the founder, to<br \/>\n   whom Abraham, the father of Israel, gave tithes and homage. &#8220;Declared<br \/>\n   of God a High Priest after the order of Melchisedek.&#8221; Nay, further, his<br \/>\n   greatness is that of the Son of God, the fellow and equal of Deity. He<br \/>\n   is as great as his infinite nature and the divine appointment and his<br \/>\n   ideal of ministry could make him.<\/p>\n<p>   PASSED THROUGH THE HEAVENS. Between the holy place where the priest<br \/>\n   daily performed the service of the sanctuary, and the inner shrine<br \/>\n   forbidden to all save to the high priest once each year, there hung a<br \/>\n   veil of blue. And of what was that blue veil the emblem, save of those<br \/>\n   heavenly curtains, the work of God&#8217;s fingers, which hang between our<br \/>\n   mortal vision and the marvels of his presence chamber? Once a year the<br \/>\n   high priest carried the blood of propitiation through the blue veil of<br \/>\n   separation, and sprinkled it upon the mercy seat; and in this<br \/>\n   significant and solemn act he typified the entrance of our blessed Lord<br \/>\n   into the immediate presence of God, bearing the marks and emblems of<br \/>\n   his atoning death, and taking up his position there as our Mediator and<br \/>\n   Intercessor, in whom we are represented, and for whose sake we are<br \/>\n   accepted and beloved.<\/p>\n<p>   TOUCHED WITH THE FEELING OF OUR INFIRMITIES. He hates the sin, but<br \/>\n   loves the sinner. His hatred to the one is measured by his cross; his<br \/>\n   love to the other is infinite as his nature. And his love is not a<br \/>\n   dreamy ecstasy; but practical, because all the machinery of temptation<br \/>\n   was brought into Operation against him. It would take too long to<br \/>\n   enumerate the points at which the great adversary of souls assails us;<br \/>\n   but there is not a sense, a faculty, a power, which may not be the<br \/>\n   avenue of his attack. Through eye-gate, ear-gate, and thought-gate his<br \/>\n   squadrons seek to pour. And, marvelous though it be, yet our High<br \/>\n   Priest was tempted in all these points, in body, soul, and spirit;<br \/>\n   though there was no faltering in his holy resolution, no vacillation or<br \/>\n   shadow of turning, no desire to yield. &#8220;The prince of this world<br \/>\n   cometh, and hath nothing in me.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   All his experiences are vividly present to him still; and whenever we<br \/>\n   go to him, pleading for mercy or help, he instantly knows just how much<br \/>\n   and where we need it, and immediately his intercessions obtain for us,<br \/>\n   and his hands bestow, the exact form of either we may require. &#8220;He is<br \/>\n   touched.&#8221; That sympathetic heart is the metropolis to which each<br \/>\n   afferent nerve carries an immediate thrill from the meanest and<br \/>\n   remotest members of his body, bringing at once in return the very help<br \/>\n   and grace which are required. Oh to live in touch with Christ! always<br \/>\n   touching him, as of old the women touched his garment&#8217;s hem; and<br \/>\n   receiving responses, quick as the lightning flash, and full of the<br \/>\n   healing, saving virtue of God (Mark .28).<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                                XIII GETHSEMANE<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Who in the days of his flesh, when he had offered up prayers and<br \/>\n    supplications with strong crying and tears unto him that was able to save<br \/>\n    him from death, and was heard in that he feared: though he were a Son, yet<br \/>\n    learned he obedience by the things which he suffered.&#8221; HEBREWS v.7, 8.<\/p>\n<p>   Eight ancient olive trees still mark the site of Gethsemane; not<br \/>\n   improbably they witnessed that memorable and mysterious scene referred<br \/>\n   to here. And what a scene was that! It had stood alone in unique and<br \/>\n   unapproachable wonder, had it not been followed by fifteen hours of<br \/>\n   even greater mystery.<\/p>\n<p>   The strongest words in Greek language are used to tell of the keen<br \/>\n   anguish through which the Saviour passed within those Garden walls. &#8220;He<br \/>\n   began to be sorrowful&#8221;; as if in all his past experiences he had never<br \/>\n   known what sorrow was! &#8220;lie was sore amazed&#8221;; as if his mind were<br \/>\n   almost dazed and overwhelmed. &#8220;He was very heavy,&#8221; his spirit stooped<br \/>\n   beneath the weight of his sorrows, as afterward his body stooped<br \/>\n   beneath the weight of his cross; or the word may mean that he was so<br \/>\n   distracted with sorrow, as to be almost beside himself. And the Lord<br \/>\n   himself could not have found a stronger word than he used when he said,<br \/>\n   &#8220;My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even unto death.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But the evangelist Luke gives us the most convincing proof of his<br \/>\n   anguish when he tells us that his sweat, like great beads of blood,<br \/>\n   fell upon the ground, touched by the slight frost, and in the cold<br \/>\n   night air. The finishing touch is given in these words, which tell of<br \/>\n   his &#8220;strong crying and tears.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   THE THINGS WHICH HE SUFFERED. What were they? They were not those of<br \/>\n   the Substitute. The tenor of Scripture goes to show that the work of<br \/>\n   substitution was really wrought out upon the cross. There the robe of<br \/>\n   our completed righteousness was woven from the top through-out. It was<br \/>\n   on the free that he bare our sins in his own body. It was by his blood<br \/>\n   that he brought us nigh to God. It was by the death of God&#8217;s Son that<br \/>\n   we have been reconciled to God; and the repeated references of<br \/>\n   Scripture, and especially of this epistle, to sacrifice, indicate that<br \/>\n   in the act of dying, that was done which magnifies the law, and makes<br \/>\n   it honorable, and removes every obstacle that had otherwise prevented<br \/>\n   the love of God from following out its purposes of mercy.<\/p>\n<p>   We shall never fully understand here how the Lord Jesus made<br \/>\n   reconciliation for the sins of the world, or how that which he bore<br \/>\n   could be an equivalent for the penalty due from a sinful race. We have<br \/>\n   no standard of comparison; we have no line long enough to let us down<br \/>\n   into the depths of that unexplored mystery; but we may thankfully<br \/>\n   accept it as a fact stated on the page of Scripture perpetually, that<br \/>\n   he did that which put away the curse, atoned for human guilt, and was<br \/>\n   more than equivalent to all those sufferings which a race of sinful men<br \/>\n   must otherwise have borne. The mystery defies our language, but it is<br \/>\n   apprehended by faith; and as she stands upon her highest pinnacles,<br \/>\n   love discerns the meaning of the death of Christ by a spiritual<br \/>\n   instinct, though as yet she has not perfectly learned the language in<br \/>\n   which to express her conceptions of the mysteries that circle around<br \/>\n   the cross. It may be that in thousands of unselfish actions, she is<br \/>\n   acquiring the terms in which some day she will be able to understand<br \/>\n   and explain all.<\/p>\n<p>   But all that we need insist on here, and now, is that the sufferings of<br \/>\n   the Garden are not to be included in the act of Substitution, though,<br \/>\n   as we shall see, they were closely associated with it. Gethsemane was<br \/>\n   not the altar, but the way to it.<\/p>\n<p>   Our Lord&#8217;s suffering in Gethsemane could hardly arise from the fear of<br \/>\n   his approaching physical sufferings. Such a supposition seems wholly<br \/>\n   inconsistent with the heroic fortitude, the majestic silence, the calm<br \/>\n   ascendency over suffering with which he bore himself till he breathed<br \/>\n   out his spirit, and which drew from a hardened and worldly Roman<br \/>\n   expressions of respect.<\/p>\n<p>   Besides, if the mere prospect of scourging and crucifixion drew from<br \/>\n   our Lord these strong crying and tears and bloody sweat, he surely<br \/>\n   would stand on a lower level than that to which multitudes of his<br \/>\n   followers attained through faith in him. Old men like Polycarp, tender<br \/>\n   maidens like Blandina, timid boys like Attalus, have contemplated<br \/>\n   beforehand with unruffled composure, and have endured with unshrinking<br \/>\n   fortitude, deaths far more awful, more prolonged, more agonizing.<br \/>\n   Degraded criminals have climbed the scaffold without a tremor or a sob;<br \/>\n   and surely the most exalted faith ought to bear itself as bravely as<br \/>\n   the most brutal indifference in the presence of the solemnities of<br \/>\n   death and eternity. It has been truly said that there is no passion in<br \/>\n   the mind of man, however weak, which cannot master the fear of death;<br \/>\n   and it is therefore impossible to suppose that the fear of physical<br \/>\n   suffering and disgrace could have so shaken our Saviour&#8217;s spirit.<\/p>\n<p>   But he anticipated the sufferings that he was to endure as the<br \/>\n   propitiation for sin. He knew that he was about to be brought into the<br \/>\n   closest association with the sin which was devastating human happiness<br \/>\n   and grieving the divine nature. He knew, since he had so identified<br \/>\n   himself with our fallen race, that, in a very deep and wonderful way,<br \/>\n   he was to be made sin and to bear our curse and shame, cast out by man,<br \/>\n   and apparently forsaken by God. He knew, as we shall never know, the<br \/>\n   exceeding sinfulness and horror of sin; and what it was to be the<br \/>\n   meeting-place where the iniquities of our race should converge, to<br \/>\n   become the scapegoat charged with guilt not his own, to bear away the<br \/>\n   sins of the world. All this was beyond measure terrible to one so holy<br \/>\n   and sensitive as he.<\/p>\n<p>   He had long foreseen it. He was the Lamb slain from before the<br \/>\n   foundation of the world. Each time a lamb was slain by a<br \/>\n   conscience-stricken sinner, or a scapegoat let go into the wilderness,<br \/>\n   or a pigeon dipped into the flowing water encrimsoned by the blood of<br \/>\n   its mate, he had been reminded of what was to be. He knew before his<br \/>\n   incarnation where in the forest the seedling was growing to a sapling<br \/>\n   from the wood of which his cross would be made. He even nourished it<br \/>\n   with his rain and sun. Often during his public ministry he was<br \/>\n   evidently looking beyond the events that were transpiring around him to<br \/>\n   that supreme event, which he called his &#8220;hour.&#8221; And as it came nearer,<br \/>\n   his human soul was overwhelmed at the prospect of having to sustain the<br \/>\n   weight of a world&#8217;s sin. His human nature did not shrink from death as<br \/>\n   death; but from the death which he was to die as the propitiation for<br \/>\n   our sins, and not for ours only, but for those of the whole world.<\/p>\n<p>   Six months before his death he had set his face to go to Jerusalem,<br \/>\n   with such a look of anguish upon it as to fill the hearts of his<br \/>\n   disciples with consternation. When the questions of the Greeks reminded<br \/>\n   him that he must shortly fall into the ground and die, his soul became<br \/>\n   so troubled that he cried, &#8220;Father, save me from this hour !&#8221; And now,<br \/>\n   with strong cryings and tears, he made supplication to his Father, as<br \/>\n   king that, if it were possible, the cup might pass from him. In this<br \/>\n   his human soul spoke. As to his divinely wrought purpose of redemption,<br \/>\n   there was no vacillation or hesitation. But, as man, he asked whether<br \/>\n   there might not be another way of accomplishing the redemption on which<br \/>\n   he had set his heart.<\/p>\n<p>   But there was no other way. The Father&#8217;s will, which he had come down<br \/>\n   from heaven to do, pointed along the rugged, flinty road that climbed<br \/>\n   Calvary, and passed over it, and down to the grave. And at once he<br \/>\n   accepted his destiny, and with the words &#8220;If this cup may not pass from<br \/>\n   me except I drink it, thy will be done,&#8221; he stepped forth on the flints<br \/>\n   that were to cut those blessed feet, drawing from them streams of<br \/>\n   blood.<\/p>\n<p>   HIS STRONG CRYING AND TEARS. Our Lord betook himself to that resource<br \/>\n   which is within the reach of all, and which is peculiarly precious to<br \/>\n   those who are suffering and tempted, he prayed. His heart was<br \/>\n   overwhelmed within him; and he poured out all his anguish into his<br \/>\n   Father&#8217;s ears, with strong cryings and tears. Let us note the<br \/>\n   characteristics of that prayer, that we too may be able to pass through<br \/>\n   our dark hours, when they come.<\/p>\n<p>   It was secret prayer. Leaving the majority of his disciples at the<br \/>\n   Garden gate, he took with him the three who had stood beside Jairus&#8217;s<br \/>\n   dead child, and had beheld the radiance that steeped him in his<br \/>\n   transfiguration. They alone might see him tread the winepress: but even<br \/>\n   they were left at a stone&#8217;s cast, whilst he went forward alone into the<br \/>\n   deeper shadow. We are told that they became overpowered with sleep; so<br \/>\n   that no mortal ear heard the whole burden of that marvelous prayer,<br \/>\n   some fitful snatches of which are reserved in the Gospels.<\/p>\n<p>   It was humble prayer. The evangelist Luke says that he knelt. Another<br \/>\n   says that he fell on his face. Being formed in fashion as a man, he<br \/>\n   humbled himself and became obedient to death, even the death of the<br \/>\n   cross. And it may be that even then he began to recite that marvelous<br \/>\n   Psalm, which was so much on his lips during those last hours, saying,<br \/>\n   &#8220;I am a worm, and no man; a reproach of men and despised of the<br \/>\n   people.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   It was filial prayer. Matthew describes our Lord as saying, &#8221; my<br \/>\n   Father&#8221;; and Mark tells us that he used the endearing term which was<br \/>\n   often spoken by the prattling lips of little Jewish children, Abba. For<br \/>\n   the most part, he probably spoke Greek; but Aramaic was the language of<br \/>\n   his childhood, the language of the dear home in Nazareth. In the hour<br \/>\n   of mortal agony, the mind ever reverts to the associations of its first<br \/>\n   awakening. The Saviour, therefore, appearing to feel that the more<br \/>\n   stately Greek did not sufficiently express the deep yearnings of his<br \/>\n   heart, substituted for it the more tender language of earlier years.<br \/>\n   Not &#8220;Father&#8221; only, but &#8220;Abba, Father!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   It was earnest prayer. &#8220;He prayed more earnestly,&#8221; and one proof of<br \/>\n   this appears in his repetition of the same words. It was as if his<br \/>\n   nature were too oppressed to be able to express itself in a variety of<br \/>\n   phrase; such as might indicate a certain leisure and liberty of<br \/>\n   thought. One strong current of anguish running at its highest could<br \/>\n   only strike one monotone of grief, like the note of the storm or the<br \/>\n   flood. Back, and back again, came the words, cup . .pass . . . will . .<br \/>\n   . Father. And the sweat of blood, pressed from his forehead, as the red<br \/>\n   juice of the grape beneath the heavy foot of the peasant, witnessed to<br \/>\n   the intensity of his soul.<\/p>\n<p>   It was submissive prayer. Matthew and Mark quote this sentence,<br \/>\n   &#8220;Nevertheless not what I will, but what thou wilt.&#8221; Luke quotes this,<br \/>\n   &#8220;Father, if thou be willing, remove this cup from me; nevertheless, not<br \/>\n   my will, but thine be done.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Jesus was the Father&#8217;s Fellow&#8217;s co-equal in his divine nature; but for<br \/>\n   the purpose of redemption it was needful that he should temporarily<br \/>\n   divest himself of the use of the attributes of his deity, and live a<br \/>\n   truly human life. As man, he carefully marked each symptom of his<br \/>\n   Father&#8217;s will, from the day when it prompted him to linger behind his<br \/>\n   parents in the temple; and he always instantly fulfilled his behests.<br \/>\n   &#8220;I came down from heaven,&#8221; he said, &#8220;not to do mine own will, but the<br \/>\n   will of him that sent me. &#8220;This was the yoke he bore, and in taking it,<br \/>\n   he found rest unto his soul. Whatever was the danger or difficulty into<br \/>\n   which such obedience might carry him, he ever followed the beacon-cloud<br \/>\n   of the divine will; sure that the manna of daily strength would fall,<br \/>\n   and that the deep sweet waters of peace would follow where it led the<br \/>\n   way. That way now seemed to lead through the heart of a fiery furnace.<br \/>\n   There was no alternative than to follow; and he elected to do so, nay,<br \/>\n   was glad, even then, with a joy that the cold waters of death could not<br \/>\n   extinguish. At the same time, he learnt what obedience meant, and gave<br \/>\n   an example of it, that shone out with unequaled majesty, purity, and<br \/>\n   beauty, unparalleled in the annals of the universe. As man, our Lord<br \/>\n   then learnt how much was meant by that word obedience. &#8220;He learned<br \/>\n   obedience.&#8221; And now he asks that we should obey him, as he obeyed God.<br \/>\n   &#8220;Unto them that obey him.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Sometimes the path of the Christian&#8217;s obedience becomes very difficult.<br \/>\n   It climbs upward; the gradient is continually steeper; the foothold<br \/>\n   ever more difficult; and, as the evening comes, the nimble climber of<br \/>\n   the morning creeps slowly forward on hands and knees. The day is never<br \/>\n   greater than the strength; but as the strength grows by use, the<br \/>\n   demands upon it are greater, and the hours longer. At last a moment may<br \/>\n   come, when we are called for God&#8217;s sake to leave some dear circle; to<br \/>\n   risk the loss of name and fame; to relinquish the cherished ambition of<br \/>\n   a life; to incur obloquy, suffering, and death; to drink the bitter<br \/>\n   cup; to enter the brooding cloud; to climb the smoking mount. Ah! then<br \/>\n   we too learn what obedience means; and have no resource but in strong<br \/>\n   cryings and tears.<\/p>\n<p>   In such hours pour out thy heart in audible cnes. Plentifully mingle<br \/>\n   the name &#8220;Father&#8221; with thine entreatles. Fear not to repeat the same<br \/>\n   words. Look not to man, he cannot understand thee; but to him who is<br \/>\n   nearer to thee than thy dearest. So shalt thou get calmer and quieter,<br \/>\n   until thou rest in his will; as a child, worn out by a tempest of<br \/>\n   passion, sobs itself to sleep on its mother&#8217;s breast.<\/p>\n<p>   THE ANSWER. &#8220;He was heard for his godly fear.&#8221; His holy reverence and<br \/>\n   devotion to his Father&#8217;s will made it impossible that his prayers<br \/>\n   should be unanswered; although, as it so often happens, the answer came<br \/>\n   in another way than his fears had suggested. The cup was not taken<br \/>\n   away, but the answer came. It came in the mission of the angel that<br \/>\n   stood beside him. It came in the calm serenity with which he met the<br \/>\n   brutal crowd, that soon filled that quiet Garden with their coarse<br \/>\n   voices and trampling feet. It came in his triumph over death and the<br \/>\n   grave. It came in his being perfected as mediator, to become unto all<br \/>\n   them that obey him the Author of eternal salvation, and the High-Priest<br \/>\n   forever after the order of Melchizedek.<\/p>\n<p>   Prayers prompted by love and in harmony with godly fear are never lost.<br \/>\n   We may ask for things which it would be unwise and unkind of God to<br \/>\n   grant; but in that case, his goodness shows itself rather in the<br \/>\n   refusal than the assent. And yet the prayer is heard and answered.<br \/>\n   Strength is instilled into the fainting heart. The faithful and<br \/>\n   merciful High-Priest does for us what the angel essayed to do for him;<br \/>\n   but how much better, since he has learnt so much of the art of comfort<br \/>\n   in the school of suffering! And out of it the way finally emerges into<br \/>\n   life, though we have left the right hand and foot in the grave behind<br \/>\n   us. We also discover that we have learnt the art of becoming channels<br \/>\n   of eternal salvation to those around us. Ever since Jesus suffered<br \/>\n   there, Gethsemane has been threaded by the King&#8217;s highway that passes<br \/>\n   through it to the New Jerusalem. And in its precincts God has kept many<br \/>\n   of his children, to learn obedience by the things that they suffer, and<br \/>\n   to learn the divine art of comforting others as they themselves have<br \/>\n   been comforted by God.<\/p>\n<p>   There are comparatively few, to whom Jesus does not say, at some time<br \/>\n   in their lives, &#8220;Come and watch with me.&#8221; He takes us with him into the<br \/>\n   darksome shadows of the winepress, though there are recesses of shade,<br \/>\n   at a stone&#8217;s cast, where he must go alone. Let us not misuse the<br \/>\n   precious hours in the heavy slumbers of insensibility. There are<br \/>\n   lessons to be learnt there which can be acquired nowhere else; but if<br \/>\n   we heed not his summons to watch with him, it may be that he will close<br \/>\n   the precious opportunity by bidding us sleep on and take our rest;<br \/>\n   because the allotted term has passed, and the hour of a new epoch has<br \/>\n   struck. If we fail to use for prayer and preparation the sacred hour,<br \/>\n   that comes laden with opportunities for either; if we sleep instead of<br \/>\n   watching with our Lord: what hope have we of being able to play a noble<br \/>\n   part when the flashing lights and the trampling feet announce the<br \/>\n   traitor&#8217;s advent? Squander the moments of preparation, and you may have<br \/>\n   to rue their loss through all the coming years!<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                     XIV. IMPOSSIBLE TO RENEW TO REPENTANCE<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;It Is impossible for those who were once enlightened, and have tasted of<br \/>\n    the heavenly gift, and were made partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have<br \/>\n    tasted the good word of God, and the powers of the world to come, if they<br \/>\n    shall fall away, to renew them again unto repentance; seeing they crucify to<br \/>\n    themselves the Son of God afresh, and put him to an open shame.&#8221;-HEBREWS vi.<br \/>\n    4-6.<\/p>\n<p>    The sacred writer enumerates four fundamental principles: Repentance<br \/>\n   from dead works, which in the old dispensation was symbolized by divers<br \/>\n   baptisms, or washings; Faith toward God, typified by the laying of<br \/>\n   hands on the head of the victim-sacrifices; the Resurrection of the<br \/>\n   dead; and Eternal Judgment. And then he proposes not to lay them again,<br \/>\n   but to leave them. There is no thought, however, of deserting them. The<br \/>\n   great principles on which God saves the soul are identical in every<br \/>\n   age, and indispensable.<\/p>\n<p>   We can only leave them as the child leaves the multiplication-table,<br \/>\n   when it is well learnt, but which lies at the root of all after-study;<br \/>\n   as the plant leaves the root, when it towers into the majestic shrub,<br \/>\n   which draws all its life from that low origin; and as the builder<br \/>\n   leaves the foundation, that he may carry up stone on stone, and leans<br \/>\n   on the foundation most heavily, when he has left it at the furthest<br \/>\n   distance below him. And we are taught the reason why these principles<br \/>\n   are not laid afresh. It would be useless to do so; it would serve no<br \/>\n   good purpose; it would leave in the same state as it found them those<br \/>\n   who had apostatized from the faith. And so we are led to one of those<br \/>\n   passages which sensitive spirits have turned to their own torment and<br \/>\n   anguish; just as men will distil the rankest poison from some of the<br \/>\n   sweetest flowers.<\/p>\n<p>   HOW FAR WE MAY GO, AND YET FALL AWAY. These apostate disciples had been<br \/>\n   enlightened (ver. 4). They had been led to see their sin and danger,<br \/>\n   the temporary nature of Judaism, the dignity and glory of the Saviour.<br \/>\n   Other Hebrews might be ignorant, the folds of the veil hanging heavily<br \/>\n   over their sight; but it could never be so with them, since they had<br \/>\n   stood in the midst of the Gospel&#8217;s meridian light, and had been<br \/>\n   enlightened.<\/p>\n<p>   So may it be with us. Not like the savage, crouching before his fetish,<br \/>\n   or roaming over the wild; not like the follower of Confucius, Buddha,<br \/>\n   or Mahomet, groping in the twilight of nature or religious guess-work;<br \/>\n   not like myriads in our own land, whose hearts are as dark as the chaos<br \/>\n   into which God commanded the primeval beam to shine: we have been<br \/>\n   enlightened. We may know that we are sinners; we may have learnt from<br \/>\n   childhood the scheme of salvation; we may be familiar with the<br \/>\n   mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, into which angels desire to look:<br \/>\n   and yet we may fall away.<\/p>\n<p>   These Hebrews, here referred to, had also tasted of the heavenly gift.<br \/>\n   What gift is that? I hear a voice, which we know well, speaking from<br \/>\n   the well of Sychar, and saying: &#8220;The water that I shall give shall be<br \/>\n   in thee, springing up into everlasting life.&#8221; It is the life of God in<br \/>\n   the soul; it is Christ himself; and he is willing to be in us, like a<br \/>\n   perennial spring, unstanched in drought, unfrozen in frost, leaping up,<br \/>\n   in fresh and living beauty, like some warm spring that makes a paradise<br \/>\n   in the arctic circle.<\/p>\n<p>   But some are content not to receive it, only to taste it. This is what<br \/>\n   these persons did. They sipped the sweetness of Christ. They had a<br \/>\n   passing superficial glimpse into his heart. Like Gideon&#8217;s soldiers,<br \/>\n   they caught up a few drops in their hands from the river of God, and<br \/>\n   hastened on their way. So we may have some pleasure in thoughts of<br \/>\n   Christ. His sufferings touch; his beauty attracts; his history moves<br \/>\n   and inspires. But it is only a taste; and yet we may fall away. They<br \/>\n   had also been made partakers of the Holy Ghost. It is not said that<br \/>\n   they had been converted, regenerated, or filled by the Holy Ghost. The<br \/>\n   expression is a very peculiar one, and it is used because the sacred<br \/>\n   writer could not affirm any of these things of them, and yet Was<br \/>\n   anxious to show that they had been brought under his gracious<br \/>\n   influences. For instance, he had convinced them of sin, had striven<br \/>\n   with them, had plied them with warning and entreaty, with fear and<br \/>\n   hope. And they had so far yielded to him as to give up some of their<br \/>\n   sins and assume the outward guise of Christianity.<\/p>\n<p>   Moreover, they had tasted the good Word of God, and the powers of the<br \/>\n   world to come. The first of these is obviously the Scriptures; and the<br \/>\n   second is the usual expression for the age in which we live, and which,<br \/>\n   with all its spiritual forces, was beginning to thrill the hearts of<br \/>\n   men when these words were penned. They liked a good sermon; the Bible<br \/>\n   was full of interest and charm; they had heard the prophets, and seen<br \/>\n   the apostles of the Pentecostal age. All these had been analyzed,<br \/>\n   weighed, and counted; and yet they were in peril of going back. Let us,<br \/>\n   therefore, beware!<\/p>\n<p>   WHAT 15 IT TO FALL AWAY? It is something more than to fall. The real<br \/>\n   child of God may fall, as David or as Peter did; but there is a vast<br \/>\n   difference between falling and falling away. This latter experience can<br \/>\n   no more come to a real believer than a second flood of waters to the<br \/>\n   earth; but it will certainly find out the counterfeit and the sham.<\/p>\n<p>   To fall away is to go back from the outward profession of Christianity,<br \/>\n   not temporarily, but finally; not as the result of some sudden sin, but<br \/>\n   because the first outward stimulus is exhausted, and there is no true<br \/>\n   life beating at the heart, to repair or reinvigorate the wasting<br \/>\n   devotion of the life. It is to resemble those wandering planets, which<br \/>\n   never shone with their own light, but only in the reflected light of<br \/>\n   some central sun; but which, having broken from its guiding leash, dash<br \/>\n   further and further into the blackness of darkness, without one spark<br \/>\n   of life or heat or light. It is to return as a dog to its vomit, and as<br \/>\n   a sow to her filth; because the reformation was only outward and<br \/>\n   temporary, and the dog or sow natures were never changed through the<br \/>\n   gracious work of the Holy Spirit. It is to be another Judas; to commit<br \/>\n   the sin against the Holy Ghost; to lose all earnestness of feeling, all<br \/>\n   desire for better things, all power of tender emotion; and to become<br \/>\n   utterly callous and dead, as the pavement on which we walk, or the<br \/>\n   rusty armor hanging on the old castle&#8217;s walls.<\/p>\n<p>   WHY IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO RESTORE SUCH TO REPENTANCE. Notice, there is<br \/>\n   nothing said here of what God can do. The only question is as to the<br \/>\n   limits of human power, and the ordinary methods of influencing human<br \/>\n   wills. Also notice, we are not told that God could not save those who<br \/>\n   had fallen away; but that it is impossible to hope that a man who has<br \/>\n   passed through the experiences just described, and has nevertheless<br \/>\n   apostatized, can be reached or touched by any of those arguments or<br \/>\n   motives which are familiar weapons in the Gospel armory. If the<br \/>\n   mightiest arguments have been brought to bear on the conscience in<br \/>\n   vain; if after some slight response, which gave hopes of better things,<br \/>\n   it has relapsed into the stupor and insensibility of its former state,<br \/>\n   there remains nothing more to be done. There is nothing more potent<br \/>\n   than the wail of Calvary&#8217;s broken heart, and the peal from Sinai&#8217;s<br \/>\n   brow; and, if these have been tried in vain, no argument is left which<br \/>\n   can touch the conscience and arouse the heart. If these people had<br \/>\n   never been exposed to these appeals, there would have been some hope<br \/>\n   for them; but what hope can there be now, since, in having passed<br \/>\n   through them without permanent effect, they have become more hardened<br \/>\n   in the process than they were at first?<\/p>\n<p>   Here is a man dragged from an ice-pond, and brought into the infirmary.<br \/>\n   Hot flannels are at once applied; the limbs are chafed; every means<br \/>\n   known to modern science for restoring life is employed. At first it<br \/>\n   seems as if these appliances will take effect, there are twitchings and<br \/>\n   convulsive movements; but, alas! they soon subside, and the surgeon<br \/>\n   gravely shakes his head. &#8220;Can you do nothing else?&#8221; &#8220;Nothing,&#8221; he<br \/>\n   replies; &#8220;I have used every method I can devise; and if these fail, it<br \/>\n   is impossible to renew again to life.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   This passage has nothing to do with those who fear lest it condemns<br \/>\n   them. The presence of that anxiety, like the cry which betrayed the<br \/>\n   real mother in the days of Solomon, establishes beyond a doubt that you<br \/>\n   are not one that has fallen away beyond the possibility of renewal to<br \/>\n   repentance. If you are still touched by Gospel sermons, and are anxious<br \/>\n   to repent, and are in godly fear lest you should be a castaway, take<br \/>\n   heart! these are signs that this passage has no bearing on you. Why<br \/>\n   make yourself ill with a sick man&#8217;s medicine? But if you are growing<br \/>\n   callous and insensible under the preaching of the Gospel, look into<br \/>\n   this passage and see your doom, unless you speedily arrest your steps.<\/p>\n<p>   THE NATURAL ILLUSTRATION (ver. 7). Behold that field, well situated,<br \/>\n   prepared by careful culture and arduous toil: the good seed is<br \/>\n   scattered with lavish hand; the rain comes oft upon it; the sunshine<br \/>\n   kisses it; the seasons, as they pass, woo it to bear fruit. At first it<br \/>\n   would appear as if it were about to answer the expectations freely<br \/>\n   entertained. But see, the show of green which covers its face turns out<br \/>\n   to be a crop of briars and thorns. The owner for whom it was dressed<br \/>\n   comes to visit it. &#8220;What,&#8221; cries he, &#8220;have you done all you could,<br \/>\n   this, and that, and the other?&#8221; &#8220;All,&#8221; is the reply. Then the decision<br \/>\n   comes back, stern and sad, &#8220;It is useless to expend more time or care.<br \/>\n   Leave it to its fate. Let no fruit grow on it henceforth and forever.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   We may resemble that field; and yet, whilst there is a spark of<br \/>\n   devotion, a thrill of holy longing, a sigh after a better life, a<br \/>\n   yearning to be penitent and holy, there is still hope. The great<br \/>\n   Husbandman will not cast us off, so long as there is one redeeming<br \/>\n   feature in our condition. He will not break the bruised reed, nor<br \/>\n   quench the smoking flax. He will not fail, nor be discouraged, until he<br \/>\n   has made the desert into a garden, and the wilderness like the paradise<br \/>\n   of God.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                         XV. THE ANCHORAGE OF THE SOUL.<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Be followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the<br \/>\n    1)promises.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   HEBREWS vi. 12.<\/p>\n<p>   THE PROMISES OF GOD! That is a key-word here. Inherit the promises<br \/>\n   (ver. 12); God made promise (ver. 13); he obtained the promise (ver.<br \/>\n   15); the heirs of promise (ver. 17). But perhaps the reiteration of the<br \/>\n   word does not awaken the interest or stir the heart of those who read<br \/>\n   it. We are so familiar with it; and, above all, we are not in<br \/>\n   circumstances which make the divine promises specially precious. The<br \/>\n   night of sorrow must obscure our sky, or we can never descry or<br \/>\n   appreciate the stars of promise that sparkle as gems in the firmament<br \/>\n   of Scripture. Those who are rich and increased in goods and have need<br \/>\n   of nothing cannot realize what the promises of God really mean.<\/p>\n<p>   Possessed of a good income, guaranteeing the supply of every need, it<br \/>\n   is of little moment that God has pledged himself to provide all needful<br \/>\n   things for those who seek his kingdom first. Environed by troops of<br \/>\n   faithful friends, like so many successive lines of defense intrenched<br \/>\n   in the strong fortress of position and rank, there is less interest in<br \/>\n   the assurance that God will be the shield and buckler, the munition of<br \/>\n   rocks, the refuge from the storm for his saints. But when riches<br \/>\n   dwindle, and friends fail, and health declines, and difficulty,<br \/>\n   persecution, and trial threaten, then the soul betakes itself to the<br \/>\n   promises of God, and cons them over, studying them by the hour<br \/>\n   together, until it wakes up to find mines of treasure under pages which<br \/>\n   were blank as the moorlands beneath which coal-beds lie. It would be<br \/>\n   well for some of us if God would strip us of all those things in which<br \/>\n   we place such confidence; so that we might be compelled, perhaps for<br \/>\n   the first time in our lives, to seek in himself all that we are now<br \/>\n   wont to seek in his gifts. Oh, blessed loss, which should teach us our<br \/>\n   true wealth! Oh, happy deprivation, which should reveal our<br \/>\n   inexhaustible resources! Oh, loving discipline, which should break the<br \/>\n   cisterns that hold the brackish rain-water, and compel us to betake<br \/>\n   ourselves to the river of God, which proceeds from the throne of God<br \/>\n   and the Lamb!<\/p>\n<p>   The lax and cursory manner in which we read pages begemmed with divine<br \/>\n   promise is largely due to the fact that we have never been put into<br \/>\n   such straits of sorrow and privation as to appreciate their value. One<br \/>\n   crushing trial would open up whole tracts of promise, which are now<br \/>\n   like the shut doors of a corridor in a royal palace. This is one reason<br \/>\n   why such a man as the Christian hero, Gordon, would spend hours over<br \/>\n   the Word of God, counting his Father&#8217;s promises, holding them up as<br \/>\n   jewels in the sunshine, and rejoicing over them as great spoil; such<br \/>\n   men as he have had little else; they have had no other resources to<br \/>\n   fall back upon; they were driven to lay hold on them for very<br \/>\n   existence. And thus they fulfilled the enigma of the Apostle, &#8220;Having<br \/>\n   nothing, yet possessing all things.&#8221; Those who are conscious of their<br \/>\n   poverty are they who become rich in faith, and heirs of the Kingdom.<\/p>\n<p>   It was in precisely such a condition that the Hebrews here addressed<br \/>\n   were found. Their goods had been spoiled; they had endured a great<br \/>\n   fight of affliction; they had been made a gazing stock both by<br \/>\n   reproaches and afflictions; all on which men are accustomed to rely had<br \/>\n   been swept from them; and therefore the Holy Ghost, in these pages,<br \/>\n   directs their minds to the exceeding great and precious promises, in<br \/>\n   which God pledged himself to supply all their need; and to furnish from<br \/>\n   his own treasuries all, and more than all, that they had lost; not<br \/>\n   giving them these things in visible possession, but supplying them as<br \/>\n   they were needed, and in proportion to their faith. It was surely a<br \/>\n   good exchange, to lose all, and to recover all in God!<\/p>\n<p>   GOD&#8217;S PROMISES ARE RELIABLE. A good man&#8217;s word is his bond. And when<br \/>\n   such a one has given a promise our anxiety is allayed, our fears are<br \/>\n   quieted, we have strong consolation. But if, in addition to the<br \/>\n   promise, our friend has solemnly bound himself by an oath, calling<br \/>\n   heaven and earth to witness, and God to ratify, the asseveration is so<br \/>\n   momentous, the appeal so awful, the impression made on the mind so<br \/>\n   deep, that, whatever happens, the soul shelters itself in the<br \/>\n   immutability of his decision. It is doubly impossible for him to change<br \/>\n   or deceive. And this is the bond by which God has bound himself.<\/p>\n<p>   When dealing with Abraham, God gave him repeated promises, first of the<br \/>\n   land, then of the seed, also of the blessing which should accrue to all<br \/>\n   generations of men through him. On one occasion he went through the<br \/>\n   form of covenant making in vogue among the surrounding peoples (Gen.<br \/>\n   xv. 17). But, on Mount Moriah, when the faithful patriarch had given<br \/>\n   the one stupendous evidence of faith and obedience, even unto death,<br \/>\n   God sware, and &#8220;because he could sware by no greater, he sware by<br \/>\n   himself.&#8221; &#8220;By myself have I sworn, saith the Lord&#8217;, (Gen. xxii. 16).<\/p>\n<p>   And so it is with us. We who by faith are the spiritual seed of Abraham<br \/>\n   are blessed with him. &#8220;The promise is sure to all the seed; not to that<br \/>\n   only which is of the law, but to that also which is of the faith of<br \/>\n   Abraham, who is the father of us all&#8221; (Rom. iv. 16). All the promises<br \/>\n   of God are Yea and Amen. He is not a man that he should lie, nor the<br \/>\n   son of man that he should repent. He has well calculated his resources,<br \/>\n   before he has pledged himself; and when once he has done so it is<br \/>\n   impossible that he should fail. Fall flat on the divine promises; cling<br \/>\n   to them as a shipwrecked sailor to the floating spar; venture all on<br \/>\n   them; their fulfillment is guaranteed by covenant and oath; by blood<br \/>\n   and agony and death; by the light of the resurrection morning and the<br \/>\n   glory of the ascension mount; by the experience of myriads, who have<br \/>\n   never found them fail. If any man living has found one promise<br \/>\n   untrustworthy, let him publish it to the world; and the heavens will<br \/>\n   clothe themselves in sackcloth, and the sun and moon and stars will<br \/>\n   reel from their seats, the universe will rock, and a hollow wind moan<br \/>\n   through creation, bearing the tidings that God is mutable, that God can<br \/>\n   lie. And that voice will be the herald of universal dissolution. But it<br \/>\n   can never, never be. Heirs of promise! God&#8217;s power Is eternal, his<br \/>\n   counsel is immutable. Heaven and earth may pass away, but his word<br \/>\n   shall never pass away. Ye therefore may have strong consolation; though<br \/>\n   ye lose all else, your heritage in the word and oath of God shall be<br \/>\n   unimpaired, world without end.<\/p>\n<p>   GOD&#8217;S PROMISES, THUS ASSURED, MAKE AN ANCHORAGE FOR THE SOUL. Few<br \/>\n   things are more important for the mariner than to secure a good<br \/>\n   anchorage ground, where the soil will not give before the weight of the<br \/>\n   vessel and the strain of the storm. And with all those inclinations<br \/>\n   toward drifting which we have already considered, we urgently need to<br \/>\n   discover something permanent, unchanging, and satisfying, with which we<br \/>\n   may grapple by the anchor of our hope.<\/p>\n<p>   The faculty of hope in a Christian is not different to that of a<br \/>\n   worldly man. It is the same faculty or quality in each. But there is a<br \/>\n   vast difference in the ground in which the anchor is fixed. In the case<br \/>\n   of the worldly man, it is the loose, light, unreliable soil of<br \/>\n   peradventures and speculations. In the case of the Christian, it is the<br \/>\n   unyielding, immutable promise and oath of the Eternal God. Therefore<br \/>\n   the former is often darkened with mis-giving and fear; while the latter<br \/>\n   cries, without a shadow of doubt, &#8220;I know whom I have believed, and am<br \/>\n   persuaded.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Hope is something more than faith.  Faith accepts and credits<br \/>\n   testimony; hope anticipates. Faith says the fruit is good; hope picks<br \/>\n   and eats. Faith is bud; hope blossom. Faith presents the check; hope<br \/>\n   lays out the amount received. And such hope is the anchor of the soul.<br \/>\n   The comparison between hope and an anchor is familiar even to heathen<br \/>\n   writers, and it is easy to see how fit it is. It steadies the soul.<br \/>\n   Take an illustration from common life. A young man pledges his troth to<br \/>\n   a poor but noble girl. He is drafted for foreign service, and says<br \/>\n   farewell for long years. Meanwhile she is left to do as well as she can<br \/>\n   to maintain herself. Work is scanty, wages low, she is sometimes<br \/>\n   severely tempted and tried. But, amidst all, she is kept true to her<br \/>\n   absent lover, and to her nobler self, by the little strand of hope<br \/>\n   which links her to a happy and united future. So, when suffering or<br \/>\n   tempted or discouraged, our hope goes forward into the blessed future,<br \/>\n   depicted on the page of Scripture in glowing colors, and promised by<br \/>\n   the word of him who cannot lie; and the anticipation of it fills the<br \/>\n   soul with courage and patience, so as to endure the trials of time, in<br \/>\n   view of the certain blessedness of eternity.<\/p>\n<p>   THE ANCHORAGE IN THE PROMISES HAS A THREEFOLD VALUE. It is sure, there<br \/>\n   is no fear of its failing; sure as the sure mercies of David; sure as<br \/>\n   the &#8220;everlasting covenant, ordered in all things and sure&#8221;; sure as God<br \/>\n   can make it. It is steadfast, its influence on the soul is to keep it<br \/>\n   steady: &#8220;Steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the<br \/>\n   Lord.&#8221; It entereth into that within the veil. In the ancient world,<br \/>\n   when there was not water enough to float a ship into the harbor, a man<br \/>\n   would carry the anchor over the shoals, and fix it in the calm waters<br \/>\n   of the inner basin. In some such way as this, our Lord Jesus, when,<br \/>\n   like the high-priest in the Jewish Tabernacle, he passed through the<br \/>\n   blue veil that hides the celestial world from ours, took our hope with<br \/>\n   him, and holds it there. The Lord Jesus is our hope (1 Tim. i.1 ; 1<br \/>\n   John iii. 3). He is our forerunner. He has preceded us into his<br \/>\n   Father&#8217;s presence, the first fruits of them that slept. He has gone<br \/>\n   thither as our Representative and Priest. When he majestically passed<br \/>\n   from the sight of his disciples, and was hidden from the eyes that<br \/>\n   longingly followed him, he entered within the veil. There he ever<br \/>\n   liveth; and because of it our hopes follow him, center in him, and<br \/>\n   connect us already with that bright home of which he is the radiant<br \/>\n   center.<\/p>\n<p>   THERE ARE CERTAIN QUALITIES WHICH WE MUST LEARN TO EXERCISE. Faith and<br \/>\n   patience can alone inherit the promises (ver. 12). Abraham had<br \/>\n   patiently to endure before he received the promise (ver. 15). It is not<br \/>\n   easy to wait, or to let patience have her perfect work; and it is only<br \/>\n   possible to faith. There is no sublimer instance of long waiting than<br \/>\n   the history of Abraham, for which his faith nerved him, and to whom the<br \/>\n   promise was literally fulfilled. And so shall it be again. Patience<br \/>\n   weary, eager hearts. The time shall come when you shall lay hands on<br \/>\n   your capital; but be content in the meanwhile to enjoy the interest.<br \/>\n   The auspicious moment hastens when you shall know and taste all the<br \/>\n   blessedness of Paradise regained; but feast in the interim on the<br \/>\n   grapes of Eshcol, the pomegranates and other produce of the land. Claim<br \/>\n   the patience of Christ, of which the last of the apostles, who had need<br \/>\n   of it to sustain him in the long delay, so sweetly speaks (Rev. i. 9).<br \/>\n   &#8220;Be ye patient; stablish your hearts; for the coming of the Lord<br \/>\n   draweth nigh.&#8221; &#8220;Let us run with patience the race set before us,<br \/>\n   looking unto Jesus.&#8221; Thus shall we manifest &#8220;the patience of the<br \/>\n   saints&#8221;; and thus shall we, like those who have preceded us, finally<br \/>\n   inherit the promises.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>XVI THE PRIESTHOOD OF CHRIST<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Thou art a Priest forever after the order of Melchizedek.&#8221;-HEBREWS vii. 17.<\/p>\n<p>   VARIOUS fancies have gathered around the person of Melchizedek,<br \/>\n   investing him with extraordinary qualities; but it is better far to<br \/>\n   think of him simply as the head or chieftain of a large family or clan,<br \/>\n   which gathered around the site to be known, in after years, as the holy<br \/>\n   city.&#8221; Already its name was shadowed forth in the term &#8220;Salem,&#8221; which<br \/>\n   designated the clustered rude huts or tents. Amid the almost universal<br \/>\n   lawlessness and depravity which swept over Palestine, righteousness and<br \/>\n   peace seem to have fled for shelter to this little community, where<br \/>\n   alone due reverence was given to the Most High God, possessor of heaven<br \/>\n   and earth.<\/p>\n<p>   How this oasis had come into existence amid the surrounding moral<br \/>\n   desert we cannot tell; but it may have been due to the commanding<br \/>\n   personal influence of the king, who, according to patriarchal custom,<br \/>\n   as father of the family, was not only the ruler of the family life, but<br \/>\n   leader in the family devotions; and thus, while Melchizedek was king of<br \/>\n   Salem, he was also priest of the Most High. Moreover, it would appear<br \/>\n   that he bore a special commission, and was raised up for a specific<br \/>\n   purpose, as the ordained messenger between God and men; and as<br \/>\n   embodying a striking portraiture of the priesthood to be exercised for<br \/>\n   man by the Son of God.<\/p>\n<p>   Note the significance of the words, made like unto the Son of God (ver.<br \/>\n   3). Christ&#8217;s eternal Priesthood vias the archetypal reality, after the<br \/>\n   similitude of which that of Melchizedek was fashioned. It was as if the<br \/>\n   Father could not await the day of his Son&#8217;s priestly entrance within<br \/>\n   the veil but must needs anticipate the marvels of his ministry by<br \/>\n   embodying its leading features in miniature. Let us now study some of<br \/>\n   them.<\/p>\n<p>   CHRIST IS KING AS WELL AS PRIEST (ver. 1). History gives its unanimous<br \/>\n   judgment against the temporal and the spiritual power being vested in<br \/>\n   the same man. In Israel the two offices were kept rigorously separate;<br \/>\n   and when, on one occasion, a king passed the sacred barrier, and,<br \/>\n   snatching up a censer, strode into the inner court, he was at once<br \/>\n   followed by the remonstrances of the priestly band, whilst the white<br \/>\n   brand of leprosy wrote his doom upon his brow; &#8220;and he himself hastened<br \/>\n   to go out, because the Lord had smitten him.&#8221; But the simple monarch of<br \/>\n   whom we write, living before gathering abuses forbade the union,<br \/>\n   combined in his person the royal scepter and the sacerdotal censer. And<br \/>\n   herein he foreshadowed the Christ.<\/p>\n<p>   Jesus is King and Priest. He is King because he is a priest. He is<br \/>\n   highly exalted, demanding homage from every knee, and confession from<br \/>\n   every lip, because he became obedient to the death of the cross. He<br \/>\n   bases his royal claims, not on hereditary descent, though the blood of<br \/>\n   David flowed in his veins; not on conquest or superior force; not on<br \/>\n   the legislation that underpins the kingdom of heaven among men: but on<br \/>\n   this, that he redeemed us to God by his blood. He is the King of glory,<br \/>\n   because he is the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world.<br \/>\n   The cross was the stepping-stone to his throne.<\/p>\n<p>   And he cannot fulfill his office as Priest unless he be first<br \/>\n   recognized as King. Many fail to derive all the blessing offered to men<br \/>\n   through the Priesthood of Christ, because they are not willing to admit<br \/>\n   his claims as King. They do not reverence and obey him. They do not<br \/>\n   open the whole of the inner realm to his scepter. They endeavor to<br \/>\n   serve two masters; and to stand well with empires as different as light<br \/>\n   and darkness, heaven and hell, God and Satan. There must be<br \/>\n   consecration before there can be perfect faith; coronation before<br \/>\n   deliverance; the King before the Priest.<\/p>\n<p>   The order is invariable first King of Righteousness, and after that<br \/>\n   also King of Peace (ver. 2). &#8221; Peace, give us peace!&#8221; is the<br \/>\n   importunate demand of men; peace at any price; by all means peace. But<br \/>\n   God, in the deep waters, lays the foundation of righteousness; &#8220;and the<br \/>\n   work of righteousness shall be peace, and the effect of righteousness<br \/>\n   quietness and assurance forever.&#8221; It is of no use to heal the wound<br \/>\n   slightly, saying, &#8220;Peace, peace,&#8221; when there is none. Infinitely better<br \/>\n   is it to probe to the bottom, and to build up from a sound and healthy<br \/>\n   foundation to the surface of the flesh. And the King of Peace will<br \/>\n   never enter your soul until you have first acknowledged him as King of<br \/>\n   Righteousness, submitting yourself to his righteous claims, and<br \/>\n   renouncing the righteousness which is of the law for that which is by<br \/>\n   faith.<\/p>\n<p>   It is lamentable to find how few Christians, comparatively, are<br \/>\n   realizing the full meaning or power of Christianity. Joyless,<br \/>\n   fruitless, powerless, they are a stumbling block to the world, and a<br \/>\n   mockery to devils. And is not the reason here? They are not right. They<br \/>\n   are harboring traitors and aliens in their souls. They constantly<br \/>\n   condemn themselves in things that they allow. No doubt they excuse<br \/>\n   themselves, and invent special reasons to palliate their faults, so<br \/>\n   that what would be inadmissible with others is pardonable in them. What<br \/>\n   special pleading! What ingenious arguments! What gymnastic feats are<br \/>\n   theirs! But all in vain. Let any such who read these lines learn that<br \/>\n   it is peremptory to make Christ King, and King of Righteousness, before<br \/>\n   ever they can appreciate the peace which accrues from his Priesthood on<br \/>\n   our behalf.<\/p>\n<p>   CHRIST&#8217;S PRIESTHOOD WAS NOT INHERITED (ver. 3). This also comes out<br \/>\n   clearly in the history of the priest-king of Salem. The Levitical<br \/>\n   priest had carefully to trace his connection with Aaron, and hence the<br \/>\n   elaborate genealogies of which some parts of the Bible are full. The<br \/>\n   priests, at the time of the return from Babylon, who could not prove<br \/>\n   their pedigree, were suspended until a priest arose with Urim and<br \/>\n   Thummim. But Melchizedek&#8217;s priesthood had evidently nothing to do with<br \/>\n   his descent. He was independent of priestly pedigree. Of course it is<br \/>\n   not necessary to infer that he really had no human parentage and that<br \/>\n   he knew neither birth nor death. This is neither stated nor assumed.<br \/>\n   The argument is simply built on the omission of any reference to these<br \/>\n   events in ordinary human life; and aims to prove that, therefore, this<br \/>\n   old-world priesthood was quite independent of those conditions which<br \/>\n   were of prime importance in the Levitical dispensation. It was of an<br \/>\n   entirely different order from that which officiated in the Jewish<br \/>\n   Temple; and was, therefore, so capable to represent Christ&#8217;s.<\/p>\n<p>   As God, our Lord had no mother. As man, no father. He did not Spring<br \/>\n   from a family of priests; for it is evident that our Lord sprang out of<br \/>\n   Judah, of which tribe Moses spake nothing concerning the priesthood.<br \/>\n   What was allegorically true of Melchizedek was literally true of Jesus;<br \/>\n   who has had neither beginning of days nor end of life. His Priesthood,<br \/>\n   therefore, is utterly unique. He stands amongst men unrivaled. There<br \/>\n   have been none like him before nor since. His functions derived from<br \/>\n   none, shared by none, transmitted to none. Made what he was from all<br \/>\n   eternity by the foreknowledge and counsel of God.<\/p>\n<p>   There never was a beginning to the priestliness of our Saviour&#8217;s heart.<br \/>\n   There is no date in heaven&#8217;s calendar for the uprising within him of<br \/>\n   mercy and pity, and of the intention to stand as the Advocate and<br \/>\n   Intercessor for our race. Before the mountains were brought forth, or<br \/>\n   the heavens and earth were made, there was already in his thoughts the<br \/>\n   germ of that marvelous drama which is slowly unfolding before the gaze<br \/>\n   of the universe. He was Priest, as well as the Lamb slain, from before<br \/>\n   the foundation of the world. Love is eternal. Sacrifice is one of the<br \/>\n   root principles of the being of God. Priesthood is part of the texture<br \/>\n   of the nature of the Second Person in the adorable Trinity. There need<br \/>\n   be no fear, therefore, that he will ever desert his office; or lay it<br \/>\n   aside for some other purpose; or cease to have compassion on the<br \/>\n   ignorant and erring, the tempted and fallen.<\/p>\n<p>   CHRIST&#8217;S PRIESTHOOD IS CONTINUAL (ver. 3). The priests of Aaron&#8217;s line<br \/>\n   were not suffered to continue by reason of death. But of him &#8220;it is<br \/>\n   witnessed that he liveth&#8221; (ver. 8). Hallelujah! a Priest has arisen<br \/>\n   &#8220;after the power of an endless life&#8221; (ver. 16). &#8220;The Lord sware and<br \/>\n   will not repent, Thou art a Priest forever&#8221; (ver. 21). &#8220;Because he<br \/>\n   abideth forever, his Priesthood is unchangeable&#8221; (ver. 24). &#8220;He ever<br \/>\n   liveth to make intercession&#8221; (ver. 25). &#8220;Consecrated forevermore&#8221; (ver.<br \/>\n   28). What explicit and abundant testimony! Our High-Priest shall never<br \/>\n   ascend Mount Hor to be stripped of his robes of office and die. The<br \/>\n   secrets confided to him need never be told again to his successor. The<br \/>\n   tender love which links him and us shall never be snapped or cut in<br \/>\n   death. No one else will ever be called in to take his place in the<br \/>\n   superintendence of our souls.<\/p>\n<p>   This teaching rebukes two errors-(1) The error of those who teach<br \/>\n   sinlessness in the flesh. It is impossible to exaggerate the mischief<br \/>\n   which is being wrought just now by some who take advantage of the<br \/>\n   universal yearning for a higher experience, and are holding out to<br \/>\n   credulous souls the prospect of reaching a position in which they will<br \/>\n   no longer need to confess sin, no longer require perpetual cleansing in<br \/>\n   the blood of Christ, no longer be sensible of their sinnership.<\/p>\n<p>   They who speak thus confound sin and sins. They apply the term<br \/>\n   infirmity to acts and dispositions which the Word of God calls by<br \/>\n   blacker, darker names. This teaching lowers a man&#8217;s standard of sin to<br \/>\n   suit the erroneous doctrine which he has imbibed. It is contrary to the<br \/>\n   distinct teaching of Scripture that the flesh in the believer may yet<br \/>\n   lust for the upper hand. It is in Opposition to all deeper experience<br \/>\n   of the Christian life, which goes to show that, even when we know<br \/>\n   nothing against ourselves, yet are we not hereby justified; because<br \/>\n   there may be many evils of which, for want of clearer light, we are<br \/>\n   completely ignorant, but which stand out patent enough to the eye of<br \/>\n   him who judges us, the Lord who searches the heart and reins.<\/p>\n<p>   The error of those who teach the perplexity if sacrificing priesthood.<br \/>\n   Of course all believers are priests, in the sense of offering the<br \/>\n   sacrifice of praise and prayer, the offerings of self-denying love. But<br \/>\n   there are many among us who persist in affirming that they are called,<br \/>\n   in addition, constantly to offer the perpetual sacrifice of Calvary, in<br \/>\n   the elements of the Lord&#8217;s Supper. Amid the ceremonial of the mass, as<br \/>\n   offered in too many of our English churches by professed Protestants,<br \/>\n   claiming to be priests, it is hard to see any trace of the simple<br \/>\n   institution of the Lord&#8217;s Supper. And it makes one tingle with<br \/>\n   righteous indignation to see the way in which these blind leaders of<br \/>\n   the blind are deceiving the multitudes to the ruin of their soul<br \/>\n   Sometimes one longs for the withering sarcasm of an Erasmus, the sturdy<br \/>\n   common sense of a Latimer, the vehemence of a Knox, to show up the<br \/>\n   unscriptural pretensions of these men, tricked out in the gaudy finery<br \/>\n   of pagan costumes, and going through mummeries which would provoke to<br \/>\n   laughter, if the whole system were not so inexpressibly sad. &#8220;How long,<br \/>\n   Lord, how long!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But, after all, the true way to meet these errors is to insist upon our<br \/>\n   Lord&#8217;s continual and unchangeable intercession and priesthood. Surely<br \/>\n   if he lives and continues his work, it is a piece of impertinent and<br \/>\n   arrogant folly to intrude upon his functions. We must revert to the<br \/>\n   earlier methods of Scriptural interpretation and exposition before ever<br \/>\n   we shall be able to forearm our young people against the monstrous<br \/>\n   errors of our times, or win back those who have been so disastrously<br \/>\n   led astray.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                   XVII. THE SUPERLATIVE GREATNESS OF CHRIST.<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Able to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him, seeing he<br \/>\n    ever liveth to make intercession for them.&#8221;-HEBREWS vii. 25.<\/p>\n<p>   THIS chapter needs to be read under a deep sense of sin, to be properly<br \/>\n   understood and appreciated. It is the conscious sinner who needs the<br \/>\n   Priest. We can do very well with Christ as Teacher, Philanthropist,<br \/>\n   Ideal Man, until we see ourselves as we are in the sight of God; but<br \/>\n   when that vision is given to us, our hearts cry out with an exceeding<br \/>\n   great and bitter cry for the Priest, who can stand for us with God, and<br \/>\n   for God with us.<\/p>\n<p>   There is urgent need for a fresh consciousness and conviction of our<br \/>\n   sinnership, both amongst unbelievers and professing Christians. Light<br \/>\n   views of sin give slight views of the sacrifice of Calvary, of the need<br \/>\n   for propitiation, and of the dread future penalty on willful<br \/>\n   wrong-doing. Did men really understand what sin is, they would not talk<br \/>\n   so glibly of their complete deliverance from it; confounding as they do<br \/>\n   the few sins of which they are cognizant with the mass of evil that<br \/>\n   lies still in their nature, like the mud at the bottom of a pellucid<br \/>\n   lake, only needing to be stirred to show itself. And if men really felt<br \/>\n   their sins, there would be a unanimous rush to the precious Blood and<br \/>\n   to the only priest for absolution and pardon.<\/p>\n<p>   It is hardly likely that these poor words can affect the set of the<br \/>\n   current; yet, if it were possible to reach the great mass of the<br \/>\n   preachers of the present day, one would urge them to lay aside their<br \/>\n   literary essays, their arguments with evolutionists, their poetry and<br \/>\n   rhetoric, and to bring the trenchant teaching of God&#8217;s Word to bear on<br \/>\n   human consciences and lives. Let them attack sin as sin. Let them deal<br \/>\n   with the sins of their congregations specifically, as the Boer marks<br \/>\n   his man for his bullet. Let them show what God thinks of the sins which<br \/>\n   we treat so lightly. And as soon as we get back to the old fashioned<br \/>\n   style of preaching, we shall see a revival of old fashioned<br \/>\n   conversions. It is of no use complaining, when we are ourselves to<br \/>\n   blame. Human nature is unaltered. The law of God is unchanged. The cry<br \/>\n   of the conscience is stifled, not silenced. Again shall we hear of<br \/>\n   multitudes pierced to the heart, and crying for mercy. And then the<br \/>\n   Priesthood of Christ, as described here, will acquire a new<br \/>\n   preciousness.<\/p>\n<p>   HE IS A GREAT HIGH-PRIEST (ver. 4). How great, appears from the episode<br \/>\n   here referred to. Flushed with victory, bringing with him all the<br \/>\n   captives and goods which Chedorlaomer had swept away from Sodom, the<br \/>\n   patriarch Abraham had nearly reached his own camp. But as he drew nigh<br \/>\n   to Salem, where peace and righteousness dwelt beneath the rule of<br \/>\n   Melchizedek, he was met by this saintly figure, bearing in his hands<br \/>\n   the sacred emblems of bread and wine: meet type of him who often<br \/>\n   accosts us on the road of life, when weary with conflict, or when<br \/>\n   entering into subtle temptation, and refreshes us with the bread of his<br \/>\n   flesh, and the wine of his blood. And Abraham knelt to receive a<br \/>\n   blessing at his hand, and gave him tithes of all (Gen. xiv. 19, 20).<\/p>\n<p>   Does not this prove the greatness of Melchizedek? The Levites and<br \/>\n   priests were indeed permitted to take tithes of their brethren; but<br \/>\n   this glorious priest feels no compunction to take tithes of one of<br \/>\n   another race. He rose above the narrow boundaries of race or blood, and<br \/>\n   was prepared to do his office with equal care for an alien as for his<br \/>\n   own. This unsectarian, cosmopolitan, large-hearted view of his<br \/>\n   obligations to man as man is a true mark of greatness. And in this he<br \/>\n   manifests a trait of the greatness of our dear Lord, whose Priesthood<br \/>\n   overleaps the limits which might be set by nationality or birth, and<br \/>\n   deals with man as man; with thee, reader, and me, if only we will come<br \/>\n   to him.<\/p>\n<p>   Besides this, since the greater must bless the less, it is obvious that<br \/>\n   Abraham, great and good though he was, the friend of God, and the<br \/>\n   recipient of the promises, must have felt that Melchizedek was his<br \/>\n   superior, or he would never have treated him with such marked respect<br \/>\n   (Heb. vii. 6, 7). Surely, then, this holy man was a fit representative<br \/>\n   of our blessed Lord, to whom all the noblest in heaven and earth bow<br \/>\n   the knee; confessing that he is Lord; and consecrating to him, not a<br \/>\n   tenth only, but the whole of what they have and are.<\/p>\n<p>   HE IS A GREATER HIGH-PRIEST THAN AARON OR HIS SONS. When Abraham knelt<br \/>\n   beneath that royal and priestly hand, he did not do so for himself<br \/>\n   alone, but as a representative man. First and head of his race, his<br \/>\n   descendants were identified with him in his deed. Levi, therefore, who<br \/>\n   receiveth tithes paid tithes in the patriarch; and, in doing so,<br \/>\n   forevermore took up the second place as inferior, and second best.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;Stop,&#8221; cries an objector; &#8220;if you affirm this inferiority of the<br \/>\n   Jewish priesthood to that of Melchizedek, you are making an assertion<br \/>\n   so far-reaching in its results as to need some further corroboration.<br \/>\n   Are you quite sure that this is as you say?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;Certainly,&#8221; is the reply; &#8220;else, why should there be so emphatic an<br \/>\n   announcement made in David&#8217;s Psalms of the coming of another Priest<br \/>\n   long after the Jewish priesthood had been in operation? &#8216;If perfection<br \/>\n   were by the Levitical priesthood, what further need was there that<br \/>\n   another Priest should arise after the order of Melchizedek and not be<br \/>\n   called after the order of Aaron?'&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;But stay,&#8221; again interposes the objector; &#8220;if you are going to<br \/>\n   supersede the Levitical priesthood, you are of necessity making a<br \/>\n   change in all that ceremonial law which rested on the priesthood as an<br \/>\n   arch upon its keystone. Are you prepared to sweep away a system so<br \/>\n   venerable, so religiously maintained, the bulwark of religion, the<br \/>\n   institution of God?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;I am prepared for this,&#8221; is the reply; &#8220;the previous commandments that<br \/>\n   relate to sacrifices and rites and ceremonies will have to go. They<br \/>\n   were temporary and imperfect. Types, not realities; molds, not the real<br \/>\n   vessels; shadows, not the substance. They made nothing perfect. Their<br \/>\n   office was to bring in a better hope; but, now that this is come, they<br \/>\n   may be annulled and laid aside.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   It seems a light thing to us; but it was of the gravest import to those<br \/>\n   who were here addressed. To them the Jewish priesthood and ceremonial<br \/>\n   were more than a state religion; they were religion itself. Tradition,<br \/>\n   custom, ancestral veneration, personal admiration, and adherence, all<br \/>\n   these ties had to be rudely snapped, as they were compelled to admit<br \/>\n   the cogency of this inspired and irresistible argument. If Jesus were<br \/>\n   indeed the Priest spoken of by David in Psalm cx.- and of this there<br \/>\n   seemed no doubt because it was so often applied to him (Matt. xxii. 44;<br \/>\n   Acts ii. 34)- then there could be no doubt that his Priesthood was<br \/>\n   better than Aaron&#8217;s; and that the whole system of which the Levitical<br \/>\n   priesthood was the essential characteristic must pass away before that<br \/>\n   system which gathers around the person and work of the Lord Jesus.<\/p>\n<p>   We must distinguish between the moral and the ceremonial law: the<br \/>\n   latter is transient, and was fulfilled in Jesus Christ; the former, of<br \/>\n   course, is of permanent and eternal force, written on the conscience of<br \/>\n   man and the government of the world.<\/p>\n<p>   We can only stay for a moment here to show how absurd it is for either<br \/>\n   the Roman or the Anglican priest to base his pretensions on the example<br \/>\n   of the Old Testament. To do so is to confess their inferiority to the<br \/>\n   only Priesthood which is recognized in the present age. They are in<br \/>\n   evil case. Press them for their warrant of existence. If they quote<br \/>\n   Rev. i. 6, then we all have an equal right to wear their dress and<br \/>\n   fulfill their office. If they quote Leviticus, then are they hopelessly<br \/>\n   undone; for that priesthood has been superseded. The time is coming<br \/>\n   when all his people will have to disavow connection with those men<br \/>\n   whose pretensions are baseless, or worse, delusive; and an<br \/>\n   unwarrantable intrusion into the sacred offices of Christ. Alas I poor<br \/>\n   souls, deluded and fleeced by them!<\/p>\n<p>   HE IS THE GREATEST OF HIGH-PRIESTS. Because he was made priest by the<br \/>\n   oath of God (vv. 20, 21). Ordinary priests had no such sanction to<br \/>\n   their appointment; but he by an oath. Jehovah sware, and will not<br \/>\n   change his mind. His appointment is final, absolute, immutable. It<br \/>\n   never can be superseded, as that of Aaron has been. Heaven and earth<br \/>\n   may pass away, but it will not pass away.<\/p>\n<p>   Because he continueth ever. His is the Priesthood in which throbs the<br \/>\n   power of an endless life (ver. 16). It is witnessed of him, that he<br \/>\n   liveth. &#8220;Behold,&#8221; said he, &#8220;I am alive forevermore.&#8221; What a contrast to<br \/>\n   all human priests, on whose graves this epitaph may ever be inscribed,<br \/>\n   &#8220;Not suffered to continue by reason of death.&#8221; One by one they grow old<br \/>\n   and die: the eye, often filmed with tears, is closed; the heart stands<br \/>\n   still; the hands, often raised in absolution, crossed meekly on the<br \/>\n   breast, as if asking for pardon. But he ever liveth. And of this<br \/>\n   perpetual life there are two blessed results. On the one hand, he has<br \/>\n   an untransferable Priesthood (ver. 24); on the other hand, he is able<br \/>\n   to save them to the uttermost that come unto God by him (ver. 25).<br \/>\n   There is no limit to his salvation, no barrier beyond which he may not<br \/>\n   pass. Uttermost in time, and in character, and in desperation, you may<br \/>\n   be at one of the ends of the earth; yet you shall be lifted to the<br \/>\n   uttermost degree of glory. To the uttermost-from sins of thought as<br \/>\n   well as of word and deed; to the uttermost, in cleansing the thoughts<br \/>\n   and intents of the heart.<\/p>\n<p>   Because of his blameless character. Holy toward God; harmless toward<br \/>\n   man; undefiled in heart; separate from sinners in life. Not needing to<br \/>\n   offer up sacrifice for himself, as the priests did always before<br \/>\n   offering for the congregation; not requiring to make a daily or yearly<br \/>\n   repetition of that perfect sacrifice and oblation which was once made<br \/>\n   on the cross (vv. 26, 27).<\/p>\n<p>   Because of the dignity of his Person (ver. 28). The office of mediation<br \/>\n   is no longer intrusted to a man, or set of men, encompassed by<br \/>\n   infirmities. See! through the shining ranks of being there advances the<br \/>\n   Son, Light of Light, Fellow of Jehovah, Co-equal with God, One with<br \/>\n   Father and Spirit in the ever-blessed Trinity. He is solemnly<br \/>\n   consecrated to this task of reconciling and saving sinners. All heaven<br \/>\n   hears and ratifies the oath. And surely we may well ponder what must be<br \/>\n   our worth in the thought of God, and what our destiny, when our case is<br \/>\n   undertaken, amid such solemnities, by One so August, so glorious, so<br \/>\n   divine, as the High-Priest, who now awaits the appeal of the humblest<br \/>\n   penitent of the human race. &#8220;Such a High-Priest became us.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;To THE UTTERMOST.&#8221; Eyes may light on these words, weary with weeping,<br \/>\n   of those who have been reduced well-nigh to despair through the<br \/>\n   greatness and virulence of their sins. Not only does the record of the<br \/>\n   past seem too black to be forgiven, but old habits are perpetually<br \/>\n   reasserting themselves; ridiculing the most steadfast resolutions, and<br \/>\n   smiting the inner life of the soul down to the ground. At such times we<br \/>\n   are disposed to envy the vegetable and animal creation, which are not<br \/>\n   capable of sin; or the myriads of sweet children who have been taken<br \/>\n   home to God before the time of conscious rebellion and war could rend<br \/>\n   their infant hearts. But the greatness of our sin is always less than<br \/>\n   the greatness of God&#8217;s grace. Where the one abounds, the other much<br \/>\n   more abounds. If we go down to the bottoms of the mountains and touch<br \/>\n   the heart of the deep, deeper than all is the redeeming mercy of God.<br \/>\n   The love and grace and power of Jesus are more than our unutterable<br \/>\n   necessities. Only trust him, he is &#8220;able to save unto the uttermost&#8221;;<br \/>\n   and he is as willing as able.<\/p>\n<p>   There are many in these days filled with questionings about the clean<br \/>\n   heart, the extent to which we may be delivered from sin, and such like<br \/>\n   speculations. To these we say: Cease to think of cleansing, and<br \/>\n   consider the Cleanser; forbear to speculate on the deliverance, and<br \/>\n   deal with the Deliverer; be not so eager as to the nature of the<br \/>\n   salvation, but let the Saviour into your heart; and be sure that so<br \/>\n   long as he is in possession, he will exert so salutary an effect, that<br \/>\n   sin, however mighty, shall instantly lose its power over the<br \/>\n   tempest-driven soul that comes through him to God, the source of<br \/>\n   holiness.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                           XVIII. THE TRUE TABERNACLE<\/p>\n<p>     &#8220;According to the pattern showed to thee in the mount.&#8221;-HEBREWS viii. 5.<\/p>\n<p>   THERE were three stages by which Moses, the man of God, ascended into<br \/>\n   the Mount. To the first, he went in company with Aaron, Nadab, and<br \/>\n   Abihu, and seventy elders of the children of Israel, the chosen<br \/>\n   representatives of the people. &#8220;And they saw the God of Israel; and<br \/>\n   there was under his feet as it were a paved work of a sapphire stone,<br \/>\n   and as it were the body of heaven in his clearness; they saw God, and<br \/>\n   did eat and drink&#8221; (Exod. xxiv. 10, 11). This eating and drinking was<br \/>\n   evidently a symbol of friendship and peace, based upon the shedding of<br \/>\n   the blood, which is recorded in the previous verses. We, too, may see<br \/>\n   God, and eat of the flesh and drink of the blood of the Son of Man, on<br \/>\n   the basis of that precious blood by which we have been made nigh.<\/p>\n<p>   When this feast was over, the voice of God called Moses up to a higher<br \/>\n   range, a further steep. He first bade the elders tarry where they were;<br \/>\n   and then, accompanied only by Joshua, he rose up, and went into the<br \/>\n   mount of God, on which the cloud brooded, steeped and bathed in the<br \/>\n   glory of the Lord, like the long bars of cloud in the brilliance of a<br \/>\n   setting sun.<\/p>\n<p>   But on the seventh day, even Joshua was left behind. God called unto<br \/>\n   Moses out of the cloud. And Moses went up further into the mount,<br \/>\n   deeper and yet deeper into the heart of the burning glory. All his<br \/>\n   senses were keenly awake to the scenes around him, and entranced; each<br \/>\n   the channel for tides of rapturous enjoyment, without pain, without<br \/>\n   self-consciousness, without the paralysis of fear, as if one were borne<br \/>\n   ever onward by a tide of glory and music, each movement of which was<br \/>\n   rapture. &#8220;And Moses was in the Mount forty days and forty nights.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   During that time minute instructions were given Moses concerning the<br \/>\n   Tabernacle, which was to be erected on the plains below. Those<br \/>\n   instructions are given in Exod. xxv., xxvi.,xxvii., and are exceedingly<br \/>\n   minute. But nothing was left to human fancy. Beginning with the ark and<br \/>\n   its mercy-seat as the throne of God, the instructions pass through the<br \/>\n   table of shittim wood, the candlestick with its seven branches, the<br \/>\n   boards and curtains and hangings, until they end at the great brazen<br \/>\n   altar in the court of the Tabernacle, where God and the sinner met. Is<br \/>\n   not this also the path trodden by the Lord himself, the substance of<br \/>\n   all these types, who came from the bosom of the Father to the cross of<br \/>\n   Calvary, the brazen altar where he put away the sins of men?<\/p>\n<p>   But, in addition to the minute description thus given, there appears to<br \/>\n   have been presented to the mind of Moses some representation of the<br \/>\n   things which he was bidden to construct. It was as if the eternal<br \/>\n   realities which had dwelt forever in the mind of God took some visible<br \/>\n   shape before his vision. The unseen became visible. The eternal took<br \/>\n   form. A pattern was shown him. He trod the aisles of the true<br \/>\n   Tabernacle. He beheld the heavenly things themselves. And it was after<br \/>\n   this pattern that he was repeatedly urged and commanded to build.<br \/>\n   &#8220;According to all that I show thee, after the pattern of the<br \/>\n   Tabernacle, and the pattern of all the instruments thereof, even so<br \/>\n   shall ye make it&#8221; (Exod. xxv. 9, 40; xxvi. 30; xxvii. 8).<\/p>\n<p>   THE JEWISH RITUAL DESERVES DEVOUT STUDY. It is always interesting to<br \/>\n   study methods of religious worship, even though the rites have become<br \/>\n   obsolete, the altars deserted, and the dust of priest and votary has<br \/>\n   long since mingled in the sand of the desert or the verdure of the<br \/>\n   glade. Who can look unmoved at the gigantic monuments which rear<br \/>\n   themselves in the dense forests of Central Mexico, the remnants of an<br \/>\n   age of giants who have passed away, giving no clew to the symbols or<br \/>\n   hieroglyphs which they have carved? Who can walk unmoved through the<br \/>\n   stone circles of Stonehenge, Keswick, or Penmaenmawr, and not fall into<br \/>\n   pensive musings?<\/p>\n<p>   For this reason, if for no other, the Levitical ritual would ever be<br \/>\n   possessed of intrinsic interest. When we think of the noble spirits who<br \/>\n   have bequeathed us our most precious religious records, who sang in the<br \/>\n   Psalms, and wept in the Lamentations, and flashed with the ecstasy of<br \/>\n   Messianic prediction and prophecy; and all of whom were trained in the<br \/>\n   system of which the Tabernacle was the focus and heart, we cannot fail<br \/>\n   to examine it with holy and reverent curiosity, as if one should visit<br \/>\n   the nursery or schoolhouse where loved and honored teachers spent their<br \/>\n   earliest years.<\/p>\n<p>   But there is a yet deeper interest here. For we are told that these<br \/>\n   things were made after the pattern of things in the heavens. Every<br \/>\n   knob, and tache, and curtain, and vessel, and piece of furniture, had<br \/>\n   some analogue, some spiritual counterpart of which it was the rude and<br \/>\n   material expression. Through these examples and shadows there is no<br \/>\n   doubt that the ancient saints caught glimpses of the eternal realities.<br \/>\n   We infer this, because there is such a similarity between their<br \/>\n   religious life, as expressed in their writings, and our own. But if<br \/>\n   they, who had nothing but the type to guide them, were able to discern<br \/>\n   so many deep and holy lessons through its medium, how much more<br \/>\n   evidently should we be able to see the grand principles of redemption<br \/>\n   in the ancient ritual, when before us have passed the scenes of<br \/>\n   Bethlehem, Calvary, the Garden of Arimathea, and the Ascension Mount!<\/p>\n<p>   Sometimes in a shadow we may see details of workmanship which otherwise<br \/>\n   in the substance we might have missed. One of the most wonderful<br \/>\n   achievements of the present day is sun-photography, by which<br \/>\n   photographs are obtained of the sun-disk under certain conditions. And<br \/>\n   it is obviously much easier to investigate the nature of the sun from<br \/>\n   such photographs than to study it amid the unbearable glory of his<br \/>\n   presence. The eye may quietly pursue its investigations undazzled and<br \/>\n   unabashed. So we may better understand some of the details of Christ&#8217;s<br \/>\n   work, as we study Leviticus, than when we stand with the apostles amid<br \/>\n   the marvels of the cross, or with the Seer amid the supernal blaze of<br \/>\n   Apocalyptic vision.<\/p>\n<p>   Turn not lightly then from the Book of Leviticus, which shadows forth<br \/>\n   the Gospel; and, indeed, gives much of the terminology, the phrases and<br \/>\n   symbols, to be afterward employed. Beneath the teaching of the same<br \/>\n   Holy Spirit as taught Moses of old we explore the sacred meanings which<br \/>\n   underlie ark and propitiatory; fine twined linen and blue; candlestick<br \/>\n   and table; altar of incense and altar of burnt-offering; basin and<br \/>\n   vessel and snuffer. Each is like a hook in the divine household, to<br \/>\n   which God has attached a sacred meaning, and which will yield up its<br \/>\n   secret to those who reverently ask and seek and knock. Adapting some<br \/>\n   memorable words, we may say: &#8220;The invisible things of God, from the<br \/>\n   construction of the Tabernacle, are clearly seen, being understood by<br \/>\n   the things that were made, even his eternal purpose of redemption.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   THE TRUTHS OF THE GOSPEL ARE ETERNAL REALITIES. We must not think that<br \/>\n   they are ever destined to pass away, as the Jewish types did. They<br \/>\n   cannot. They are the heavenly things themselves. They are the true, the<br \/>\n   ideal, the divine. They have always been what they are. They always<br \/>\n   will be what they are. We may yet have to see much deeper into them; we<br \/>\n   may need to be taught them in yet higher methods of divine<br \/>\n   communication. We may have to be lifted on to a loftier region of<br \/>\n   experience in order to comprehend them. But they are essentially and<br \/>\n   forever settled, the granite of eternal fact. Any structure built on<br \/>\n   them shall last forever. The Jews had only the example, we have the<br \/>\n   reality; they the picture, we the person; they the shadow, we the<br \/>\n   substance.<\/p>\n<p>   It is interesting to feel that Moses saw no other truth in God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   revelation than what Paul saw; though to Moses it shaped itself in the<br \/>\n   Tabernacle with its layers of skins, whilst to Paul it took shape in<br \/>\n   glowing trains of splendid argument and rhetoric. But ever in the mind<br \/>\n   and thought of God there has been the same distinction between holiness<br \/>\n   and sin; ever the need of sacrifice, even unto death; ever the demand<br \/>\n   for shed life, as the only means through which the sinner may approach<br \/>\n   his holy Majesty; ever the requirements of the incense of praise, the<br \/>\n   bread of obedience, the light of an illuminated character; ever the<br \/>\n   priest to make intercession; and ever the aisles and courts and spaces<br \/>\n   dedicated to worship and intercourse, lofty as the fellowship between<br \/>\n   the Father and the Son.<\/p>\n<p>   Calvary is no novelty, nor the Priesthood, nor the work of Jesus; they<br \/>\n   represent the shining forth of eternal facts in the deepest nature of<br \/>\n   God. To ignore them is to miss union with God on the most fundamental<br \/>\n   laws and processes of his being. The Lamb was slain before the<br \/>\n   foundation of the world: and lie appears in heaven still bearing the<br \/>\n   marks of his death, &#8220;a Lamb as it had been slain.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   OUR PLACE OF WORSHIP. We must needs assemble ourselves in places of<br \/>\n   assembly with fellow Christians; but in point of fact not one of them<br \/>\n   is essential to true worship. The type has passed, and we know that the<br \/>\n   Jewish Tabernacle is no more. But what do we see? Men are trying to<br \/>\n   reproduce it, or to invent a substitute for it. Ah, how greatly they<br \/>\n   misconceive our true position! We certainly neither need the Jewish<br \/>\n   Tabernacle nor any substitute; because we are constituted priests of<br \/>\n   the heavenly tabernacle, which no human hand ever reared, and which is<br \/>\n   the meeting place between God and all true hearts, yea, of all who love<br \/>\n   God. &#8220;Neither in this mountain, nor yet at Jerusalem, shall ye worship<br \/>\n   the Father.&#8221; When we meet a company of our fellow Christians, we are<br \/>\n   not to think of them as the whole of those with whom we worship. The<br \/>\n   true worshiper is one of a great festal throng, which is filling the<br \/>\n   spiritual temple. We are but part of a congregation consisting of all<br \/>\n   the sainted dead, and the believing living, in all communions, and<br \/>\n   throughout the universe of God. The prisoner, the traveler, the<br \/>\n   invalid, the mother, the nurse- a11 meet there in unison, and worship<br \/>\n   God together. All are priests, and yonder is the High-Priest, who has<br \/>\n   passed through the heavens and ever lives to make intercession. &#8220;A<br \/>\n   minister of the true tabernacle.&#8221; How ridiculous do those appear to<br \/>\n   such an assembly who arrogate to themselves priestly pretensions, and<br \/>\n   who would make us believe that they are repeating the sacrifice of<br \/>\n   Christ! In this temple at least they are not wanted, for Christ is here<br \/>\n   to offer the sacrifice himself.<\/p>\n<p>   THE TRUE PATTERN OF OUR LIFE IS SUGGESTED HERE. We have many plans and<br \/>\n   schemes and patterns; but how often abortive and disappointing! Would<br \/>\n   that we could spend long periods with God in the mount, getting his<br \/>\n   pattern of our life and work! There is nothing higher for us than to<br \/>\n   build up some resemblance to God&#8217;s eternal thought. All structures<br \/>\n   built on that scheme will stand forever. And God will ever find<br \/>\n   material, more than enough, for those who dare to be singular, because<br \/>\n   they are true to the pattern which he shows on the mount. And if it be<br \/>\n   asked what that pattern is which God will show us in the mount of<br \/>\n   communion, we may reply: it is the life and character and work of Jesus<br \/>\n   Christ our Lord; the model and exemplar and pattern of all that is true<br \/>\n   and just and pure and lovely and of good report. See that thou make thy<br \/>\n   life on this pattern, which God waits to show thee in the mount. God<br \/>\n   calls thee to it, and he will enable thee to perform.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                             XIX. THE TWO COVENANTS<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;I will be to them a God, and they shall be to me a people.&#8221; HEBREWS viii.<br \/>\n    10.<\/p>\n<p>   NEW word comes into this marvelous treatise which may repel some, as<br \/>\n   having a theological sound; and yet it contains new depths of meaning<br \/>\n   and interest for us all. It is the word Covenant. We all understand<br \/>\n   pretty clearly the covenants into which men enter with each other with<br \/>\n   respect to property, or other matters of daily business. One man<br \/>\n   undertakes to do certain things, on condition that another pledges<br \/>\n   himself to do certain other things. When these respective undertakings<br \/>\n   are settled, they are engrossed on parchment, signed, and sealed; and<br \/>\n   from that moment each party is honorably bound to perform his share in<br \/>\n   the transaction.<\/p>\n<p>   In some such way, adapting himself to our methods of thought and<br \/>\n   practice, the eternal God has entered into covenant with faithful and<br \/>\n   obedient souls. Nor is it possible to overestimate the condescension on<br \/>\n   his part, or the honor and advantage placed within our reach, by such<br \/>\n   relationship. It seems too wonderful to be true; yet it must be true,<br \/>\n   for on no other grounds than its revealed truthfulness could it ever<br \/>\n   have become a matter of human statement or debate. The covenant between<br \/>\n   a prince and a beggar, or between a man like William Penn and the rude<br \/>\n   dark skins of America, is dwarfed into utter insignificance and<br \/>\n   paltriness when mentioned in the same day as the covenant between God<br \/>\n   and the soul of man.<\/p>\n<p>   Theologians have detected several different kinds of covenant in the<br \/>\n   course of human history, and as depicted in the Bible. But it is<br \/>\n   sufficient for us to notice the two covenants, Old and New, mentioned<br \/>\n   in this paragraph. And the basis of the whole argument is contained in<br \/>\n   Jer. xxxi. 31-34, in which there is a distinction made between the<br \/>\n   covenant made with the fathers-when God took them out of the land of<br \/>\n   Egypt, and that new covenant, which in the days of Jeremiah, was still<br \/>\n   future. Moses was the mediator of the first, as Jesus is of the second.<\/p>\n<p>   THE MOSAIC COVENANT. It was often reiterated in very gracious and<br \/>\n   searching tones. Take, for instance, that scene which took place as the<br \/>\n   vast host defiled into the plain beneath the brow of Sinai, in the<br \/>\n   third month of the Exodus. As yet there was no cloud or fire on Sinai&#8217;s<br \/>\n   crest; but a proposition was made to the people by Moses, that if they,<br \/>\n   on their side, would obey God&#8217;s voice and keep his word, God, on his<br \/>\n   side, would do two things: he would regard them as his peculiar<br \/>\n   treasure above all people; and he would take them to himself as a<br \/>\n   kingdom of priests, and a holy nation (Exod. xix. 5, 6). And the<br \/>\n   people, little counting the cost, or realizing all that was involved,<br \/>\n   cried with one glib, unanimous voice, &#8220;All that the Lord hath spoken<br \/>\n   will we do.&#8221; They thus entered into covenant.<\/p>\n<p>   Shortly after, when the Ten Commandments had been given, the terms of<br \/>\n   the covenant on God&#8217;s part were very much enlarged. On the fulfillment,<br \/>\n   on the part of the people, of the old condition of obedience, God went<br \/>\n   further than ever before in his promises, which comprehended a vast<br \/>\n   variety of need, and consisted of many parts (Exod. xxiii. 22-31). And<br \/>\n   again the people gave one mighty, unanimous shout of assent (xxiv. 3).<\/p>\n<p>   Nor was this all; for when, with the intention of recording these<br \/>\n   solemn engagements, they were entered in the Book of the Covenant, and<br \/>\n   read publicly, amid the solemn ratification of sprinkled blood, the<br \/>\n   people again said, &#8220;All that the Lord hath said will we do, and be<br \/>\n   obedient&#8221; (xxiv. 7). But how little they knew themselves! Within a week<br \/>\n   or two they were dancing wildly around the golden calf; and within a<br \/>\n   few months there was not one who dared affirm that he had kept the<br \/>\n   covenant in every jot and tittle. Nay, on the contrary: &#8220;which my<br \/>\n   covenant they brake, saith the Lord.&#8221; What else could be expected of<br \/>\n   them! although Moses did write them a second and detailed statement of<br \/>\n   the conditions of the covenant in the Book of Deuteronomy, with the<br \/>\n   reiterated demand, that occurs like a refrain, &#8220;Ye shall observe to<br \/>\n   do.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   There were two great defects in that old covenant, which arose out of<br \/>\n   the weakness of poor human nature; in the first place, it gave no<br \/>\n   power, no moral dynamics, to enable the human covenanters to do what<br \/>\n   they promised; and, secondly, it could not provide for the effectual<br \/>\n   putting away of those sins which arose from their failure to carry into<br \/>\n   effect their covenanted vows (Heb. ix. 9).<\/p>\n<p>   Surely the majority of men, aiming after a religious life, pass through<br \/>\n   an experience like this. When first we are redeemed by the blood of the<br \/>\n   Lamb, and brought out into the new life, we seem to stand again under<br \/>\n   Mount Sinai; or, better still, our conscience becomes our Sinai, and<br \/>\n   from its highest point we seem to hear the voice of God, engaging<br \/>\n   himself to be a God to us if we will in all things obey his voice. And<br \/>\n   this we immediately pledge ourselves to do. We are not insincere, we<br \/>\n   really mean to perform it; we are enamoured at the ideal of life<br \/>\n   presented to us. It is not only desirable as the condition of<br \/>\n   blessings, but it is eminently attractive and lovely.<\/p>\n<p>   But we make a profound mistake in pledging ourselves; for we are<br \/>\n   undertaking a matter which is totally beyond our reach. As well might a<br \/>\n   paralyzed man undertake to climb Mount Blanc, or a bankrupt to pay his<br \/>\n   debts. We soon learn that sin has paralyzed all our moral motor nerves.<br \/>\n   The good we would, we do not: the evil we would not, we do. We are<br \/>\n   brought into captivity to the law of sin in our members, which wars<br \/>\n   against the law of our mind. We go out to shake ourselves, as at other<br \/>\n   times; but we wist not that razors have passed over our locks of<br \/>\n   strength, leaving us powerless and helpless.<\/p>\n<p>   It seems a pity that each has to learn the uselessness of these<br \/>\n   attempts for himself, instead of profiting by the experience of others<br \/>\n   and the records of the past. Yet so it is. One after another starts to<br \/>\n   earn the privilege of God&#8217;s presence and smile and blessing by being<br \/>\n   good and obedient and punctilious in complying with rules and forms and<br \/>\n   regulations. It goes on well for a little while, but soon utterly<br \/>\n   breaks down. We are baffled and beaten, as sea-fowl who dash themselves<br \/>\n   against a lighthouse tower in the storm, and then fall wounded into the<br \/>\n   yeasty foam beneath. We are slow to learn that, as we receive<br \/>\n   justification, so must we receive sanctification, from the hands of God<br \/>\n   as his free gift.<\/p>\n<p>   If any reader of these lines is trying to keep up a friendly<br \/>\n   relationship with God on this principle of try and do and keep, the<br \/>\n   sooner that soul realizes the certainty of failure, not for want of<br \/>\n   will, but through the weakness of the moral nature, and yields itself<br \/>\n   to the grace revealed in the second and better covenant, the more<br \/>\n   quickly will it find a secure and happy resting place, from which it<br \/>\n   will not be disturbed or driven, world without end.<\/p>\n<p>   THE BETTER COVENANT. It is so much better than that of Moses, in this<br \/>\n   way: while it pledges God to even better promises (ver. 6) than those<br \/>\n   of the earlier covenant, promises which for a moment demand our<br \/>\n   attention, there is no pledge or undertaking of any kind demanded from<br \/>\n   us. There are no ifs; no injunctions of observe to do; no conditions of<br \/>\n   obedience to be fulfilled. From first to last it consists of the f<br \/>\n   wills of the Most High. Count them up in this marvelous enumeration<br \/>\n   (vv. 10, II, 12), and then dare to claim that each should be fulfilled<br \/>\n   in your personal experience; because this is the covenant under which<br \/>\n   we are living, and through which we have access to God.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;I will write my laws into their minds.&#8221;  That refers to the<br \/>\n   intellectual faculty, which thinks, remembers, argues. It will be of<br \/>\n   inestimable value to have them there for constant reference; so that<br \/>\n   they shall always stand inscribed on the side posts and lintels of the<br \/>\n   inner life, demanding reverence, and compelling daily attention.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;I will write them upon their hearts.&#8221; That is the seat of the<br \/>\n   emotional life and of the affections. If they are written there, they<br \/>\n   must engage our love. And what a man loves, he is pretty certain to<br \/>\n   follow and obey. &#8220;A little lower,&#8221; said the dying veteran, as they<br \/>\n   probed for the bullet, which had sunk deep down into his breast, &#8220;and<br \/>\n   you will find the Emperor&#8221;; and in the case of the Christian who has<br \/>\n   been taken into covenant with God, the law is inscribed on the deepest<br \/>\n   affections of his being. He obeys because he loves to obey. He stays in<br \/>\n   his Master&#8217;s service, not because he must, but because he chooses it<br \/>\n   for himself, saying, as his ear is bored to the door, &#8220;I love my<br \/>\n   Master, I will not go out free.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;I will be to them a God, and they shall be to me a people.&#8221;  The last<br \/>\n   clause is even better than the first, because it implies the keeping<br \/>\n   power of God. His chosen people so wandered from him that he once<br \/>\n   called them &#8220;LoAmmi&#8221; Not my people (Hos. i.). But if we are ever to be<br \/>\n   his people; people for his peculiar possession then it can only result<br \/>\n   from the operation of his gracious Spirit, who keeps us, as the sun<br \/>\n   restrains the planets from dashing off into space to become wandering<br \/>\n   stars.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;All shall know me.&#8221; Oh, rapture of raptures! can it be? To know God!<br \/>\n   To know the deep things of God. To know him, or to be known of him. To<br \/>\n   know him as Abraham did, to whom he told his secrets; as Moses did, who<br \/>\n   conversed with him face to face; or as the Apostle John did, when he<br \/>\n   beheld him in the visions of the Apocalypse. And that this privilege<br \/>\n   should be within reach of the least!<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;I will be merciful to their unrighteousness.&#8221; In the old covenant<br \/>\n   there was little room for mercy. It was a matter of voluntary<br \/>\n   agreement; if one of the covenanting parties failed in the least<br \/>\n   particular, there was no obligation on the other to remain faithful to<br \/>\n   their mutual agreement. The failure of one party neutralized the whole<br \/>\n   covenant. But there is no such stringency here. On the contrary, mercy<br \/>\n   is admitted into the relationship, and exercises her gracious sway.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;I will remember their sins and iniquities no more.&#8221; As a score is<br \/>\n   forgotten when blotted from a slate, so shall sin be, as if obliterated<br \/>\n   from the memory of God. It will be forgotten, as a debt paid years ago.<br \/>\n   It will be so entirely put out of mind that it shall be as if it had<br \/>\n   never been. If sought for, not found. The handwriting nailed through.<br \/>\n   The stone dropped into ocean depths. The cloud absorbed by the summer<br \/>\n   heat, as it fades from the deep blue sky. Joseph&#8217;s brethren, in their<br \/>\n   last approach to Joseph, after their father&#8217;s death, betrayed a fear<br \/>\n   that though his resentment was cloaked, it was not thoroughly<br \/>\n   relinquished. But their fears were entirely groundless. They discovered<br \/>\n   that the offense had utterly passed from their brother&#8217;s thought, and<br \/>\n   Joseph wept when they spake unto him.&#8221; In some such way as this God<br \/>\n   ceases to consider our sins, and grieves if we do not believe the<br \/>\n   thoroughness of his abundant pardon.<\/p>\n<p>   Are you enjoying the terms of this covenant in your daily experience?<br \/>\n   God is prepared to fulfill them to the letter. Count on him to do as he<br \/>\n   has promised. Reckon on his faithfulness. Claim that each pledge shall<br \/>\n   be realized in you to the fullest limits of his wealth, and your need.<br \/>\n   Do not try to invent conditions or terms not laid down by him; but<br \/>\n   gladly accept the position of doing nothing to earn or win, and of<br \/>\n   accepting all that God gives, without money and without price.<\/p>\n<p>   Do you ask how God can call this a covenant, in which there is no<br \/>\n   second covenanting party? The answer is easy: Jesus Christ has stood in<br \/>\n   our stead, and has not only negotiated this covenant, but has fulfilled<br \/>\n   in our name, and on our behalf, all the conditions which were necessary<br \/>\n   and right. He has borne the penalty of human weakness and<br \/>\n   transgression. He has met all demands for a perfect and unbroken<br \/>\n   obedience. He has engaged to secure, by the gift of the Holy Spirit, a<br \/>\n   holiness in us which could never have been obtained by our own efforts.<br \/>\n   And as he has become our Sponsor and Surety, so God is able to enter<br \/>\n   into these liberal terms with us, saying nothing of all the cost to his<br \/>\n   Son, but permitting us to share all the benefits; on this condition<br \/>\n   only, that we identify ourselves with him by a living faith, intrusting<br \/>\n   all spiritual transactions into his hands, and abiding by the decisions<br \/>\n   of his will. This is the new and better covenant, which has replaced<br \/>\n   the old.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>XX. THE HEAVENLY THINGS THEMSELVES.<\/p>\n<p>    For there was a tabernacle made.&#8221;HEBREWS ix. 2.<\/p>\n<p>   THE eye is quicker than the ear. And there is therefore no language so<br \/>\n   expressive as the language of symbols. The multitude will better catch<br \/>\n   your meaning by one apt symbol than by a thousand words. The mind<br \/>\n   shrinks from the intellectual effort of grappling with the subtle<br \/>\n   essences of things, and loves to have truth wrapped up in a form which<br \/>\n   can easily be taken in by the eye, the ear, the sense of touch.<\/p>\n<p>   This explains why there is such a tendency toward ritualism in the<br \/>\n   Romanish and Anglican Churches. Where man&#8217;s spiritual life is strong,<br \/>\n   it is independent of the outward form; but when it is weak it leans<br \/>\n   feebly on external aids. And it was because the children of Israel were<br \/>\n   in so childish a condition that God enshrined his deep and holy<br \/>\n   thoughts in outward forms and material shadows. The untutored people<br \/>\n   must have spiritual truth expressed in symbols, which appealed to the<br \/>\n   most obtuse. For fifteen hundred years, therefore, the Jewish worship<br \/>\n   gathered round the most splendid ceremonial that the world has ever<br \/>\n   seen<\/p>\n<p>   ceremonial which these Hebrew Christians sadly missed when they passed<br \/>\n   into the simple ordinances of some bare upper room.<\/p>\n<p>   Let us for a moment study those ancient symbols.<\/p>\n<p>   Choose an expanse of sand; mark out an oblong space forty-five feet<br \/>\n   long by fifteen feet broad. Lay all along upon your outlines a<br \/>\n   continuous belt of silver sockets, hollowed out so as to hold the ends<br \/>\n   of the planks that form the walls of the Tabernacle. Now fetch those<br \/>\n   boards themselves, beams of acacia wood fifteen feet high, covered with<br \/>\n   the choicest gold, and fastened together by three long bars of gold,<br \/>\n   running from end to end. The entrance doorway must face the east,<br \/>\n   composed of five golden pillars, over which fall the folds of a rich<br \/>\n   and heavy curtain. Then measure thirty feet from this, and let another<br \/>\n   curtain separate the holy from the most holy place. Now fetch more<br \/>\n   curtains to make the ceiling, and to hang down on either side over the<br \/>\n   gilded acacia beams that form the outer walls; first, a gorgeous<br \/>\n   curtain wrought with brilliant hues, and covered with the forms of<br \/>\n   cherubim; next, a veil of pure white linen; third, a strong curtain of<br \/>\n   rams&#8217; skins, dyed red; and, lastly, to defend it from the weather, a<br \/>\n   common and coarse covering of badgers&#8217; skins. The court is constituted<br \/>\n   by heavy curtains that hang around and veil the movements of the<br \/>\n   priests within.<\/p>\n<p>   Let us cast a brief glance at each item as we briefly pass from the<br \/>\n   outer to the inner shrine.<\/p>\n<p>   THE BRAZEN ALTAR, with its projecting horns, to which animals<br \/>\n   designated for sacrifice were tied (Psalm cxviii. 27), or on which the<br \/>\n   fugitive laid hold for sanctuary and shelter (Exod. xxi. 14), stood in<br \/>\n   the outer court. There were offered the sin offering, the burnt<br \/>\n   offering, and the peace offering. It was deemed most holy (Exod. xxix.<br \/>\n   37.) And well it might be; for it was the symbol of the cross of<br \/>\n   Calvary, that wondrous cross where Jesus offered himself as a sacrifice<br \/>\n   for sin; himself both priest and victim and altar too.<\/p>\n<p>   None could enter the holy place, save by passing this sacred emblem,<br \/>\n   any more than we could ever have entered into fellowship with God,<br \/>\n   unless there had been wrought for us upon the cross that one<br \/>\n   all-sufficient sacrifice and oblation for sins, which purges our heart<br \/>\n   from an evil conscience. The longer we live, and the more we know of<br \/>\n   God, the more precious and indispensable does that cross appear: our<br \/>\n   hope in sorrow, our beacon in the dark, our shelter in the storm, our<br \/>\n   refuge in hours of conviction, our trysting-place with God, our pride<br \/>\n   and joy.<\/p>\n<p>   Blest cross! blest sepulcher! blest rather be<\/p>\n<p>   The Man that there was put to death for me.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>    And if the brazen altar speaks of the one sacrifice, once for all, of<br \/>\n   Calvary, the laver speaks of the daily washing of the stains of our<br \/>\n   wilderness journeyings, as Jesus washed the feet of his disciples (John<br \/>\n   xiii).<\/p>\n<p>   THE SEVEN-BRANCHED CANDLESTICK, from which the light was shed which lit<br \/>\n   up the holy place, would first arrest the eye of the priest, who might<br \/>\n   cross the threshold for the first time. Its form is familiar to us from<br \/>\n   the bas-relief upon the Arch of Titus. How eloquently does it speak of<br \/>\n   Christ! The texture of beaten gold, on every part of which the hammer<br \/>\n   strokes had fallen, tells of his bruisings for us (Exod. xxv. 36). The<br \/>\n   union of the six lesser lamps, with the one tall Center one, betokens<br \/>\n   the mystery of that union in light-giving which makes the Church one<br \/>\n   with her Lord forevermore in illuminating a dark world. The golden oil,<br \/>\n   stealing through the golden pipes that needed to be kept clean and<br \/>\n   unchoked, shows our dependence on him for supplies of the daily grace<br \/>\n   of the Holy Spirit (Zech. iv. 2). And the very snuffers, all of gold,<br \/>\n   used wisely by the high-priest to trim the flame, are significant of<br \/>\n   those processes by which our dear Lord is often obliged to cut away the<br \/>\n   unevenness of the wick, and to cause us a momentary dimming of light<br \/>\n   that we may afterward burn more clearly and steadily. His life is the<br \/>\n   light of men. In his light we see light. He sheds light on hearts and<br \/>\n   homes and mysteries and space; and hereafter the Lamb shall be the<br \/>\n   light of heaven.<\/p>\n<p>   THE GOLDEN SHEWBREAD TABLE must not be over looked, with its array of<br \/>\n   twelve loaves of fine flour, sprinkled with sweet smelling<br \/>\n   frankincense, and eaten only by the priests, when replaced on the<br \/>\n   seventh day by a fresh supply. Here again, as in the last symbol, is<br \/>\n   that mysterious blending of Christ and his people. Christ is the true<br \/>\n   bread of presence. He is the bread of God. Jehovah finds in his<br \/>\n   obedience and life and death perfect satisfaction; and we too feed on<br \/>\n   him. His flesh is meat indeed. We eat his flesh and live by him. The<br \/>\n   table was portable, so as to be carried in the journeyings of the<br \/>\n   people; and we can never thrive without taking him with us wherever we<br \/>\n   go. This is the heavenly manna; our daily bread; our priestly<br \/>\n   perquisite. But the people also were represented in those twelve<br \/>\n   loaves, as they were in the twelve stones of the breastplate. And<br \/>\n   doubtless there is a sense in which all believers still stand ever<br \/>\n   before God in the purity and sweetness of Christ; &#8220;for we, being many,<br \/>\n   are one bread and one body, for we are all partakers of that one<br \/>\n   bread.&#8221; Oh, is it possible for me to give aught of satisfaction to God?<br \/>\n   To believe this would surely instill a new meaning into the most<br \/>\n   trivial acts of life. Yet this may be so.<\/p>\n<p>   THE CENSER, OR ALTAR OF INCENSE, is classed with the most holy place;<br \/>\n   not because it stood inside the veil, but because it was so closely<br \/>\n   associated with the worship rendered there. It was as near as possible<br \/>\n   to the ark (Exod. xxx. 6). It reminds us of the golden altar which was<br \/>\n   before the throne (Rev. viii. 3). No blood ever dimmed the luster of<br \/>\n   the gold; the ashes that glowed there were brought from the altar of<br \/>\n   burnt offering; and on them were sprinkled the incense, which had been<br \/>\n   compounded by very special art (Exod. xxx. 34-38). That precious<br \/>\n   incense, which it was death to imitate, speaks of his much merit, in<br \/>\n   virtue of which our prayers and praises find acceptance. Is not this<br \/>\n   his perpetual work for us, standing in heaven as our great High<br \/>\n   Priest?  ever living to make intercession, catching our poor prayers,<br \/>\n   and presenting them to his Father, fragrant with the savor of his own<br \/>\n   grace and loveliness and merit?<\/p>\n<p>   THE VEIL, passed only once a year by the high-priest, carrying blood,<br \/>\n   reminded the worshipers that the way into the holiest was not yet<br \/>\n   perfect. There were degrees of fellowship with God to which those rites<br \/>\n   could give no introduction. &#8220;The way into the holiest was not yet made<br \/>\n   manifest.&#8221; &#8220;The veil, that is to say, his flesh&#8221; (Heb. x. 20). Oh, fine<br \/>\n   twined linen, in thy purity, thou wert never so pure as that body which<br \/>\n   was conceived without sin! Oh, exquisite work of curious imagery, thou<br \/>\n   canst not vie with the marvelous mysteries that gather in that human<br \/>\n   form! Yet, till Jesus died, there was a barrier, an obstacle, a veil.<br \/>\n   It was bespattered with blood, but it was a veil still. But at the hour<br \/>\n   when he breathed out his soul in death, the veil was rent by mighty<br \/>\n   unseen hands from top to bottom, disclosing all the sacred mysteries<br \/>\n   beyond to the unaccustomed eyes of any priests who at that moment may<br \/>\n   have been burning incense at the hour of prayer, while the whole<br \/>\n   multitude stood without (Luke i. 9). It is a rent veil now, and the way<br \/>\n   into the holiest lies open. It is new and living and blood-marked; we<br \/>\n   may therefore tread it without fear or mistake, and pass in with holy<br \/>\n   boldness to stand where angels veil their faces with their wings in<br \/>\n   ceaseless adoration (x. 19, 20).<\/p>\n<p>   THE ARK. A box, oblong in shape, 4 ft. 6 in. in length, by 2 ft. 8 in.<br \/>\n   in breadth and height; made of acacia wood, overlaid with gold; its<br \/>\n   lid, a golden slab, called the mercy-seat, on which cherubic forms<br \/>\n   stood or knelt, with eyes fixed on the blood stained golden slab<br \/>\n   between them; for it was on the mercy-seat that the blood was copiously<br \/>\n   sprinkled year by year, and there the Shekinah light ever shone. In the<br \/>\n   wilderness wanderings the ark contained the tables of stone, not broken<br \/>\n   but whole, the manna, and the rod. But when it came to rest, and the<br \/>\n   staves were drawn out, the manna, food for pilgrims, and the rod, which<br \/>\n   symbolized the power of life, were gone; only the law remained.<\/p>\n<p>   The law can never be done away with. It is holy, just, and good. Not<br \/>\n   one jot or tittle can pass away from it. It is at the heart of all<br \/>\n   things. Beneath all surfaces, below all coverlets, deeper than the foam<br \/>\n   and tumult and revolution of the world, rests righteous and inexorable<br \/>\n   law. We must all yield to its imperial sway. Even the atheist must<br \/>\n   build his walls according to the dictates of the plumb-line, or they<br \/>\n   will inevitably crumble to ruin.<\/p>\n<p>   But law is under love. The golden mercy-seat exactly covered and hid<br \/>\n   the tables, as they no longer leaped from crag to crag, but lay quietly<br \/>\n   beneath it. An ark without a covering, and from which tables of stony<br \/>\n   law looked out on one, would be terrible indeed. But there need be no<br \/>\n   dread to those who know that God will commune with them from above a<br \/>\n   mercy-seat which completely meets the case and is sprinkled with blood.<br \/>\n   We are told by the Apostle, who had well read the deepest meaning of<br \/>\n   these types, that &#8220;God hath set forth Christ Jesus as a mercy seat,<br \/>\n   through faith in his blood&#8221; (Rom. iii. 24, 25). Jesus has met the<br \/>\n   demands of law by his golden life and his death of blood; and we may<br \/>\n   meet God&#8217;s righteousness in him. Our own righteousness would be an<br \/>\n   insufficient covering, too narrow and too short; but our Substitute has<br \/>\n   met every possible demand. &#8220;Who is he that condemneth ? It is Christ<br \/>\n   that died.&#8221; Grace reigns through righteousness unto eternal life.<\/p>\n<p>   But ah, no blood of goat or calf can speak the priceless value of his<br \/>\n   blood, by which we have access into the holiest. Oh, precious blood!<br \/>\n   which tells of a heart breaking with love and sorrow; which betrays a<br \/>\n   life poured out like water on the ground in extremest agony; which<br \/>\n   gathers up all the meaning of Leviticus and its many hecatombs of<br \/>\n   victims; the pledge of tenderest friendship, the purchase money of our<br \/>\n   redemption, the wine of life: thy scarlet thread speaks to us from the<br \/>\n   windows of the past in symbols of joy and hope and peace and immortal<br \/>\n   love. The precious blood of Christ!<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                           XXI. TEACHING BY CONTRAST<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;How much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the Eternal Spirit<br \/>\n    offered himself without spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works<br \/>\n    to serve the living God! &#8220;HEBREWS ix. 14.<\/p>\n<p>    IN this marvelous paragraph (vv. 6-14) there are five striking and<br \/>\n   well-defined contrasts between the picture symbols of Leviticus, and<br \/>\n   the realities revealed in the New Testament Scriptures. And to their<br \/>\n   consideration we will at once proceed, thanking God as we do so that we<br \/>\n   live in the very midst of the heavenly things themselves, rather than<br \/>\n   in the shadows, which, though they doubtless helped and nourished the<br \/>\n   devout souls of an earlier age, were confessedly inadequate to supply<br \/>\n   the deeper demands of man&#8217;s spiritual life.<\/p>\n<p>   THE FIRST TABERNACLE IS CONTRASTED WITH THE TRUE (vv. 6, 8, 11). It<br \/>\n   must have been a fair and lovely sight to behold, when first, on the<br \/>\n   plains of Sinai, the Tabernacle was reared, with its golden furniture<br \/>\n   and sumptuous drapery. The very angels may have desired to look into<br \/>\n   it, and trace the outlines of thoughts, which perhaps were only<br \/>\n   beginning to unfold themselves to their intelligence. But fair though<br \/>\n   it was, it had in it all those traces of imperfection which necessarily<br \/>\n   attach to human workmanship, and make even a needle-point seem coarse<br \/>\n   beneath the microscope. It was &#8220;made with hands.&#8221; Besides which it was<br \/>\n   destined to grow old, and perish beneath the gnawing tooth or fret of<br \/>\n   time. Already it must have shown signs of decay when it was carefully<br \/>\n   borne across the Jordan; and, in David&#8217;s days, its venerable<br \/>\n   associations could not blind him to the necessity of replacing it as<br \/>\n   soon as possible.<\/p>\n<p>   How different to this is the true tabernacle, of which it was the type,<br \/>\n   which is so much &#8220;greater and more perfect.&#8221; What is that tabernacle?<br \/>\n   and where? Sometimes it seems to pious musing as if the whole universe<br \/>\n   were one great temple; the mountains its altars; the seas and oceans,<br \/>\n   with their vast depths, its lavers; the heavens its blue curtains; the<br \/>\n   loftier spaces, with their stars and mystery of color, and fragrant<br \/>\n   incense-breath and angel worship, its holy place; whilst the very<br \/>\n   throne-room of God, where the Seer&#8217;s eye beheld the rainbow-circled<br \/>\n   throne, corresponds to the most holy place in which the light of the<br \/>\n   Shekinah glistened over the blood-stained mercy seat.<\/p>\n<p>   But such poetic flights are forbidden by the sober prose which tells us<br \/>\n   that the true tabernacle is not &#8220;of this creation&#8221; (ver. 11). It is no<br \/>\n   part of this created world, whether earth or heaven; it would exist,<br \/>\n   though all the material universe should resolve itself into primeval<br \/>\n   chaos; it is a spiritual fabric, whose aisles are trodden by saintly<br \/>\n   spirits in their loftiest experiences, when, forgetting that they are<br \/>\n   creatures of time, they rise into communion with God, and enjoy<br \/>\n   rapturous moments, which seem ages in their wealth of blessed meaning.<br \/>\n   Such is the true tabernacle which the Lord pitched, and not man (viii.<br \/>\n   2).<\/p>\n<p>   THE HIGH-PRIESTS ARE CONTRASTED WITH CHRIST (vv.7,11). The outer court<br \/>\n   of the sanctuary might be trodden, under certain conditions, by<br \/>\n   ordinary Israelites; but for the most part they were excluded, and<br \/>\n   service was rendered by Levites and priests, at the head of whom stood<br \/>\n   the high-priest, radiant in his garments of glory and beauty. The<br \/>\n   garment of fine white linen worn next his person; the linen girdle girt<br \/>\n   about his loins fitting him for ministry (John xiii. 4); the robe of<br \/>\n   the ephod, woven all of blue, and fringed with scarlet tassels in the<br \/>\n   form of pomegranates; the ephod itself, composed of the same materials<br \/>\n   as constituted the veil; and on his breast the twelve precious stones,<br \/>\n   engraven with the names of Israel. How grand a spectacle was there!<\/p>\n<p>   And yet there were two fatal flaws. He was not suffered to continue by<br \/>\n   reason of death (vii. 23); and he was a sinful man, who needed to offer<br \/>\n   sacrifice for himself (ix. 7). On the great day of atonement, it was<br \/>\n   expressly stated that he was not to go within the veil to plead for the<br \/>\n   people, until he had made an atonement for himself and his house by the<br \/>\n   blood of the young bullock, which he had previously killed (Lev. xvi.<br \/>\n   11, 12, 13).<\/p>\n<p>   In these respects, how different is our High-Priest, after the order of<br \/>\n   Melchizedek! Death tried to master him; but he could not be holden of<br \/>\n   it; and by death he destroyed him that hath the power of death. &#8220;He<br \/>\n   continueth ever.&#8221; &#8220;He ever liveth.&#8221; His priesthood is unchangeable. &#8220;He<br \/>\n   is a priest forever.&#8221; All this was clearly proved in the seventh<br \/>\n   chapter. But now it is asserted that he was &#8220;without spot&#8221; (ver. 14).<br \/>\n   He was well searched; but none could convince him of sin. Judas tried<br \/>\n   to find some warrant for his treachery, but was compelled to confess<br \/>\n   that it was innocent blood. Caiaphas and Annas called in false<br \/>\n   witnesses in vain; and at last condemned him on words uttered by his<br \/>\n   own lips, claiming divine authority and power. Pilate repeatedly<br \/>\n   asseverated, even washing his hands in proof, that he could find in him<br \/>\n   no fault at all.<\/p>\n<p>   Nay, the Lord himself bared his breast to the Father in conscious<br \/>\n   innocence; unlike the saintliest of men, who, in proportion to their<br \/>\n   goodness, confess their sinnership. &#8220;Such a High-Priest became us, who<br \/>\n   is holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners, who needeth<br \/>\n   not daily to offer up sacrifice for his own sins.<\/p>\n<p>   THE VEILED WAY INTO THE HOLIEST IS CONTRASTED WITH OUR FREEDOM TO ENTER<br \/>\n   THE PRESENCE OF GOD. We have the positive assurance of these words that<br \/>\n   the Holy Spirit meant to signify direct spiritual truth in the<br \/>\n   construction of the Jewish Tabernacle (ver. 8). He who revealed divine<br \/>\n   truth by inspired prophets, revealed it so in the structure of the<br \/>\n   material edifice. The methods of instruction might vary; the teacher<br \/>\n   was the same. Indeed, the whole ritual was a parable for the present<br \/>\n   time (ver. 9).<\/p>\n<p>   Every well-taught child is aware of the distinction between the holy<br \/>\n   place, with its candlesticks, incense-table, and shew-bread, and the<br \/>\n   holy of holies, with its ark, and cloud of glory. The first tabernacle<br \/>\n   was separated from the second by heavy curtains, which were never drawn<br \/>\n   aside except by the high-priest, and by him only once a year, and then<br \/>\n   in connection with an unusually solemn ritual. Surely the dullest<br \/>\n   Israelite must have understood the meaning of that expressive figure;<br \/>\n   and have felt that, even though his race might claim to be nearer to<br \/>\n   God than all mankind beside, yet there was a depth of intimacy from<br \/>\n   which his foot was checked by the prohibition of God himself. &#8220;The way<br \/>\n   into the holiest was not yet made manifest.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   For us, however, the veil is rent. Jesus entered once into the holy<br \/>\n   place, and as he passed the heavy folds were rent in twain from the top<br \/>\n   to the bottom. Surely no priest that witnessed it could ever forget the<br \/>\n   moment, when, as the earth trembled beneath the temple floor, the<br \/>\n   thickly woven veil split and fell back, and disclosed the solemnities<br \/>\n   on which no eyes but those of the high-priest dared to gaze. Surely the<br \/>\n   most obtuse can read the meaning signified herein by the Holy Ghost.<br \/>\n   There is no veil between us and God but that which we weave by our own<br \/>\n   sin or ignorance. We may go into the very secrets of his love. We may<br \/>\n   stand unabashed where angels worship with veiled faces. We may behold<br \/>\n   mysteries hidden from before the foundation of the world. The love of<br \/>\n   God has no secrets for us whom he calls friends.<\/p>\n<p>   Oh, why are we so content with the superficial and the transient, with<br \/>\n   the ephemeral gossip and literature of our times, with the outer courts<br \/>\n   in which the formalists and worldly Christians around us are contented<br \/>\n   to remain? when there are such heights and depths, such lengths and<br \/>\n   breadths, to be explored in the very nature of God. Why do men in our<br \/>\n   time bring back that veil, though they call it &#8220;a screen- Alas, they<br \/>\n   are blind leaders of the blind.<\/p>\n<p>   THE RITES OF JUDAISM ARE CONTRASTED WITH CONSCIENCE-CLEANSING<br \/>\n   ORDINANCES OF THE GOSPEL. They stood in meats and drinks and divers<br \/>\n   washings, which at the best were carnal ordinances imposed until a time<br \/>\n   of reformation; and though they rendered the worshiper ceremonially<br \/>\n   clean, they left his conscience unappeased.<\/p>\n<p>   A great many of the offenses which required to be put away in those<br \/>\n   olden days arose from the breach of ceremonial laws. A man who touched<br \/>\n   the dead or the unclean became ceremonially defiled. For any such thing<br \/>\n   he must undergo the appointed rites of cleansing, ere he could enter<br \/>\n   the courts of the Lord&#8217;s house. The ceremonial laws were quite<br \/>\n   competent to deal with delinquencies like these; but they failed in<br \/>\n   providing atonement or in securing pardon for acts of sin. &#8220;They could<br \/>\n   not make him that did the service perfect, as pertaining to the<br \/>\n   conscience.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   The unsatisfactory nature of sacrifices was even patent on the great<br \/>\n   day of atonement, which is here evidently referred to. Laying aside the<br \/>\n   gorgeous robes in which he was usually arrayed, the high-priest clothed<br \/>\n   himself in simple linen. The animals to be offered during the day were<br \/>\n   next presented at the door of the Tabernacle; and lots were cast as to<br \/>\n   which of the two bullocks was to be for himself, and which of the two<br \/>\n   goats was to be slain. Then for the first time he entered the most holy<br \/>\n   place amid the fumes of fragrant incense, and sprinkled the blood of<br \/>\n   the bullock to make an atonement for the sins of himself and his house.<br \/>\n   A second time he entered with the blood of the goat, to make an<br \/>\n   atonement for the sins of the people, who, meanwhile, stood without in<br \/>\n   penitential grief. And when all was over, the nation&#8217;s sins were<br \/>\n   confessed over the head of the living goat, which was sent into the<br \/>\n   land of forgetfulness. Still, no one could suppose that the slaying of<br \/>\n   the one goat or the sending of the other into the wilderness actually<br \/>\n   expiated the offense of the whole people. There was a remembrance of<br \/>\n   sins made once a year; but not necessarily entire remission for all who<br \/>\n   stood in that vast silent crowd. And many must have turned away in<br \/>\n   doubt and misgiving. David expressed their feeling when he sang the<br \/>\n   Fifty-first Psalm beneath the impression of his own sinnership (see<br \/>\n   also Micah vi. 6).<\/p>\n<p>   But how different is all this now! Our consciences are purged (ver.<br \/>\n   14). We have no more conscience of sins. We feel that the death of our<br \/>\n   Lord Jesus is an adequate expiation for them all, and that he has so<br \/>\n   fully taken them from us and put them away that they cannot be found;<br \/>\n   they are as though they had never been; they have ceased from the very<br \/>\n   memory of God. True, there are works which are constantly rendering our<br \/>\n   conscience unclean, as of old the flesh of the Israelite was rendered<br \/>\n   unclean by the touch of death. But the blood of Jesus does for our<br \/>\n   conscience what the ashes of the heifer did for the flesh of the<br \/>\n   ceremonially unclean. &#8220;The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us<br \/>\n   from all sin.&#8221; We have therefore no longer an evil conscience resulting<br \/>\n   from unexpiated sin.<\/p>\n<p>   THE BLOOD OF ANIMALS IS CONTRASTED WITH THE BLOOD OF CHRIST. Hecatombs<br \/>\n   of victims are not of equal value with one man; how much less with the<br \/>\n   Son of God! Rivers of the blood of beasts are not equivalent to one<br \/>\n   drop of his. They offer no standard by which to apprise his precious<br \/>\n   blood. This is too obvious to need further comment here, and we shall<br \/>\n   need to defer to another chapter our estimate, however inadequate, of<br \/>\n   the value of that blood.<\/p>\n<p>   But in the meanwhile, let us notice that it was through the Eternal<br \/>\n   Spirit that Christ offered himself without spot to God. It was not, as<br \/>\n   some falsely affirm, that the Father forced an innocent man to suffer<br \/>\n   for sins he had never done, or that our Saviour suffered to appease the<br \/>\n   Father&#8217;s wrath; but that the eternal nature of God came out in the<br \/>\n   sacrifice of Calvary. &#8220;God was in Christ, reconciling the world unto<br \/>\n   himself.&#8221; When God determined to save men, he did not delegate the work<br \/>\n   to angels, nor did he permit a sinless man to sink beneath the<br \/>\n   intolerable burden of a world&#8217;s sin; but in the person of his Son, he<br \/>\n   took home to himself the agony and curse and cost of sin, and by<br \/>\n   bearing them, wiped them out forever. It is, therefore, eternal<br \/>\n   redemption (ver. I 2).<\/p>\n<p>   The death of the cross was a voluntary act; &#8220;he offered himself; &#8221;<br \/>\n   Priest and victim both. And it was an act in which the Eternal Trinity<br \/>\n   participated; the manifestation in time of an eternal fact of the<br \/>\n   divine nature.<\/p>\n<p>   And how can we ever show our gratitude, except by serving the living<br \/>\n   God (ver. 14). We are redeemed to serve; bought to be owned absolutely.<br \/>\n   Who can refuse a service so reasonable, fraught with blessedness so<br \/>\n   transcendent? Head! think for him whose brow was thorn-girt. Hands!<br \/>\n   toil for him whose hands were nailed to the cross. Feet! speed to do<br \/>\n   his behests whose feet were pierced. Body of mine! be his temple whose<br \/>\n   body was wrung with pains unspeakable. To serve him-this is the Only<br \/>\n   true attitude and behavior, as those who are not their own, but his.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>XXII. THE BLOOD OF CHRIST<\/p>\n<p>    Without shedding of blood is no remission.&#8221; -HEBREWS ix. 22.<\/p>\n<p>   ROUND and round this ancient window into the past (vv. 15-28) is bound<br \/>\n   the red cord of blood. Twelve times at the very least does this solemn,<br \/>\n   this awful, word occur. The devil himself seems to admit that it is<br \/>\n   invested with some mystic potency; else why should he compel so many of<br \/>\n   his miserable followers to interlard each phrase they utter by some<br \/>\n   reference to it? Man cannot look on or speak of blood without an<br \/>\n   involuntary solemnity; unless, indeed, he has done despite to some of<br \/>\n   the deepest instincts of his being, or through familiarity has learned<br \/>\n   con-tempt. And we feel whilst reading this chapter, as if we have come<br \/>\n   into the very heart of the deepest of all mysteries, the most solemn of<br \/>\n   all solemnities, the most awful of all tragedies or martyrdoms or<br \/>\n   sacrificial rites. Take off the shoes from your feet; for the place on<br \/>\n   which we stand together now is holy ground.<\/p>\n<p>   Blood is becoming increasingly recognized as one of the most important<br \/>\n   constituents of the human body. Scientific and other research is more<br \/>\n   and more inclined to verify the ancient sayings, which may have been<br \/>\n   broken in the colleges of Egypt, where Moses learned the most advanced<br \/>\n   science of his time, before ever they were stamped with the imprimatur<br \/>\n   of inspiration, &#8220;the blood is the life&#8221;; &#8220;the life of the flesh is in<br \/>\n   the blood&#8221; (Deut. xii. 23; Lev. xvii. ii). We know that the red<br \/>\n   corpuscles of the blood play an important function in carrying the<br \/>\n   oxygen of the air to consume the decaying tissues, and to light fires<br \/>\n   in every part of the human frame. But who can tell all the mysterious<br \/>\n   functions of the numberless colorless disks which float along the<br \/>\n   currents of the blood, and which may be intimately connected with the<br \/>\n   very essence of our vitality? Certain it is that impoverished blood<br \/>\n   means decrepit life; tainted blood means corruption and disease; ebbing<br \/>\n   blood means waning life. The first effort of the physician is to feel<br \/>\n   the pulse of the blood; whilst the most fatal disease is the poisoning<br \/>\n   of the blood. The blood is the life. And shed blood is life poured<br \/>\n   forth from its source and fountain-head.<\/p>\n<p>   There is nothing, therefore, in man more precious than blood. If he<br \/>\n   gives that, he gives the best he has to give. His blood is his life-his<br \/>\n   all; and it is a noble act when a man is ready to make this supreme<br \/>\n   gift for others. It is this which lights up the devilry of war, and<br \/>\n   sheds a transient gleam of nobility on the coarsest, roughest soldiery,<br \/>\n   that they are prepared to sacrifice their lives in torrents of blood,<br \/>\n   to beat the foeman back from hearth and home and fatherland. This is<br \/>\n   why women have treasured up handkerchiefs dipped in the blood that has<br \/>\n   flowed on the heads-man&#8217;s block from the veins of martyrs for liberty<br \/>\n   or religion. This is why men point without a shudder to the stains of<br \/>\n   blood on blades that have been drawn in freedom&#8217;s holy cause; or on<br \/>\n   tattered banners which led the fight against the battalions of Paganism<br \/>\n   or Popery. This is why the historian of the Church does not feel too<br \/>\n   dainty to make frequent reference to the blood which flowed in rivers<br \/>\n   on the eve of the Sicilian Vespers, and on the day of black St.<br \/>\n   Bartholomew. No, we glory in the blood which noble men have poured out<br \/>\n   as water on the ground. None of us is too sensitive to dwell with<br \/>\n   exultation on the phrase.<\/p>\n<p>   Why, then, should we hesitate to speak of the blood of Christ? It was<br \/>\n   royal blood. &#8220;His own&#8221; (ver. 12); and he was a King indeed. It was<br \/>\n   voluntarily shed: &#8221; He offered himself&#8221; (ver. 14). It was pure<br \/>\n   &#8220;innocent blood,&#8221; &#8220;without spot&#8221; (ver. 14). It was sacrificial. He died<br \/>\n   not as a martyr, but as a Saviour (ver. 26). It flowed from his head,<br \/>\n   thorn-girt, that it might atone for sins of thought; from his hands and<br \/>\n   feet, fast nailed, that it might expiate sins of deed and walk; from<br \/>\n   his side, that it might wipe out the sins of our affections, as well as<br \/>\n   tell us of his deep and fervent love, which could not be confined<br \/>\n   within the four chambers of his heart, but must find vent in falling on<br \/>\n   the earth. Why should we be ashamed of the blood of Christ? No other<br \/>\n   phrase will so readily or sufficiently gather up all the complex<br \/>\n   thoughts which mingle in the death of Christ. Life; life shed; life<br \/>\n   shed violently; life shed violently, and as a sacrifice; life passing<br \/>\n   forth by violence, and sacrificially, to become a tide of which we must<br \/>\n   also all stoop down and drink, if we desire to have life in ourselves<br \/>\n   (John vi. 53-56).<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;This is he that came by water and blood; not by water only, but by<br \/>\n   water and blood&#8221; (1 John v. 6). Oh, precious words, recalling that<br \/>\n   never-to-be-forgotten incident when, following the rugged point of the<br \/>\n   soldier&#8217;s spear, there came out blood and water from the Saviour&#8217;s<br \/>\n   broken heart (John xix. 34). Had it been water only, we had been<br \/>\n   undone. Water might do for respectable sinners-fifty-pence debtors,<br \/>\n   Pharisees, who are not sinners as other men. But some of us feel water<br \/>\n   would be of no avail at all. Our sins are so deep-dyed, so inveterate,<br \/>\n   so fast, that nothing but blood could set us free. Blood must atone for<br \/>\n   us. Blood must cleanse us. In other words, life must be shed to redeem<br \/>\n   us, such life as is poured from the very being of the Son of God.<\/p>\n<p>   But there is a deep sense in which that blood is flowing, washing,<br \/>\n   cleansing, and feeding soul, all down the age. Like the stream of<br \/>\n   desert, it follows us. &#8220;It speaketh&#8221; pleading with God for man, and<br \/>\n   with man for God (xii. 24). &#8220;It cleanseth,&#8221; not as a single past act,<br \/>\n   but as a perpetual experience in the believer&#8217;s soul, removing recent<br \/>\n   sin, and checking the uprisings of our evil nature (1 John i. 7). It is<br \/>\n   the drink of all devout souls; and its perennial presence and efficacy<br \/>\n   is well symbolized by the appearance still on the communion table of<br \/>\n   the church of the wine, which tells the worshiper that the blood of<br \/>\n   Calvary, once shed, and never shed again, is a s fresh and efficacious<br \/>\n   as ever, or as the wine poured freshly into the cup. Let men say what<br \/>\n   they will, the shedding of the blood of Christ is an embodiment of an<br \/>\n   eternal fact in the Being of God, and is an essential condition of the<br \/>\n   healthy life of man.<\/p>\n<p>   It purges the defiled conscience more completely than the ashes of a<br \/>\n   heifer purged of flesh of the ceremonially unclean (ver. 14). Why,<br \/>\n   then, do you carry about the perpetual consciousness of sin? Confess<br \/>\n   sin instantly, of ever you are aware of it. Claim the blood of<br \/>\n   sprinkling, and go at once top serve the living God.<\/p>\n<p>   It put away the sin of previous dispensation. It was in virtue of the<br \/>\n   death to be suffered on Calvary that the holy God was able to forgive<br \/>\n   the offences and accept the imperfect services of Old Testament saints.<br \/>\n   The shadow of the cross fell backward, as well as forward. And it is<br \/>\n   because of what Jesus did that all have been saved, who have passed<br \/>\n   within the pearly gate, or shall pass it (ver. I 5, and compare Rom.<br \/>\n   iv. 24).<\/p>\n<p>   It ratifies the covenant. No covenant was ratified in the old time,<br \/>\n   except in blood. When God entered into covenant with Abraham, five<br \/>\n   victims were divided in the midst, making a lane, down which the<br \/>\n   fire-symbol of the divine presence passed. &#8220;There is of necessity the<br \/>\n   death of the covenant maker.&#8221; And in pursuance of this ancient custom,<br \/>\n   the first covenant was solemnly sealed by blood (vv. i8, 19). How sure<br \/>\n   and steadfast must that covenant be into which God has entered with our<br \/>\n   Surety on our behalf! The blood of Jesus is an asseveration which<br \/>\n   cannot be gain-said or transgressed. All God&#8217;s will is opened to us<br \/>\n   since Jesus died. We may claim what we will. We are his heirs, the<br \/>\n   heirs of the wealth of our Elder Brother, Jesus.<\/p>\n<p>   It opens the way into the holies. What the high-priest did every year<br \/>\n   in miniature, Christ has done once (vv. 24, 25, 26). &#8220;He died unto sin<br \/>\n   once.&#8221; By virtue of his own shed blood, he went once for all into the<br \/>\n   real holiest place, appearing in the presence of God for us as our<br \/>\n   High-Priest, and leaving the way forever open to those who dare to<br \/>\n   follow. &#8220;The heavenly things themselves&#8221; need cleansing; not because of<br \/>\n   any intrinsic evil in themselves, but because they are constantly being<br \/>\n   used and trodden by sinful men. Now, however, though that is so, there<br \/>\n   is an efficacy in the work of Jesus which is always counterveiling our<br \/>\n   impurity, and making it possible for us to draw near to God with<br \/>\n   boldness and acceptance.<\/p>\n<p>   It put away sin. &#8220;Once for all.&#8221; &#8221; Once in the end of the world.&#8221; Not<br \/>\n   for each dispensation, but for all dispensations. Not for one age, but<br \/>\n   for all ages Not for a few, but for the &#8220;many,&#8221; comprehending the<br \/>\n   vastness of the number which no man can compute of the great family of<br \/>\n   man. As the year&#8217;s sin of a nation was borne away into the desert by<br \/>\n   the scapegoat, and put away, so was the whole sin of the race centered<br \/>\n   on the head of Jesus. He was made sin. As a physician might be imagined<br \/>\n   drawing on himself all the maladies of his patients, so did Jesus draw<br \/>\n   to himself and assume all the sins of mankind. He was the propitiation<br \/>\n   for the whole world. And when he died, he dropped sin as a stone into<br \/>\n   the depths of oblivion. And he put away sin. The Greek word is very<br \/>\n   strong; annihilated, made nothing of made as though it had never been.<br \/>\n   Sin, in the mind and purpose of God, is as entirely done away as a debt<br \/>\n   when it is paid. Hallelujah! in heaven and on earth (Rev. v. 9; 1. 5).<br \/>\n   But whilst this is an eternal truth with him who knows not our<br \/>\n   distinctions of time, yet it will avail only as a fact when each<br \/>\n   individual sinner lays claim to this wonderful provision, confesses his<br \/>\n   sin, and realizes that there is now no longer condemnation, because the<br \/>\n   Lamb of God has borne away his sin and the world&#8217;s. Will you now dare<br \/>\n   to reckon this to be true for you, not because you feel it, but because<br \/>\n   God says it? Dare to repeat 1 Peter ii. 24, and Isaiah liii. 5,<br \/>\n   substituting &#8220;my&#8221; for &#8220;our.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;What marvelous appearances are these three! He appeared once in the<br \/>\n   end of the world as a sacrifice. He appears now in heaven as a Priest.<br \/>\n   He will appear the second time without sin unto salvation; as of old<br \/>\n   the high priest, at the close of the day of atonement, came out with<br \/>\n   outstretched hands to bless the people. Oh, to be looking for him, that<br \/>\n   we may not miss the radiant vision or the tender blessing of peace!<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                                 XXIII. &#8220;ONCE&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Once in the end of the world hath he appeared, to put away sin by the<br \/>\n    sacrifice of himself.&#8221; HEBREWS ix. 26. (See a130 ix. 27,28; x. 2, 10.)&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>    THERE is a word here which recurs, like a note on an organ beneath the<br \/>\n   tumult of majestic sound. Five times, at least, it rolls forth its<br \/>\n   thunder, pealing through all ages, echoing through all worlds,<br \/>\n   announcing the finality of an accomplished redemption to the whole<br \/>\n   universe of God &#8220;ONCE!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   And there is another phrase which we must couple with it, spoken by the<br \/>\n   parched lips of the dying Saviour, yet with a loud voice, as though it<br \/>\n   were the cry of a conqueror: &#8220;When Jesus, therefore, had received the<br \/>\n   vinegar, he said, &#8216;It is finished&#8217;; and he bowed his head and gave up<br \/>\n   the ghost.&#8221; It is very seldom that man can look back on a finished<br \/>\n   life-work. The chisel drops from the paralyzed hand ere the statue is<br \/>\n   complete; the chilling fingers refuse to guide the pen along another<br \/>\n   line, though the book is so nearly done; the statesman must leave his<br \/>\n   plans and far-reaching schemes to be completed by another, perhaps his<br \/>\n   rival. But as from his cross Jesus Christ our Lord looked upon the work<br \/>\n   of redemption which he had undertaken, and in connection with which he<br \/>\n   had suffered even to the hiding of his Father&#8217;s face, he could not<br \/>\n   discover one stitch, or stone, or particle deficient. For untold<br \/>\n   myriads for thee and me and all there was done that which never needed<br \/>\n   to be done again, but stood as an accomplished fact forevermore.<\/p>\n<p>   THE &#8220;ONCE&#8221; OF A COMPLETED WORK (ix. 26). In these words there is a sigh<br \/>\n   of relief. A thought had for a moment flashed across the sunlit page of<br \/>\n   Scripture, which had suggested an infinite horror. In pursuing the<br \/>\n   parallels between the incidents of the great day of atonement and the<br \/>\n   great day when Jesus died, we had been suddenly reminded of the fact<br \/>\n   that the solemn spectacle was witnessed once a year &#8221; The high-priest<br \/>\n   entereth into the holy place every year with blood of others&#8221; (ver.<br \/>\n   25). Every year the same rites performed, the same blood shed, the same<br \/>\n   propitiation made. Suppose that, after the same analogy, Jesus had<br \/>\n   suffered every year! Every year the agony of the shadowed garden! Every<br \/>\n   year the bitter anguish of the cross! Every year the burial in the<br \/>\n   garden tomb! Then earth would have been overcast with midnight, and<br \/>\n   life would have been agony! Who could bear to see him suffer often!<\/p>\n<p>   But there was no necessity for him to suffer more than once; because<br \/>\n   repetition means imperfection, of which, in his work, there is no sign<br \/>\n   or trace. There petition of the sacrifices of the Jewish law meant that<br \/>\n   they could not take away sin, or make the comers thereunto perfect.<br \/>\n   Again and again the crowd of pious Jews gathered, driven to seek<br \/>\n   deliverance from the conscience of sins, which brooded deeply and<br \/>\n   darkly over their souls. Perhaps they would receive momentary respite<br \/>\n   as they saw the elaborate ceremonial, and felt that they were included<br \/>\n   in the high-priest&#8217;s confession and benediction. And so they wended<br \/>\n   their way homeward; but ere long a weary sense of dissatisfaction would<br \/>\n   again betake them: they would reflect on the inadequacy of the<br \/>\n   atonement which stood only in the offering of the life of slain beasts.<br \/>\n   Sins were remembered, but not put away; it was impossible that the<br \/>\n   blood of bulls and goats could do that (x. 4). And so, doubtless, in<br \/>\n   the more thoughtful, hearts must have failed, and consciences moaned<br \/>\n   out their weary plaint unsatisfied. Therefore the sacrifices had to be<br \/>\n   presented continually.<\/p>\n<p>   On the other hand, Christ&#8217;s work needs no repetition. It is final<br \/>\n   because it is perfect. Its perfection is attested, because it has never<br \/>\n   been repeated. &#8220;In that he died, he died unto sin once.&#8221; Our Saviour<br \/>\n   set his hand to save us: he did not mean to faith he came into our<br \/>\n   world with this distinct purpose; he died to do it; and, having done<br \/>\n   it, he went home to God. But if from the vantage-ground of the throne,<br \/>\n   reviewing his work, he had discerned any deficiency or flaw, he would<br \/>\n   have come back to make it good; and, inasmuch as he has not done so, we<br \/>\n   may be sure that the death of the cross is perfectly satisfactory. &#8220;Now<br \/>\n   once, in the end of the ages, hath he appeared to put away sin by the<br \/>\n   sacrifice of himself.&#8221; Oh, ponder these wondrous words!  Once. He<br \/>\n   liveth forevermore; and shall never again pass for a moment under the<br \/>\n   dark shadow of death.<\/p>\n<p>   He hath appeared (or been manifested). What then? He must have existed<br \/>\n   previously. The incarnation was but the embodiment in visible form of<br \/>\n   One who existed before all worlds; and the death of the cross was the<br \/>\n   unfolding in a single act of eternal facts in the nature of God. As the<br \/>\n   great sun-disk may be mirrored in a tiny mountain tarn, so in the one<br \/>\n   day of crucifixion, there were set forth to men, angels, and devils,<br \/>\n   love, sacrifice, and redeeming mercy, which are part of the very<br \/>\n   essence of God. Marvelous, indeed, the rending of the veil, by which<br \/>\n   such marvels are revealed.<\/p>\n<p>   In the end of the world (or of the ages). God is called the King of<br \/>\n   Ages. Time is probably as much a creation as space or distance or<br \/>\n   matter. It is an accommodation to finite thought; a parenthesis in<br \/>\n   eternity; a rainbow flung across the mighty age of deity. We break time<br \/>\n   into hours; God breaks it into ages. There are ages behind us, and ages<br \/>\n   before. We stand on a narrow neck of land between two seas. The first<br \/>\n   age of which we know anything is that of creation. The second, of<br \/>\n   Paradise. The third, of the world before the flood. The fourth, of the<br \/>\n   Patriarchs. The fifth, of Moses, ending with the fall of Jerusalem, and<br \/>\n   the death of the Messiah. The sixth, of the Gentiles, in which we live.<br \/>\n   And before us, we can dimly descry the forms of the Age of Millennium;<br \/>\n   the Age of Regeneration and Restitution; the Age of Judgment; and the<br \/>\n   Age in which the kingdom shall be delivered to the Father. There is<br \/>\n   thus a complete analogy between the creation of the material world, and<br \/>\n   the creation of the new heavens and earth.<\/p>\n<p>   Geologists love to enumerate the strata of the earth&#8217;s formation<br \/>\n   through which the processes of world -building were carried; and we<br \/>\n   shall probably discover some day that God has been building up the new<br \/>\n   creation through successive ages of history and development. Christ&#8217;s<br \/>\n   death is here said to have happened at the end of the ages; and we<br \/>\n   should at once see the force of this, even though there may remain<br \/>\n   several great ages to be fulfilled, ere time run out its course, if<br \/>\n   only we knew how many ages have preceded. Compared to the number that<br \/>\n   have been, this is the end, the climax, the ridge of the weary climb;<br \/>\n   what lies beyond are the miles of level surface, to the sudden dip down<br \/>\n   of the cliffs in face of the ocean of eternity.<\/p>\n<p>   He hath put away sin. Oh, marvelous word! It might be rendered to<br \/>\n   annihilate, to make as if it had never been. The wreath of cloud may<br \/>\n   disappear, but the separated drops still float through space. The<br \/>\n   bubble may break on the foam-tipped wave, but the film of water has<br \/>\n   gone to add its attenuated addition to the ocean depth. But Jesus has<br \/>\n   put sin away as when a debt is paid, an obligation is canceled, or a<br \/>\n   sin-laden victim was slain, burned, and buried in the old days of<br \/>\n   Moses. All sin, the sin of the world, the accumulated sin of mankind<br \/>\n   was made to meet in Jesus. He was made sin. He stood before the<br \/>\n   universe as though he had drawn upon himself all the human sin which<br \/>\n   has ever rent the air or befouled the earth, or put the stars of night<br \/>\n   to the blush; and, bearing the shame, the horror, the penalty during<br \/>\n   those dread hours which rung from him the cry of desolate forsakenness,<br \/>\n   he put it away, and wiped it out forever; and, in doing this, he has<br \/>\n   put away the penal results of Adam&#8217;s fall.<\/p>\n<p>   The inherited tendencies to evil remain in all the race; but the<br \/>\n   spiritual penalty which Adam incurred for himself and all of us, as our<br \/>\n   representative and head, has been canceled by the sufferings and death<br \/>\n   of our glorious representative and head, the Second Adam, the Lord from<br \/>\n   heaven. Men will still have to suffer the penalty of sins which they<br \/>\n   voluntarily commit, and for which they do not seek forgiveness and<br \/>\n   cleansing through the blood; but men will not have to suffer the<br \/>\n   penalty which otherwise must have accrued to them, as members of a<br \/>\n   fallen race-fallen with their first parents and father, because Jesus<br \/>\n   put away that when he died. And thus it is that the multitudes of sweet<br \/>\n   babes, idiots, and others who belong to Adam&#8217;s race, but have had no<br \/>\n   opportunity of personal transgression, are able to enter without let or<br \/>\n   hindrance into the land where there entereth nothing which defileth.<\/p>\n<p>   By the sacrifice of himself. Not by his example, fair and lovely though<br \/>\n   it was. Not by his teaching, though the food of the world. Not by his<br \/>\n   works, the source and fountain-head of modern philanthropy. But by his<br \/>\n   death, and by his death as a sacrifice. If you want to understand a<br \/>\n   writer, you must know the sense in which he uses his characteristic<br \/>\n   words, and you must carefully study the definitions which he gives of<br \/>\n   them. And if you would understand the meaning of Christ&#8217;s death, you<br \/>\n   must go back to the definitions, given in minute detail in Leviticus,<br \/>\n   of the meaning of sacrifice, atonement, and propitiation, by which that<br \/>\n   death is afterward described; and Only so much you dare to interpret.<br \/>\n   Whatever sacrifice meant in Leviticus, it means when applied to the<br \/>\n   death of the cross. And surely there can be no controversy that of old<br \/>\n   it stood for the substitution of the innocent for the guilty; the<br \/>\n   canceling of deserved penalty because it had been borne by another; the<br \/>\n   wiping out of sin by the shedding of blood. All this it must mean when<br \/>\n   applied to the death of Christ, with this difference, that of old the<br \/>\n   suffering was borne and death endured involuntarily; but in the case of<br \/>\n   our blessed Redeemer, God in him took home to himself, voluntarily and<br \/>\n   freely, the accumulated results of a world&#8217;s sin, and suffered them,<br \/>\n   and made them as if they had never been. &#8220;He put away sin by the<br \/>\n   sacrifice of himself.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   What was the death of Christ? &#8220;A martyrdom,&#8221; cries modern thought. &#8220;A<br \/>\n   mischance in an unenlightened age,&#8221; replies the reviewer. &#8220;An outcome<br \/>\n   of all such efforts to battle with evil,&#8221; says the broad-church<br \/>\n   teacher.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;A SACRIFICE!&#8221; thunders this Book. A voluntary sacrifice! A voluntary<br \/>\n   sacrifice by which sin has been borne and put away. Here we rest,<br \/>\n   content to abide, in a world of mystery, at the foot of one mystery<br \/>\n   more, which, despite all its mystery, answers the cry of a convicted<br \/>\n   conscience, and sheds the peace of heaven through our hearts.<\/p>\n<p>   THE &#8220;ONCE&#8221; OF MORTALITY (ix. 27). With a few exceptions mentioned on<br \/>\n   the page of Scripture, where miracles of raising are recounted, men die<br \/>\n   but once. For those there was one cradle, two coffins; one birth, two<br \/>\n   burials. But for most it is mercifully arranged that the agony and pain<br \/>\n   of dissolution should be experienced only once. And this, which is the<br \/>\n   ordinary lot of humanity, also befell Jesus Christ. He could not die<br \/>\n   often, because he was literally man, and it would have been<br \/>\n   inconsistent to violate in his case the universal law. He must become<br \/>\n   man, because only through the portal of birth could he reach the bourne<br \/>\n   of death; but, having been born, and assumed our nature, he must obey<br \/>\n   the laws of that nature, and die but once.<\/p>\n<p>   THE &#8220;ONCE&#8221; OF DEITY (ix. 28). There must have been something more than<br \/>\n   mortal in him, who in his one death could bear away the sins of many.<br \/>\n   Good and great men have died, who would have done anything to cancel or<br \/>\n   atone for the sins of their nation, their family, and their beloved;<br \/>\n   but in vain. How marvelous then must be his worth, whose sufferings and<br \/>\n   death will counterveil for a world&#8217;s sin!<\/p>\n<p>   And we can see the imperious necessity that our Saviour should be God<br \/>\n   manifest in the flesh; and that he who became obedient to the death of<br \/>\n   the cross should be also he who was in the form of God, and thought it<br \/>\n   not robbery to be God&#8217;s equal. If it be true that his death &#8220;once&#8221; has<br \/>\n   put away sin, then, bring hither your songs of worship, your wreaths of<br \/>\n   empire, your ascriptions of lowliest adoration; for he must be God. No<br \/>\n   being of inferior make could do for man what, in that brief but<br \/>\n   dreadful darkness, he has done once for all, and forever.<\/p>\n<p>   THE &#8220;ONCE&#8221; OF A PURGED CONSCIENCE (x. 2). We are not in the position of<br \/>\n   the Jews, needing to repeat their sacrifices year by year, in sad<br \/>\n   monotony; our sacrifice has been offered once for all. Therefore, we<br \/>\n   have not, like them, the perpetual conscience of sins. Our hearts are,<br \/>\n   once and forever, sprinkled from an evil conscience (ver. 22).<\/p>\n<p>   There is no necessity to ask repeatedly for forgiveness for the sins<br \/>\n   that have been once confessed and forgiven. God does not accuse us of<br \/>\n   them; we need not accuse ourselves. God does not remember them; we may<br \/>\n   well forget them, save as incentives to gratitude and humility. There<br \/>\n   is daily need for fresh confession of recent sin; but when once the<br \/>\n   soul realizes the completeness of Christ&#8217;s work on its behalf, it cries<br \/>\n   with great joy: &#8220;As far as the east is from the west, so far hath he<br \/>\n   removed our transgressions from us.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   THE &#8220;ONCE&#8221; OF A FULFILLED PURPOSE (x. io). Space forbids our lingering<br \/>\n   longer. In our next chapter we may show how completely the purpose of<br \/>\n   God has been realized in Jesus, and, therefore, that there is no<br \/>\n   necessity for a repetition of his sacrificial work. The will or purpose<br \/>\n   of God for man&#8217;s redemption asks for nothing more than that which is<br \/>\n   given it in the life and death of our Saviour. Nothing more is required<br \/>\n   for the glory of God, for the accomplishment of the divine counsels, or<br \/>\n   for the perfect deliverance and sanctification of those who believe.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;Once for all, sinner, receive it!<\/p>\n<p>   Once for all, hrother, believe it!<\/p>\n<p>   Cling to the cross, the burden will fall;<\/p>\n<p>   Christ has redeemed us, once for all&#8221;<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                         XXIV. AN ANCIENT HEBREW CUSTOM<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Sacrifice and offering thou wouldest not; but a body hast thou prepared<br \/>\n    me.&#8221; &#8211; HEBREWS x. 5.<\/p>\n<p>   IN that old Hebrew world that lies now so far back in the dim twilight<br \/>\n   of the past, there were several customs, of more than transient<br \/>\n   interest, one of which claims our thought as it glistens for a moment<br \/>\n   beneath the touch of this Epistle, as a wave far out to sea, when<br \/>\n   smitten for a moment by the sunlight.<\/p>\n<p>   It appears that if an Israelite, through the stress of bad seasons and<br \/>\n   disappointing harvests, were to fall into deep arrears to some rich<br \/>\n   neighboring creditor-so much so that he owed him even more than the<br \/>\n   land of his inheritance was worth-he was permitted not only to alienate<br \/>\n   his land till the year of jubilee, but to sell his own service so as to<br \/>\n   work out his debt. It must have been a very painful thing for the<br \/>\n   peasant proprietor to say farewell to his humble home and endeared<br \/>\n   possessions, in which his forefathers had lived and thriven, and to go<br \/>\n   forth into the service of another. Very affecting must have been the<br \/>\n   farewell walk around the tiny plot, which he and his might not live to<br \/>\n   revisit. And yet the bitterness of the separation must have been<br \/>\n   greatly mitigated and lessened by the instant freedom from anxiety<br \/>\n   which ensued. No more dark forebodings for the future; no eager<br \/>\n   questioning of how to keep the wolf from the door; no unequal struggle<br \/>\n   with the adverse seasons. All responsibility-for the payment of other<br \/>\n   creditors, for supplies of food and clothing for himself and his wife<br \/>\n   and children-from henceforth must rest on the shoulders of another.<\/p>\n<p>   So the appointed six years passed away, and at their close the master<br \/>\n   would call the laborer into his presence, to give him his discharge.<br \/>\n   But at that moment he might, if he chose, bind himself to that master&#8217;s<br \/>\n   service forever. If he shrank from facing the storms of poverty and<br \/>\n   difficulty; if he preferred the shelter and plenty of his master&#8217;s home<br \/>\n   to the struggle for existence from which he had been so happily<br \/>\n   shielded; if, above all, he loved his master, and desired not to be<br \/>\n   separated from him again, he was at liberty to say so&#8221; I love my<br \/>\n   master, I will not go out free.&#8221; Then, solemnly, and before the judges,<br \/>\n   that the choice was deliberately ratified, his master bored his ear<br \/>\n   through with an awl to the doorpost, leaving a permanent and indelible<br \/>\n   impression of the relationship into which they had entered. &#8220;And he<br \/>\n   shall serve him forever&#8221; (Exod. xxi. 6). This custom was-<\/p>\n<p>   ALLUDED TO BY THE PSALMIST (Psalm xl. 6). Living amid the routine of<br \/>\n   daily, monthly, and yearly sacrifices, this saint felt deeply their<br \/>\n   inability to take away sin, and saw that the true offering to God must<br \/>\n   be of another kind. What could he do adequately to express his sense of<br \/>\n   the wonderful works and countless thoughts of God! Surely the offered<br \/>\n   sacrifice of flour or blood, the burnt-offering or sin offering could<br \/>\n   not be the highest expression of human love and devotion; and then he<br \/>\n   bethought him of a more excellent way. He will come to God, bearing in<br \/>\n   his hand the volume of the book of his will; his heart shall dote upon<br \/>\n   that holy transcript of his Father&#8217;s character; yea, he will translate<br \/>\n   its precepts into prompt and loving obedience. &#8220;I delight to do thy<br \/>\n   will, my God; yea, thy law is within my heart.&#8221; &#8221; This shall please the<br \/>\n   Lord better than an ox or bullock that hath horns and hoofs.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Nor is this all; recalling the ancient usage to which we have alluded,<br \/>\n   he imagines himself repeating the vow of the Hebrew bond-servant, and<br \/>\n   standing meekly and voluntarily at God&#8217;s door, while his ear is bored<br \/>\n   to it forever. Henceforth he may almost cry with the Apostle, &#8220;From<br \/>\n   henceforth let no man trouble me; for I bear branded on my body the<br \/>\n   marks of Jesus.&#8221; &#8220;Mine ears hast thou bored.&#8221; &#8220;Truly I am thy servant,<br \/>\n   thou hast loosed my bonds.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   We need not wonder at the glad outburst which succeeds (ver. io). As<br \/>\n   with emphatic and repeated phrase the Psalmist avows his intention of<br \/>\n   telling the great congregation his discoveries of the love of God, we<br \/>\n   can well understand the reason of his exultation. There is no life so<br \/>\n   free as that which has escaped all other masters in becoming the<br \/>\n   bond-slave of Jesus. There is no nature so exuberant with joy and peace<br \/>\n   unspeakable as that which has felt the stab of the awl, has been tinged<br \/>\n   with the blood of self-sacrifice for his dear sake, and has passed<br \/>\n   through the open doorway to go out nevermore. There is no rest so<br \/>\n   unutterable as that which knows no further care; since all care has<br \/>\n   been once and forever laid on him who can alone bear the pressure of<br \/>\n   sorrow and sin, responsibility and need.<\/p>\n<p>   APPROPRIATED BY THE LORD JESUS. In his incarnation our blessed Lord has<br \/>\n   realized all the noblest aspirations and assertions which had ever been<br \/>\n   spoken by the lips of his most illustrious saints. The very words used<br \/>\n   by them can, therefore, be literally appropriated by him, without<br \/>\n   exaggeration, save where they falter with the broken confessions of sin<br \/>\n   and mortal weakness. Amongst others, when he came into the world, he<br \/>\n   could take up those olden words of the Fortieth Psalm, and, through<br \/>\n   them, fulfill the meaning of the ancient Hebrew custom.<\/p>\n<p>   The sacrifices of Leviticus had served a very necessary purpose in<br \/>\n   familiarizing men with the thoughts of God as to the true aspect in<br \/>\n   which our Saviour&#8217;s death was to be viewed; but it was evident that<br \/>\n   they could not exhaust his idea, or fill up the measure of his<br \/>\n   redeeming purpose. His will went far beyond them all, and, therefore,<br \/>\n   they could not be other than incomplete; and, on account of their very<br \/>\n   incompleteness, they needed incessant repetition; and even then, though<br \/>\n   repeated for centuries, they could not accomplish the purposes on which<br \/>\n   the divine nature was set. As well fill up the ocean with cartloads of<br \/>\n   soil, as accomplish the measure of God&#8217;s will by the blood of bulls and<br \/>\n   goats.<\/p>\n<p>   But when Jesus came into the world he at once set himself to accomplish<br \/>\n   that holy will. This was his constant cry: &#8220;Lo, I come to do thy will,<br \/>\n   God! &#8220;And he not only essayed to do God&#8217;s will in every minute<br \/>\n   particular and detail of his life, but especially where it touched the<br \/>\n   removal of sin, the redemption of men, the sanctification and<br \/>\n   perfecting of those who believe. It was to accomplish God&#8217;s will in<br \/>\n   these respects that the Saviour died on the cross. And it is because he<br \/>\n   perfectly succeeded, cutting out the entire pattern of the divine mind<br \/>\n   in the cloth of his obedience, that the ineffective sacrifices of<br \/>\n   Judaism have been put an end to; whilst his own sacrifice has not<br \/>\n   required the addition of a single sigh or tear or hour of darkness or<br \/>\n   thrill of agony. By the offering of his body once for all we have been<br \/>\n   sanctified, i.e., our judicial standing before God is completely<br \/>\n   satisfactory. And by one offering he bath perfected forever them that<br \/>\n   are being sanctified, i.e., he has accomplished all the objective work<br \/>\n   of our redemption in such wise as that in him we stand before God as<br \/>\n   accepted saints, though much more has yet to be done in our subjective<br \/>\n   inward experience (Heb. x. 10, 14).<\/p>\n<p>   The entire submission of our Lord to his Father&#8217;s will comes out very<br \/>\n   sweetly in a slight change here made in quoting the ancient Psalm. It<br \/>\n   may be that some older version, or various reading, is given, with the<br \/>\n   sanction of the divine Spirit. Instead of saying &#8220;Mine ear hast thou<br \/>\n   opened,&#8221; the Lord is represented as saying, &#8220;A body hast thou prepared<br \/>\n   for me.&#8221; In point of fact, though the ear carried the body with it,<br \/>\n   because it is notoriously difficult to move hand or foot so long as the<br \/>\n   ear is a captive, yet the Hebrew slave only gave his ear to the<br \/>\n   piercing awl in token of his surrender. But our Lord Jesus gave, not<br \/>\n   his ear only, but his whole body, in every faculty and power. He held<br \/>\n   nothing back, but yielded to God the Father the entirety of that body<br \/>\n   which was prepared for him by the Holy Ghost in the mystery of the holy<br \/>\n   incarnation. Ah! blessed is our lot, that God&#8217;s holy redemptive purpose<br \/>\n   has been so utterly and so efficiently fulfilled, through the offering<br \/>\n   of that body once for all nailed, not to the doorpost, but to the<br \/>\n   cross.<\/p>\n<p>   APPLICABLE TO OURSELVES. There is a strong demand amongst God&#8217;s people<br \/>\n   in the present day for that &#8220;more abundant life&#8221; which the Good<br \/>\n   Shepherd came to bestow. Out of this demand is springing a mighty<br \/>\n   movement, which if it obey the following rules and conditions, will<br \/>\n   surely be a blessing to the Church.<\/p>\n<p>   It must be natural. The saintliness that cannot romp and laugh with<br \/>\n   little children, and looks askance on the great movements in the world<br \/>\n   around, and shuts itself up in cloistered seclusion, is not the ideal<br \/>\n   of Jesus Christ, who watched the children playing in the market places,<br \/>\n   and called them to his arms, and mingled freely at the dinner-tables of<br \/>\n   the rich. It is easier, perhaps, than his, but it is a profound mistake<br \/>\n   to suppose that it will satisfy his heart. No; the saintliness of the<br \/>\n   true saint must find its home in the ordinary homes and haunts of men.<\/p>\n<p>   It must be humble. Directly a man begins to boast of what he has<br \/>\n   attained, you may be sure that he makes up in talk for what he lacks in<br \/>\n   vital experience. The tone with which some speak of perfection<br \/>\n   indicates how far they are from it. To brag of sinlessness is to yield<br \/>\n   to pride, the worst of sins. No face truly shines so long as its owner<br \/>\n   wists it. No heart is childlike which is conscious of itself.<\/p>\n<p>   It must lay stress on the objective side of Christ&#8217;s work. There must<br \/>\n   be introspection for the detection and removal of anything that lies<br \/>\n   between the soul and God; just as there must be sometimes a discharge<br \/>\n   of gunpowder to dislodge the accumulated soot of a foul chimney. But<br \/>\n   when the necessary work of introspection and confession is over, there<br \/>\n   should be an instant return to God, with the devout outlook of the soul<br \/>\n   on the person and work of the Lord Jesus. We must never encourage the<br \/>\n   introspection, except with the view of a more uninterrupted vision of<br \/>\n   Jesus.<\/p>\n<p>   If these three conditions are complied with, the movement now afoot<br \/>\n   cannot but be fraught with blessing to the universal Church; and it<br \/>\n   will probably have the effect of leading multitudes to pass through an<br \/>\n   experience like that indicated in the Psalm. Previously they may have<br \/>\n   acted merely from a sense of legalism and duty, giving sacrifices and<br \/>\n   offerings as appointed by the law. But from the glad hour that they<br \/>\n   realize all the claims of Jesus on their emancipated and surrendered<br \/>\n   natures, they will exclaim, &#8220;We love our Master; we will not go out<br \/>\n   free; bore our ears to his door, that we may serve him forever; we<br \/>\n   delight to do his will; his law is within our hearts; we are eager to<br \/>\n   do all things written in the roll of the book of his will.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Have you ever uttered words like these? Has your life been only a<br \/>\n   monotonous round of unavoidable service, of which the key-word has been<br \/>\n   &#8220;must- Alas! you have not as yet tasted how easy is his yoke, how<br \/>\n   light his burden. But if only from this moment you would open your<br \/>\n   whole heart to the work of the Holy Spirit, yielding fully to him, he<br \/>\n   would shed the love of God abroad within you, kindling your love to<br \/>\n   him; and, at once, you would do from love what you have done from law:<br \/>\n   you would be so knit to Christ that you would not be free from him,<br \/>\n   even though you could do without him; you would have forever the scar<br \/>\n   of the slavery of Jesus wrought into your very nature.<\/p>\n<p>   There is nothing in the world that gives so much rest to the soul as to<br \/>\n   do the will of God; whether it speaks on the page of Scripture, or<br \/>\n   through the inspirations of the Holy Spirit within the shrine of the<br \/>\n   heart, or in the daily routine of ordinary or extraordinary Providence.<br \/>\n   If only we could always say, &#8220;I delight to do thy will; I come, I<br \/>\n   come!&#8221; if only we could offer up to God, as Jesus did, the bodies which<br \/>\n   he has prepared for us, though to the very bitterness of the cross, if<br \/>\n   only we were as intent on finishing the work given us to do by him, as<br \/>\n   men are in achieving the ends of personal ambition: then the spirit of<br \/>\n   heaven, where the will of God is done, would engird our barren, weary<br \/>\n   lives, as the Gulf Stream some wintry shore, dispelling the frost and<br \/>\n   mantling the soil with flowers of fairest texture and fruits of<br \/>\n   Paradise. Do not try to feel the will of God: will it, choose it, obey<br \/>\n   it; and as time goes on, what you commenced by choosing you will end by<br \/>\n   loving with ardent and even vehement affection.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                               XXV. DRAWING BACK<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;The just shall live by faith; but if any man draw back, my soul shall have<br \/>\n    no pleasure in him.&#8221;-HEBREWS x. 38.  (Read verses 19- 39.)<\/p>\n<p>   THE Epistle has been for some time glowing with ever-increasing heat;<br \/>\n   and now it flames out into a vehement expostulation, which must have<br \/>\n   startled and terrified those Hebrew Christians who were still wavering<br \/>\n   between Judaism and Christianity. As we have had more than one occasion<br \/>\n   to remark, it had become a great question with some of them whether<br \/>\n   they should go back to the one, or go on with the other. The splendid<br \/>\n   ceremonial, venerable age, and olden associations of Judaism, were<br \/>\n   fighting hard to wean them away from the simplicity and spiritual<br \/>\n   demands of the later faith. But surely the retrograde movement would be<br \/>\n   arrested, and the impetus toward Christ accelerated, by these sublime<br \/>\n   and soul-stirring remonstrances.<\/p>\n<p>   THE THREEFOLD CONCLUSION ALREADY ARRIVED AT IS summed up in three<br \/>\n   momentous propositions.<\/p>\n<p>   We may boldly enter the holiest by the blood of Jesus. The holiest was<br \/>\n   the chamber of innermost communion with God. To enter it was to speak<br \/>\n   with God face to face. And its equivalent for us is the right to make<br \/>\n   our God our confidant and friend, into whose secret ear we may pour the<br \/>\n   whole story of sin and sorrow and need. Nor need the memory of recent<br \/>\n   sin distress us; because the blood of Jesus is the pledge of the<br \/>\n   forgiveness and acceptance of those who are penitent and believing. We<br \/>\n   may go continually, and even dwell, where Israel&#8217;s high priests might<br \/>\n   tread but once each year.<\/p>\n<p>   Jesus has inaugurated a new and living way. The veil of the Temple was<br \/>\n   rent when Jesus died, to indicate that the way to God was henceforth<br \/>\n   free to man, without let or hindrance, and without the intervention of<br \/>\n   a human priest. Priests have tried to block it, and to compel men to<br \/>\n   pay them toll for Opening it. But their pretensions are false. They<br \/>\n   have no such power. The way stands open still for every trembling<br \/>\n   seeker. It is new, because, though myriads have trodden it, it is as<br \/>\n   fresh as ever for each new priestly foot. It is living, because it is<br \/>\n   through the living Saviour that we come to God. &#8220;No man cometh unto the<br \/>\n   Father but by me.&#8221; Stay here to note that the veil, with its curious<br \/>\n   workmanship, was a symbol of the body of Christ. &#8220;The veil, that is to<br \/>\n   say, his flesh.&#8221; We get near to God through the death of that Son of<br \/>\n   man who, in real human sorrow, hung on the cross for us.<\/p>\n<p>   We have a Great priest. We belong to the household of God by faith; but<br \/>\n   we need a Priest. Priests need a Priest. And such a one we have, who<br \/>\n   ever liveth to make intercession for us, and to offer our prayers on<br \/>\n   the golden altar, mingled with the much incense of his own precious<br \/>\n   merit. These are the three conclusions which recapitulate the positions<br \/>\n   laid down and proved up to this point.<\/p>\n<p>   THE THREEFOLD EXHORTATION FOUNDED ON THE PREVIOUS CONCLUSIONS, &#8220;Let us<br \/>\n   draw near&#8221; (ver. 22). &#8220;Let us hold fast&#8221; (ver. 23). &#8220;Let us consider<br \/>\n   one an-other&#8221; (ver. 24). And each of these three exhortations revolves<br \/>\n   around one of the three words which are so often found in combination<br \/>\n   in the Epistles-Faith, Hope, and Love (R.V).<\/p>\n<p>   FAITH consists of two parts belief, which accepts certain declarations<br \/>\n   as true; and trust in the person about whom these declarations are<br \/>\n   made. Neither will do without the other. On the one hand, we cannot<br \/>\n   trust a person without knowing something about him; on the other hand,<br \/>\n   our knowledge will not help us unless it leads to trust, any more than<br \/>\n   it avails the shivering wretch outside the Bank of England to know that<br \/>\n   the vaults are stored with gold. A mere intellectual faith is not<br \/>\n   enough. The holding of a creed will not save. We must pass from a<br \/>\n   belief in words to trust in the Word. By faith we know that Jesus<br \/>\n   lives, and by faith we also appropriate that life. By faith we know<br \/>\n   that Jesus made on the cross a propitiation for sin; and by faith we<br \/>\n   lay our hand reverently on his dear head and confess our sin. Faith is<br \/>\n   the open hand receiving Christ. Faith is the golden pipe through which<br \/>\n   his fullness comes to us. Faith is the narrow channel by which the life<br \/>\n   that pulses in the Redeemer&#8217;s heart enters our souls. Faith is the<br \/>\n   attitude we assume when we turn aside from the human to the divine.<\/p>\n<p>   We ought not to be content with anything less than the full assurance<br \/>\n   of faith. The prime method of increasing it is in drawing near to God.<br \/>\n   In olden days the bodies of the priests were bathed in water and<br \/>\n   sprinkled with blood ere they entered the presence of God. Let us seek<br \/>\n   the spiritual counterpart of this. Relieved from the pressure of<br \/>\n   conscious guilt, with hearts as sincere and guileless as the flesh is<br \/>\n   clean when washed with pure water, let us draw near to God and keel) in<br \/>\n   fellowship with him; and in that attitude faith will grow exceedingly.<br \/>\n   It will no longer sit in the dust, but clothe itself in beautiful<br \/>\n   garments. It will wax from a thread to become a cable. No longer the<br \/>\n   trembling touch of a woman&#8217;s hand, it will grasp the pillars of the<br \/>\n   Temple with a Samson&#8217;s embrace.<\/p>\n<p>   HOPE is more than faith, and has special reference to the unknown<br \/>\n   future which it realizes, and brings to bear on our daily life. The<br \/>\n   veil that hides the future parts only as smitten by the prow of our<br \/>\n   advancing boat; it is natural, therefore, that we should often ask what<br \/>\n   lies beyond.<\/p>\n<p>   Foreboding is the prophet of ill; Hope of good. Foreboding cries, &#8220;We<br \/>\n   shall certainly fall by the hand of; Hope replies, &#8220;No weapon that is<br \/>\n   formed against us shall prosper.&#8221; Foreboding cries, &#8220;Who shall roll<br \/>\n   away the stone? &#8221; Hope sings merrily, &#8220;The Lord shall go before us, and<br \/>\n   make the crooked places straight.&#8221; Foreboding, born of unbelief, cries,<br \/>\n   &#8220;The people are great and tall, and the cities walled up to heaven&#8221;;<br \/>\n   Hope already portions out the land and chooses its inheritance. But<br \/>\n   Christian hope is infinitely better and more reliable than that of the<br \/>\n   worldling. In ordinary hope there is always the element of uncertainty;<br \/>\n   it may be doomed to disillusion and disappointment; things may not turn<br \/>\n   out as we expect: and so, being the characteristic of youth, it dies<br \/>\n   down as the years advance. But Christian hope is based on the promise<br \/>\n   of God, and therefore it cannot disappoint; nay, it is the anchor of<br \/>\n   the aged soul, becoming brighter and more enduring as the years pass<br \/>\n   by, because &#8220;he is faithful that promised.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But how may we increase our hope, so as never to let it slip, but to<br \/>\n   hold it fast with unwavering firmness? There is nothing which will<br \/>\n   sooner strengthen it than to consider his faithfulness whose promises<br \/>\n   are hope&#8217;s anchorage. Has he ever failed to fulfill his engagements? Do<br \/>\n   not the stars return to their appointed place to a hairbreadth of their<br \/>\n   time? Have not good men given a unanimous testimony to the fidelity of<br \/>\n   the covenant-keeping God? He has never suffered his faithfulness to<br \/>\n   fail-and never will. Our hope, therefore, need not falter, but be<br \/>\n   strong and very courageous.<\/p>\n<p>   LOVE comes last. She is queen of all the graces of the inner life. Love<br \/>\n   is the passion of self-giving. It never stays to ask what it can<br \/>\n   afford, or what it may expect to receive; but it is ever shedding forth<br \/>\n   its perfume, breaking its alabaster boxes, and shedding its heart&#8217;s<br \/>\n   blood. It will pine to death if it cannot give. It must share its<br \/>\n   possessions. It is prodigal of costliest service. Such love is in the<br \/>\n   heart of God, and should also be in us; and we may increase it<br \/>\n   materially by considering one another, and associating with our<br \/>\n   fellow-believers. Distance begets coldness and indifference. When we<br \/>\n   forsake the assembly of our fellow- Christians we are apt to wrap<br \/>\n   ourselves in the chill mantle of indifference. But when we see others<br \/>\n   in need, and help them; when we are willing to succor and save; when we<br \/>\n   discover that there is something attractive in the least lovable; when<br \/>\n   we feel the glowing sympathy of others-our own love grows by the<br \/>\n   demands made on it, and by the opportunities of manifestation.<\/p>\n<p>   Let us seek earnestly these best gifts; and that we may have them and<br \/>\n   abound, let us invoke the blessed indwelling of the Lord Jesus, whose<br \/>\n   entrance brings with it the whole train of sweet Christian graces.<\/p>\n<p>   THE THREEFOLD REMONSTRANCE. Go forward! otherwise penally (ver. 26). If<br \/>\n   a man unwittingly broke Moses&#8217; law, he was forgiven; but if he<br \/>\n   willfully despised it, he died without mercy. What then can be expected<br \/>\n   by those who sin willfully, not against the iron obligations of Sinai,<br \/>\n   but against the gracious words which distill from the lips of the dying<br \/>\n   Saviour! The heart that can turn from the love and blood-shedding of<br \/>\n   Calvary, and ignore them, and trample them ruthlessly under foot, is so<br \/>\n   hard, so hopeless, so defiant of the Holy Spirit as to expose itself to<br \/>\n   the gravest displeasure of God, and can expect no further offering for<br \/>\n   its sins. There is no sacrifice for the atonement of the sin of<br \/>\n   rejecting Calvary.<\/p>\n<p>   Go forward! otherwise past efforts nullified (ver. 32). These Hebrew<br \/>\n   Christians had suffered keenly on their first entrance into the<br \/>\n   Christian life. The martyrdom of the saintly Stephen; the great havoc<br \/>\n   wrought in the Church by Saul of Tarsus; the terrible famines that<br \/>\n   visited Jerusalem, causing widespread destitution. They had become even<br \/>\n   a gazing-stock by reproaches and afflictions. But they had taken<br \/>\n   joyfully the spoiling of their goods, not shrinking from the ordeal. To<br \/>\n   go back to Judaism now would annul the advantages which otherwise might<br \/>\n   have accrued from their bitter experience; would miss the harvest of<br \/>\n   their tears; would counterwork the respect with which they were being<br \/>\n   regarded; and would rob them of the reward which the Lord might give to<br \/>\n   them, if they only endured to the end. &#8220;Cast not away your boldness,<br \/>\n   which hath great recompense of reward.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Go forward! the Lord is at hand (ver. 36). Jesus was about to come in<br \/>\n   the fall of Jerusalem, as lie will come ere long to close the present<br \/>\n   age; and every sign pointed to the speedy destruction of the Jewish<br \/>\n   polity by the all-conquering might of Rome. How foolish then would it<br \/>\n   be to return to that which was on the eve of dissolution: to the Temple<br \/>\n   that would burn to the ground; to sacrifices soon to cease; to a<br \/>\n   priesthood to be speedily scattered to the winds!<\/p>\n<p>   There was only one alternative: not to go back to certain perdition, to<br \/>\n   the ruin of all the nobler attributes of the soul, to disgrace and<br \/>\n   disappointment and endless regret; but to go on through evil and good<br \/>\n   report, through sorrow and anxiety and blood, until the faithful<br \/>\n   servant should be vindicated by the Lord&#8217;s approval, and welcomed into<br \/>\n   the realms of endless blessedness.<\/p>\n<p>   Are we amongst those who go on to the saving of the soul? Here, as so<br \/>\n   often, the salvation of the soul is viewed as a process. True, we are<br \/>\n   in a sense saved when first we turn to the cross and trust the<br \/>\n   Crucified. But it is only as we keep in the current that streams from<br \/>\n   the cross, only as we remain in abiding fellowship with the Saviour,<br \/>\n   only as we submit ourselves habitually to the gracious influences of<br \/>\n   the divine Spirit, that salvation pervades and heals our whole being.<br \/>\n   Then the soul may be said to be gained (R.V., marg.), i.e., restored to<br \/>\n   its original type as conceived in the mind of God before he built the<br \/>\n   dust of the earth into man, and breathed into him the breath of life,<br \/>\n   and he became a living soul.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>XXVI. FAITH AND ITS EXPLOITS<\/p>\n<p>    Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not<br \/>\n    seen.&#8221; HEBREWS xi. 1.<\/p>\n<p>   SOCIETY rests on the faith which man has in man. The workman, toiling<br \/>\n   through the week for the wage which he believes he will receive; the<br \/>\n   passenger, procuring a ticket for a distant town, because he believes<br \/>\n   the statements of the time-tables; the sailor, steering his bark with<br \/>\n   unerring accuracy in murky weather, because he believes in the<br \/>\n   mercantile charts and tables; the entire system of monetary credit, by<br \/>\n   which vast sums circulate from hand to hand without the use of a single<br \/>\n   coin-all these are illustrations of the immense importance of faith in<br \/>\n   the affairs of men. Nothing, therefore, is more disastrous for an<br \/>\n   individual or a community than for its credit to be impaired, or its<br \/>\n   confidence shaken.<\/p>\n<p>   There seem to be three necessary preliminaries in order to faith.<br \/>\n   First, some one must make an engagement or promise. Second, there must<br \/>\n   be good reason for believing in the integrity and sufficiency of the<br \/>\n   person by whom the engagement has been made. Third, there follows a<br \/>\n   comfortable assurance that it will be even so; in fact, the believer is<br \/>\n   able to count on the object promised as being not less sure than if it<br \/>\n   had already come into actual possession. And this latter frame of mind<br \/>\n   is precisely the one indicated by the writer of this Epistle, when,<br \/>\n   guided by the Holy Spirit, he affirms that faith is the assurance of<br \/>\n   things hoped for, the persuasion or conviction of things not seen. In<br \/>\n   other words, faith is the faculty of realizing the unseen.<\/p>\n<p>   These three conditions are fulfilled in Christian faith. The same<br \/>\n   faculty is called into action with respect to the things of God. At the<br \/>\n   outset we are sure that a Voice has spoken to man from the page of<br \/>\n   Scripture; not voices, but a Voice. Next, we are sure that this Speaker<br \/>\n   is infinitely credible. Our assurance rests on several grounds: we find<br \/>\n   that his words have ever come true in the experience of past<br \/>\n   generations; we have seen them accompanied by the introduction of<br \/>\n   miraculous phenomena, indicating in their beneficence and power the<br \/>\n   goodness and glory of the Worker; we discover in our own hearts the<br \/>\n   assent of our moral nature to their evident truth: and for all these<br \/>\n   reasons we hold that the Voice which speaks deserves our credence. And<br \/>\n   therefore, lastly, we calculate on whatever has been promised as surely<br \/>\n   as if we saw it, and may reckon on it as certainly ours.<\/p>\n<p>   Let us emphasize again what has been said. We look on the words which<br \/>\n   God speaks to us from the Scriptures as being altogether different from<br \/>\n   any other words which may claim our attention from the lips of men; not<br \/>\n   only because of the character of the miracles which accompany them, but<br \/>\n   because they touch us as no other words do, and elicit the spontaneous<br \/>\n   assent and consent of our moral nature, though sometimes in<br \/>\n   condemnation of ourselves. That must be the Book of God which so<br \/>\n   exactly coincides with the best emotions and intuitions of our moral<br \/>\n   nature; and not of ours only, but of the noblest and best of our race<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;The mighty God, the Lord hath spoken, and called the earth from the<br \/>\n   rising of the sun to the going down of the same.&#8221; And if we are once<br \/>\n   assured of this, then there is no limit to the restful confidence,<br \/>\n   which not only counts the promise as credible, but actually begins to<br \/>\n   enjoy in anticipation the boons they offer. The maxim of human<br \/>\n   experience runs thus: Seeing is believing; but with the child of God<br \/>\n   the reverse is true: Believing is seeing. We are as sure of what God<br \/>\n   had promised as we would be if we saw it already before our eyes. Our<br \/>\n   vision could not make us more sure than we are that God loves us; that<br \/>\n   there is a Father&#8217;s house with its many mansions; and that some day our<br \/>\n   mortality is to put on immortality, so as to live forever in a state of<br \/>\n   existence which is absolutely sinless, sorrowless, and nightless.<\/p>\n<p>   Such faith as this is begotten in our souls, primarily by the study of<br \/>\n   God&#8217;s Word; appealing, as we have seen, to our moral consciousness,<br \/>\n   which, as it is more and more developed, is more and more satisfied<br \/>\n   with the Book which called it into being, and has done so much for its<br \/>\n   education. But sometimes faith seems to be given us in respect of some<br \/>\n   special matter which is not directly indicated in Scripture, but which<br \/>\n   we feel able to claim, yes, and as we pray and think over it we are<br \/>\n   still more able to claim it; and when we find such a conviction forming<br \/>\n   in our hearts, we may be perfectly sure of it. &#8220;Whosoever shall say to<br \/>\n   this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea; and<br \/>\n   shall not doubt in his heart, but believe that those things which he<br \/>\n   saith shall come to pass, he shall have whatsoever he saith.&#8221; Thus the<br \/>\n   child of God may begin to praise for blessings of which there is no<br \/>\n   outward sign; being as sure of them as though they had risen above the<br \/>\n   horizon, like the little cloud, no bigger than a man&#8217;s hand, to<br \/>\n   Elijah&#8217;s prayer. &#8220;We have the petitions that we desired of him.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Do you want a greater faith? then consider the promises, which are its<br \/>\n   native food! Read the story of God&#8217;s mighty acts in bygone days. Open<br \/>\n   your heart to God, that he may shine in with his own revealing<br \/>\n   presence. Ask him to give you this wondrous faculty to which nothing is<br \/>\n   impossible. Put away from you aught which might clash with the growth<br \/>\n   of your heart in faith and love.<\/p>\n<p>   FAITH GREATENS MEN. Run through this roll-call of heroes. You must<br \/>\n   admit that those whose names are mentioned stand in the first ranks of<br \/>\n   our race, shining as stars. But their claim to be thus regarded was<br \/>\n   certainly not natural genius. Enoch, for instance, and his line, being<br \/>\n   Sethites, may have been inferior to many of the family of Cain, so far<br \/>\n   as mere intellectual or artistic attainment went. But his faith lifted<br \/>\n   him out of the ranks of mediocrity to a species of primacy amongst men;<br \/>\n   and should faith become the master-principle of your life and mine, it<br \/>\n   would similarly enlarge and enrich our whole being.<\/p>\n<p>   FAITH MIGHTILY AFFECTS OUR ORDINARY HUMAN LIFE. With most men you can<br \/>\n   determine pretty nearly how they will act in given circumstances; you<br \/>\n   can enumerate the influences at work, and their value. But you can<br \/>\n   never be sure in the case of the Christian, because his faith is making<br \/>\n   real much of which the world around takes no thought whatever. The<br \/>\n   tyrant, anxious to save some young Christian confessor, approaches him<br \/>\n   with flatteries and promises, things that attract the young, and is<br \/>\n   surprised to find that they have no charm; he then approaches with<br \/>\n   suffering, obloquy, and death, things that sadden young hearts, and is<br \/>\n   equally astonished to discover that they cause no alarm. The cause is<br \/>\n   inexplicable, and is set down to obstinacy; but in point of fact the<br \/>\n   eyes of the young heart are opened on a world of which the tyrant has<br \/>\n   formed no conception. Faith is not careless of time, but more mindful<br \/>\n   of eternity. Faith does not underrate the power of man, but she<br \/>\n   magnifies omnipotence. Faith is not callous of present pain, but she<br \/>\n   weighs it against future joy. Against ill-gotten gains, she puts<br \/>\n   eternal treasure; against human hate the recompense of reward; against<br \/>\n   the weariness of the course, the crown of amaranth; against the tears<br \/>\n   of winter sowing, the shoutings of the autumn sheaves; against the<br \/>\n   inconvenience of the tent, the permanent city. None of these men would<br \/>\n   have lived the noble lives they did, had it not been for the recompense<br \/>\n   of reward and the gleams given them of the golden city amid the sorrows<br \/>\n   and straits of their lives.<\/p>\n<p>   FAITH IS POSSIBLE TO ALL CLASSES. In this list are women as well as<br \/>\n   men. Sarah and Rahab, as well as Abraham and Joshua; the widow of<br \/>\n   Shunem, and the mighty prophet who brought her son back to life; Moses,<br \/>\n   the student of Egypt&#8217;s wisdom; Gideon, the husbandman; Isaac, the<br \/>\n   grazier; Jacob, the shrewd cattle breeder; Barak, the soldier; David,<br \/>\n   the shepherd; and Samuel, the prophet. Their Occupations and<br \/>\n   circumstances varied infinitely; but there was not one of them that did<br \/>\n   not live under the influence of this master-principle. Whatever may be<br \/>\n   a man&#8217;s lawful calling, he may abide therein with God, under the<br \/>\n   influence of faith. Like the fir or pine, faith flourishes in any soil.<\/p>\n<p>   FAITH IS CONSISTENT WITH VERY DIFFERENT DEGREES OF KNOWLEDGE. It would<br \/>\n   be difficult to enumerate more varieties of religious knowledge than<br \/>\n   are summarized in. this catalogue of names. Abel&#8217;s idea of sacrifice<br \/>\n   would differ widely from David&#8217;s. The degree of acquaintance with God<br \/>\n   would be much intenser with Moses than Samson. And, compared with the<br \/>\n   clear views of truth held by these Hebrew Christians, those of the<br \/>\n   world&#8217;s gray fathers were but as baskets full of fragments. But,<br \/>\n   notwithstanding all these differences, the same principle of faith<br \/>\n   leaped upward from each heart. And the woman who touched the hem of the<br \/>\n   garment was animated with the same spirit as that which in her sister<br \/>\n   elicited the wonder of Jesus: &#8221; woman, great is thy faith!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   FAITH CAN MASTER INSUPERABLE DIFFICULTIES. It is difficult to be<br \/>\n   singular; but faith enabled Abel to offer a more excellent sacrifice<br \/>\n   than Cain. It is difficult to walk constantly with God, when wickedness<br \/>\n   is great on the earth, and all flesh has corrupted its way; but it is<br \/>\n   not impossible, for Enoch walked with God on the very margin of the<br \/>\n   Flood, and obtained the testimony that he pleased him. It is difficult<br \/>\n   to lead a pilgrim life, and such difficulties would be probably as<br \/>\n   keenly felt by the patriarchs; but what faith did for them it will do<br \/>\n   for others. It is difficult, amid the cares of business or public<br \/>\n   office, to keep the heart fresh, devout, and young; but it is not<br \/>\n   impossible to faith, which maintained the spirit of patriotism and<br \/>\n   devotion in the heart of Joseph, though sorely tempted to sink into an<br \/>\n   Egyptian grandee. It is difficult to face the loss of all things, and<br \/>\n   the displeasure of the great; but Moses did both, under the spell of<br \/>\n   faith in the unseen.<\/p>\n<p>   There are many difficulties before us all. Stormy seas forbid our<br \/>\n   passage; frowning fortifications bar our progress; mighty kingdoms defy<br \/>\n   our power; lions roar against us; fire lights its flaming barricade in<br \/>\n   our path; the sword, the armies of the alien, mockings, scourgings,<br \/>\n   bonds, and imprisonment-all these menace our peace, darken our horizon,<br \/>\n   and try on us their power; but faith has conquered all these before,<br \/>\n   and it shall do as much again. We will laugh at impossibility; we will<br \/>\n   tread the shores of the seas, certain they must make us a way; we will<br \/>\n   enter the dens of wild beasts and the furnaces of flame, sure that they<br \/>\n   are impotent to injure us; we shall escape the edge of the sword, out<br \/>\n   of weakness become strong, turn to flight armies of aliens, and set at<br \/>\n   nought all the power of the enemy: and all because we believe in God.<br \/>\n   Reckon on God&#8217;s faithfulness. Look not at the winds and waves, but at<br \/>\n   his character and will. Get alone with him, steeping your heart and<br \/>\n   mind in his precious and exceeding great promises. Be obedient to the<br \/>\n   utmost limit of your light. Walk in the Spirit, one of whose fruits is<br \/>\n   faith. So shall you be deemed worthy to join this band, whose names and<br \/>\n   exploits run over from this page into the chronicles of eternity, and<br \/>\n   to share their glorious heritage.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                         XXVII. STRIPPING FOR THE RACE<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Wherefore, seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of<br \/>\n    witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily<br \/>\n    beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us;<br \/>\n    looking unto Jesus, the author and finisher of our faith.&#8221; HEBREWS Xii. 1,<br \/>\n    2.<\/p>\n<p>    WHEN, in his Egyptian campaign, the Emperor Napoleon was leading his<br \/>\n   troops through the neighborhood of the Pyramids, he pointed to those<br \/>\n   hoary remnants of a great antiquity, and said, &#8220;Soldiers, forty<br \/>\n   centuries look down on you!&#8221; Similarly there have been summoned before<br \/>\n   our thought in the preceding chapter the good and great, the martyrs,<br \/>\n   confessors, prophets, and kings of the past. We have been led through<br \/>\n   the corridors of the divine mausoleum, and bidden to read the names and<br \/>\n   epitaphs of those of whom God was not ashamed. We have felt our faith<br \/>\n   grow stronger as we read and pondered the inspiring record; and now, by<br \/>\n   a single touch, these saintly souls are depicted as having passed from<br \/>\n   the arena into the crowded tiers, from which to observe the course<br \/>\n   which we are treading to-day. They were witnesses to the necessity,<br \/>\n   nature, and power of faith. They are witnesses also of our lives and<br \/>\n   struggles, our victories and defeats, our past and present.<\/p>\n<p>   And they are compared to a cloud. One of the finest pictures in the<br \/>\n   world is that of the Madonna de San Sisto at Dresden, which depicts the<br \/>\n   infant Saviour in the arms of his mother, surrounded by clouds, which<br \/>\n   attracted no special notice until lately; but when the accumulated dust<br \/>\n   of centuries was removed, they were found to be composed of myriads of<br \/>\n   angel faces. Surely this is the thought of the inspired writer when he<br \/>\n   speaks of &#8220;so great a cloud of witnesses.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   In some of the more spacious amphitheaters of olden times, the<br \/>\n   spectators rose in tier above tier to the number of forty or fifty<br \/>\n   thousand; and to the thought of the combatant as he looked around on<br \/>\n   this vast multitude of human faces, set in varied and gorgeous<br \/>\n   coloring, these vast congregations of his race must have appeared like<br \/>\n   clouds, composed of infinitesimal units, but all making up one mighty<br \/>\n   aggregate, and bathed in such hues as are cast on the clouds at sunrise<br \/>\n   or sunset by the level sun.<\/p>\n<p>   If before this time these Hebrew Christians had been faltering, and<br \/>\n   inclined to relinquish their earnestness, they would have been<br \/>\n   strangely stirred and quickened by the thought that they were living<br \/>\n   under the close inspection of the spirits of the mighty dead. To us<br \/>\n   also the same exhortation applies.<\/p>\n<p>   THE SPEED OF THE CHRISTIAN LIFE. &#8220;Let us run.&#8221; We must not sit still to<br \/>\n   be carried by the stream. We must not loiter and linger as children<br \/>\n   returning from a summer&#8217;s ramble. We must not even walk as men with<br \/>\n   measured step. We must run. Nor are we only to run as those who double<br \/>\n   their pace to an easy trot; we must run as men who run a race. The idea<br \/>\n   of a race is generally competition; here it is only concentration of<br \/>\n   purpose, singleness of aim, intensity.<\/p>\n<p>   Life in earnest-that is the idea. But how far do we seem from it! And<br \/>\n   what a contrast there is between our earnestness in all beside, and in<br \/>\n   our devotion to God and man! We are willing enough to join in the rush<br \/>\n   of business competition, in the race for wealth, in the heated<br \/>\n   discussion of politics, and in social life in the pursuit of pleasure;<br \/>\n   but, ah! how soon we slacken when it becomes a question of how much we<br \/>\n   are willing to do for God! How earnest men are around us! Newton poring<br \/>\n   over his problems till the midnight wind sweeps over his pages the<br \/>\n   ashes of his long-extinguished fire. Reynolds sitting, brush in hand,<br \/>\n   before his canvas for thirty six hours together, summoning into life<br \/>\n   forms of beauty that seemed glad to come. Dryden composing in a single<br \/>\n   fortnight his Ode for St. Cecilia&#8217;s Day. Buffon dragged from his<br \/>\n   beloved slumbers to his more beloved studies. And the biographer who<br \/>\n   records these traits himself rising with the dawn to prepare for the<br \/>\n   demands of his charge.<\/p>\n<p>   In a world like this, and with a theme like ours, we ought not to be<br \/>\n   languid and supine; but devoted, eager, consumed with a holy love to<br \/>\n   God, and with a passion for the souls of men. Then should we make<br \/>\n   progress in the knowledge of the Word of God, and enter into the words<br \/>\n   of one of the greatest spiritual athletes that ever lived:  &#8220;This one<br \/>\n   thing I do . . . I press toward the goal for the prize of the high<br \/>\n   calling in Christ Jesus.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   WE MUST RUN FREE OF WEIGHTS. This speed can only be maintained when we<br \/>\n   run unencumbered and free. Now, of course we would all admit the<br \/>\n   necessity of divesting ourselves of sins; but in all our lives there<br \/>\n   are weights which are not sins. A sin is that which in its very nature,<br \/>\n   and always, and by whomsoever perpetrated, is a transgression of God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   law, a violation of God&#8217;s will. But a weight is something which in<br \/>\n   itself or to another may be harmless, or even legitimate, but in our<br \/>\n   own case is a hindrance and an impediment.<\/p>\n<p>   Every believer must be left to decide what is his own special weight.<br \/>\n   We may not judge for one another. What is a weight to one is not so to<br \/>\n   all. But the Holy Spirit, if he be consulted and asked to reveal the<br \/>\n   hindrance to the earnestness and speed of the soul&#8217;s progress in divine<br \/>\n   things, will not fail to indicate it swiftly and infallibly. And this<br \/>\n   is the excellence of the Holy Spirit&#8217;s teaching: it is ever definite.<br \/>\n   If you have a general undefined feeling of discouragement, it is<br \/>\n   probably the work of the great enemy of souls; but if you are aware of<br \/>\n   some one hindrance and encumbrance which stays your speed, it is almost<br \/>\n   certainly the work of the divine Spirit, who is leading you to<br \/>\n   relinquish something which is slackening your progress in the spiritual<br \/>\n   life.<\/p>\n<p>   No man would think of maintaining a high speed encompassed with<br \/>\n   weights. The lads who run for a prize litter the course with garments<br \/>\n   flung away in their eager haste. There would be little difficulty in<br \/>\n   maintaining an intense and ardent spirit if we were more faithful in<br \/>\n   dealing with the habits and indulgences which cling around us and<br \/>\n   impede our steps. Thousands of Christians are like water-logged<br \/>\n   vessels. They cannot sink; but they are so saturated with<br \/>\n   inconsistencies and worldliness and permitted evil that they can only<br \/>\n   be towed with difficulty into the celestial port.<\/p>\n<p>   Is there anything in your life which dissipates your energy from holy<br \/>\n   things, which disinclines you to the practice of prayer and Bible<br \/>\n   study, which rises before you in your best moments, and produces in you<br \/>\n   a general sense of uneasiness and disturbance? something which others<br \/>\n   account harmless, and permit, and in which you once saw no cause for<br \/>\n   anxiety, but which you now look on with a feeling of self-condemnation?<br \/>\n   It is likely enough a weight.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Is there anything within the circle of your consciousness concerning<br \/>\n   which you have to argue with yourself, or which you do not care to<br \/>\n   investigate, treating it as a bankrupt treats his books into which he<br \/>\n   has no desire to enter, or as a votary of pleasure treats the first<br \/>\n   symptoms of decaying vitality which he seeks to conceal from himself?<br \/>\n   We so often allow in ourselves things which we would be the first to<br \/>\n   condemn in others. We frequently find ourselves engaged in discovering<br \/>\n   ingenious reasons wily a certain course which would be wrong in others<br \/>\n   is justifiable in ourselves. All such things may be considered as<br \/>\n   weights. It may be a friendship which is too engrossing; a habit which<br \/>\n   is sapping away our energy as the tap-root the fruit bearing powers of<br \/>\n   a tree; a pursuit, an amusement, a pastime, a system of reading, a<br \/>\n   method of spending time, too fascinating and too absorbing, and<br \/>\n   therefore harmful to the soul-which is tempted to walk when it should<br \/>\n   run, and to loiter when it should haste.<\/p>\n<p>   But, you ask, Is it not a sign of weakness, and will it not tend to<br \/>\n   weakness, always to be relinquishing these and similar things? Surely,<br \/>\n   you cry, the life will become impoverished and barren when it is<br \/>\n   stripped in this way of its precious things. Not so. It is impossible<br \/>\n   to renounce anything at the bidding of the inner life without adding<br \/>\n   immensely to its strength; for it grows by surrender, and waxes strong<br \/>\n   by sacrifice. And for every unworthy object which is forsaken there<br \/>\n   follows an immediate enrichment of the spirit, which is the sufficient<br \/>\n   and unvarying compensation. The athlete gladly foregoes much that other<br \/>\n   men value, and which is pleasant to himself, because his mind is intent<br \/>\n   on the prize; and he considers that he will be amply repaid for all the<br \/>\n   hardships of training if he be permitted to bear it away, though it be<br \/>\n   a belt he will never wear, or a cup he will never use. How much more<br \/>\n   gladly should we be prepared to relinquish all that hinders our<br \/>\n   attainment, not of the uncertain bauble of the athlete, but the certain<br \/>\n   reward, the incorruptible crown, the smile and &#8220;well-done&#8221; of our Lord!<\/p>\n<p>   There is an old Dutch picture of a little child dropping a cherished<br \/>\n   toy from its hands; and, at first sight, its action seems<br \/>\n   unintelligible, until, at the corner of the picture, the eye is<br \/>\n   attracted to a white dove winging its flight toward the emptied<br \/>\n   outstretched hands. Similarly we are prepared to forego a good deal<br \/>\n   when once we catch sight of the spiritual acquisitions which beckon to<br \/>\n   us. And this is the true way to reach consecration and surrender. Do<br \/>\n   not ever dwell on the giving-up side, but on the receiving side. Keep<br \/>\n   in mind the meaning of the old Hebrew word for consecration, to fill<br \/>\n   the hand. There will not be much trouble in getting men to empty their<br \/>\n   hands of wood, hay, and stubble if they see that there is a chance of<br \/>\n   filling them with the treasures which gleam from the faces or lives of<br \/>\n   others, or which call to them from the page of Scripture. The world<br \/>\n   pities us, because it sees only what we give up; but it would hold its<br \/>\n   sympathy if it could also see how much we receive &#8220;good measure,<br \/>\n   pressed down, and running over given into our bosoms.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   WE MUST LAY ASIDE BESETTING SIN. &#8220;Let us lay aside the sin which doth<br \/>\n   so closely cling to us&#8221; (R.V.). We often refer to these words; no<br \/>\n   sentence of the Bible is more often on our lips; but do we not misquote<br \/>\n   them in divorcing them from their context? We should read them as part<br \/>\n   of the great argument running through the previous chapter, and of<br \/>\n   which they are the culmination and brilliant climax. That argument has<br \/>\n   been devoted to the theme of faith. Case after case has been adduced of<br \/>\n   the exploits of the heroes of Hebrew story; and it has been shown that<br \/>\n   in each faith was the secret motive and the sufficient power. The close<br \/>\n   connection between that glowing panegyric and the opening words of the<br \/>\n   following chapter is shown by the word &#8220;Wherefore,&#8221; which even defies<br \/>\n   the wanton intrusion of the division forced upon us in our English<br \/>\n   version. And surely it is most natural to hold that the sin which so<br \/>\n   closely clings to us is nothing else than the sin of unbelief, which is<br \/>\n   the opposite pole to the faith so highly eulogized.<\/p>\n<p>   If that be a correct exegesis, it sheds new light on unbelief. It is no<br \/>\n   longer an infirmity, it is a sin. Men sometimes carry about their<br \/>\n   doubts, as beggars a deformed or sickly child, to excite the sympathy<br \/>\n   of the benevolent. But surely there is a kind of unbelief which should<br \/>\n   not meet with sympathy, but rebuke. It is sin which needs to be<br \/>\n   repented of as sin, to be resisted as sin, and to receive as sin the<br \/>\n   cleansing of Christ.<\/p>\n<p>   Unbelief may, as in the case of Thomas, spring from intellectual and<br \/>\n   constitutional difficulties. But these will not lead the soul to vaunt<br \/>\n   itself as surpassing others in insight; or to relinquish the society of<br \/>\n   others with happier constitutions; or, above all, to forego the habit<br \/>\n   of secret prayer. It will rather induce a temper of mind the very<br \/>\n   opposite of that self-confident, arrogant spirit which prevails so much<br \/>\n   in the unbelievers of our time.<\/p>\n<p>   But much unbelief springs from moral causes. The soul gets wrong with<br \/>\n   God, and says that it is not sure whether there is a God. The windows<br \/>\n   are allowed to be covered with grime, and then it doubts whether the<br \/>\n   sun is shining. The faculties of the inner life are clogged with<br \/>\n   neglect, and refuse to do their appointed office in revealing the<br \/>\n   spiritual and the unseen. We should be wiser if we dealt with much of<br \/>\n   the unbelief of our time as a disease of the spiritual life, rather<br \/>\n   than of the intellectual. Its source is largely moral. Do not set<br \/>\n   agnostics to study evidences; but show them that their temper of heart<br \/>\n   is the true cause of their darkness and unbelief. God has given each of<br \/>\n   us powers of discerning his truth, which will certainly perceive and<br \/>\n   love it; and where the reverse is the case, it is often due to some<br \/>\n   moral obliquity, to some beam in the eye, to some secret indulgence,<br \/>\n   which is destructive of all spiritual perception. Put away known sin.<br \/>\n   Read the Bible, even though you doubt its inspiration. Wait. Pray. Live<br \/>\n   up to all the light you have. And unbelief will drop away as the old<br \/>\n   leaves from the evergreens in spring.<\/p>\n<p>   There will, of course, be difficulties in all our lives to impede our<br \/>\n   heavenward progress: difficulties from the opposition of our foes;<br \/>\n   difficulties from within our own hearts. We shall need patience and<br \/>\n   long forbearance as we tread our appointed track. But there are two<br \/>\n   sources of comfort open to us.<\/p>\n<p>   Let us remember that the course is set before us by our heavenly<br \/>\n   Father, who therefore knows all its roughness and straitness, and will<br \/>\n   make all grace abound toward us, sufficient for our need. To do his<br \/>\n   will is rest and heaven.<\/p>\n<p>   Let us &#8220;look off unto Jesus.&#8221; Away from past failure and success; away<br \/>\n   from human applause and blame; away from the gold pieces scattered on<br \/>\n   the path, and the flowers that line either side. Do not look now and<br \/>\n   again, but acquire the habit of looking always, so that it shall become<br \/>\n   natural to look up from every piece of daily work, from every room,<br \/>\n   however small, from every street, however crowded, to his dear, calm,<br \/>\n   sweet face; just as the sojourner on the northern shores of Geneva&#8217;s<br \/>\n   lake is constantly prone to look up from any book or work on which the<br \/>\n   attention may have been engaged, to behold the splendor and glory of<br \/>\n   the noble range of snow-capped summits on the further shores. And if it<br \/>\n   seems hard to acquire this habitual attitude, trust the Holy Spirit to<br \/>\n   form it in your soul.<\/p>\n<p>   Above all, remember that where you tread there your Lord once trod,<br \/>\n   combating your difficulties and sorrows, though without sin; and ere<br \/>\n   long you shall be where he is now. Keep your eye fixed, then, on him as<br \/>\n   he stands to welcome and reward you; and struggle through all, animated<br \/>\n   by his smile, and attracted to his side, and you will find weights and<br \/>\n   unbelief dropping off almost insensibly and of themselves.<\/p>\n<p>   This is the only way by which souls can be persuaded. Argue with them;<br \/>\n   urge them; try to force them-and they will cling the closer to the<br \/>\n   encumbrances which are clogging their steps. But present to them Jesus<br \/>\n   in the beauty and attractiveness of his person and work, and there will<br \/>\n   be a natural loosening of impediments; as the snow which had been<br \/>\n   bending the leaves to the earth drops away when the sun begins to<br \/>\n   shine. And God never takes aught from us, without giving us something<br \/>\n   better. He removes the symbol, to give us the reality; breaks the type,<br \/>\n   to give the substance; releases us from the natural and human, to give<br \/>\n   us the divine. Oh, trust him, soul: and dare to let go, that thou<br \/>\n   mayest take; to be stripped, that thou mayest become clothed!<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>XXVIII. CHASTISEMENT<\/p>\n<p>    Whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom he<br \/>\n    receiveth.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   HEBREWS xii. 6.<\/p>\n<p>    IT is hardly possible to suppose that any shall read these lines who<br \/>\n   have not drunk of the bitter cup of affliction. Some may have even<br \/>\n   endured a great fight of afflictions. Squadron after squadron has been<br \/>\n   drawn up in array, and broken its regiments on the devoted soul. It has<br \/>\n   come to us in different forms, but in one form or another it has come<br \/>\n   to us all. Perhaps our physical strength and health have been weakened<br \/>\n   in the way; or we have been racked with unutterable anguish in mind or<br \/>\n   body; or have been obliged to see our beloved slowly slipping from the<br \/>\n   grasp of our affection, which was condemned to stand paralyzed and<br \/>\n   helpless by. In some cases, affliction has come to us in the earning of<br \/>\n   our daily bread, which has been procured with difficulty and pain,<br \/>\n   whilst care has never been long absent from our hearts, or want from<br \/>\n   our homes. In others, homes which were as full of merry voices as the<br \/>\n   woods in spring of sweet-voiced choristers are empty and silent. Ah,<br \/>\n   how infinite are the shades of grief! how extended the gamut of pain!<br \/>\n   How many can cry with the Psalmist, &#8220;All thy waves and thy billows are<br \/>\n   gone over me!<\/p>\n<p>   We can see clearly the reason of all this suffering. The course of<br \/>\n   nature is out of joint. Man&#8217;s sin has put not himself only, but the<br \/>\n   whole course of nature into collision with the will and law of God; so<br \/>\n   that it groans and travails in its pains. Selfishness has also<br \/>\n   alienated man from his fellows, inciting him to amass all that he can<br \/>\n   lay hands on for himself, oblivious to the bitter sufferings of those<br \/>\n   around him, and careless of their woes. Whilst behind the whole course<br \/>\n   of nature there is the incessant activity of malignant spirits, who, as<br \/>\n   in the case of Job, may be plotting against us, reveling in any<br \/>\n   mischief, which, for some great reasons, they are permitted to work to<br \/>\n   our hurt.<\/p>\n<p>   There are different ways in which affliction may be borne. Some despise<br \/>\n   it (ver. 5). They refuse to acknowledge any reason in themselves for<br \/>\n   its infliction. They reject the lesson it was designed to teach. They<br \/>\n   harden themselves in stoical indifference, resolving to bear it with<br \/>\n   defiant and desperate courage. Some faint under it (ver. 5). They<br \/>\n   become despondent and dispirited, or lose heart and hope. Like Pliable,<br \/>\n   they are soon daunted, and get out of the Slough of Despond with as<br \/>\n   little cost as possible to themselves; or, like Timorous and Mistrust,<br \/>\n   turn back from the lion&#8217;s roar. We ought to be in subjection. Lifting<br \/>\n   the cup meekly and submissively to our lips; calmly and trustfully<br \/>\n   saying &#8220;Amen&#8221;to every billow and wave; lovingly trying to learn the<br \/>\n   lesson written on the page of trial; and bowing ourselves as the reeds<br \/>\n   of the river&#8217;s edge to the sweeping hurricane of trial. But this,<br \/>\n   though the only true and safe course, is by no means an easy one.<\/p>\n<p>   Subjection in affliction is only possible when we can see in it the<br \/>\n   hand of the Father of spirits (ver. 9). So long as we look at the<br \/>\n   second causes, at men or things, as being the origin and source of our<br \/>\n   sorrows, we shall be filled alternately with burning indignation and<br \/>\n   hopeless grief. But when we come to understand that nothing can happen<br \/>\n   to us except as our Father permits, and that, though our trials may<br \/>\n   originate in some lower source, yet they become God&#8217;s will for us as<br \/>\n   soon as they are permitted to reach us through the defense of his<br \/>\n   environing presence, then we smile through our tears; we kiss the dear<br \/>\n   hand that uses another as its rod; we realize that each moment&#8217;s pain<br \/>\n   originates in our Father&#8217;s heart; and we are at rest. Judas may seem to<br \/>\n   mix the cup, and put it to our lips; but it is nevertheless the cup<br \/>\n   which our Father giveth us to drink, and shall we not drink it? Much of<br \/>\n   the anguish passes away from life&#8217;s trials as soon as we discern our<br \/>\n   Father&#8217;s hand; then&#8212;&#8212;<\/p>\n<p>   Affliction becomes chastisement. There is a great difference between<br \/>\n   these two. Affliction may come from a malignant and unfriendly source;<br \/>\n   chastisement is the work of the Father, yearning over his little<br \/>\n   children, desiring to eliminate from their characters all that is<br \/>\n   unlovely and unholy, and to secure in them entire conformity to his<br \/>\n   character and will. But, before you can appropriate the comfort of<br \/>\n   these words, let me earnestly ask you, my reader, whether you are a<br \/>\n   child? None are children in the sense of which we are speaking now,<br \/>\n   save those who have been born into the divine family by regeneration,<br \/>\n   through the grace of the Holy Spirit. Of this birth, faith is the sure<br \/>\n   sign and token; for it is written: &#8220;Those that believe on his name are<br \/>\n   born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of<br \/>\n   man, but of God.&#8221; Are you a child? Does the Spirit witness with your<br \/>\n   spirit that you are born of God? Can you look up into his face and cry,<br \/>\n   &#8220;Abba, Father- If so, you are surrounded by your Father&#8217;s tender,<br \/>\n   loving care. Nothing can reach you without passing through the cordon<br \/>\n   of his protection. If, therefore, affliction does lay its rough hand<br \/>\n   upon your arm, ;arresting you, then be sure that it must first have<br \/>\n   obtained permission from One who loves you infinitely, and who is<br \/>\n   willing to expose both you and himself to pain because of the vast<br \/>\n   profit on which he has set his heart.<\/p>\n<p>    All chastisement has a Purpose. There is nothing so absolutely<br \/>\n   crushing in sorrow as to feel one&#8217;s self drifting at the mercy of some<br \/>\n   chance wave, sweeping forward to an unknown shore. But a great calm<br \/>\n   settles down upon us when we realize that life is a schoolhouse, in<br \/>\n   which we are being taught by our Father himself, who sets our lessons<br \/>\n   as he sees we require them. The drill-sergeant has a purpose in every<br \/>\n   exercise; the professor of music, an object in every scale; the farmer,<br \/>\n   an end in every method of husbandry. &#8220;He does not thresh fitches with a<br \/>\n   sharp threshing instrument, neither is a cart-wheel turned about upon<br \/>\n   cummin; but the fitches are beaten out with a staff, and the cummin<br \/>\n   with a rod.&#8221; So God has a purpose in every pain he permits us to feel.<br \/>\n   There is nothing fortuitous or empirical or capricious in his dealings<br \/>\n   with his own.<\/p>\n<p>   The purposes which chastisement subserves are very various. Of course<br \/>\n   we know that the penalty of our sins has been laid on the head of our<br \/>\n   great Substitute; and that, therefore, we are forever relieved from<br \/>\n   their penal consequences. But though that is so, yet often chastisement<br \/>\n   follows on our wrong-doing; not that we expiate the wrong-doing by<br \/>\n   suffering, but that we may be compelled to regard it in its true light.<br \/>\n   Amid the pain we suffer we are compelled to review our past. The<br \/>\n   carelessness, the unwatchfulness, the prayerlessness which have been<br \/>\n   working within us pass slowly before our minds. We see where we had<br \/>\n   been going astray for long months or years. We discover how deeply and<br \/>\n   incessantly we had been grieving God&#8217;s Holy Spirit. We find that an<br \/>\n   alienation had been widening the breach between God and our souls,<br \/>\n   which, if it had proceeded further, must have involved moral ruin.<br \/>\n   Perhaps we never see our true character until the light dies off the<br \/>\n   landscape, and the clouds overcast the sky, and the wind rises<br \/>\n   moaningly about the house of our life.<\/p>\n<p>   Times of affliction lead to heart-searchings, and we become<br \/>\n   increasingly aware of sins of which we had hardly thought at all. And<br \/>\n   even though the offense may be confessed and put away, so long as<br \/>\n   affliction lasts there is a subdued temper of heart and mind, which is<br \/>\n   most favorable to religious growth. We cannot forget our sin so long as<br \/>\n   the stroke of the Almighty lies on our soul; and we are compelled to<br \/>\n   maintain a habit of holy watchfulness against its recurrence.<\/p>\n<p>   It is also in affliction that we learn that fellowship with the<br \/>\n   sufferings of Christ and that sympathy for others which are so lovely<br \/>\n   in true Christians. That is not the loftiest type of character which,<br \/>\n   like the Chinese pictures, has no background of shadow. Even Christ<br \/>\n   could only learn obedience by the things that he suffered, or become a<br \/>\n   perfect High-Priest by the ordeal of temptation. And how little can we<br \/>\n   enter into the inner depths of his soul, unless we tread the shadowed<br \/>\n   paths, or lie prostrate in the secluded glades of Gethsemane! We who<br \/>\n   attempt to assuage the griefs of mankind must ourselves be acquainted<br \/>\n   with grief, and become men of sorrows.<\/p>\n<p>   Be sure, then, that not one moment&#8217;s pain is given you to bear that<br \/>\n   could have been dispensed with. Each has been the subject of divine<br \/>\n   consideration before permitted to come, and each will be removed<br \/>\n   directly its needed mission is fulfilled.<\/p>\n<p>   Special discipline is evidence of special love (ver. 6). It costs us<br \/>\n   much less to fling our superfluities on those we love than to cause<br \/>\n   them pain. Indulgence is a sign not of intense but of slender love. The<br \/>\n   heart that really and wisely loves will bear the pain of causing pain,<br \/>\n   will incur the risk of being misjudged, will not flinch from<br \/>\n   misrepresentation and reproach; from all of which a less affection<br \/>\n   would warily shrink. It is because our Father loves us that he chastens<br \/>\n   us. He would not take so much trouble over us if we were not dear to<br \/>\n   his heart. It is because we are sons that he sets himself to scourge<br \/>\n   us. But oh, how much he suffers as he wields that scourge of small<br \/>\n   cords! Yet, hail each blow; for each sting and smart cries to thee that<br \/>\n   thou art being received into the inner circle of love.<\/p>\n<p>   When suppliants for his healing help came to our Lord, for the most<br \/>\n   part he hastened to their side. But on one occasion he lingered yet two<br \/>\n   days in the place where he was. He dared to face the suspicion of<br \/>\n   neglect and the loving impeachment of bereaved love, because he loved<br \/>\n   Martha and her sister and Lazarus. He loved them too much to be<br \/>\n   satisfied with doing small things for them, or revealing only fragments<br \/>\n   of his great glory. He longed to enrich them with his precious<br \/>\n   revelation of resurrection life. But his end could only be reached at<br \/>\n   the cost of untold sorrow, even unto death. Lazarus must die, and lie<br \/>\n   for two days in the grave, before his mightiest miracle could be<br \/>\n   wrought. And so he let the thunder-cloud break on the home lie loved,<br \/>\n   that he might be able to flash on it light which broke into a rainbow<br \/>\n   of prismatic glory.<\/p>\n<p>   If you are signally visited with suffering, such as you cannot connect<br \/>\n   with persistence in carelessness or neglect, then take it that you are<br \/>\n   one of Heaven&#8217;s favorites. It is not, as men think, the child of<br \/>\n   fortune and earthly grace, dowered with gifts in prodigal profusion,<br \/>\n   who is best beloved of God; but oftenest the child of poverty and pain<br \/>\n   and misfortune and heart-break. &#8220;If ye be without chastisement, whereof<br \/>\n   all are partakers, then ye are bastards and not sons.&#8221; Oh, ye who<br \/>\n   escape the rod, begin seriously to ask whether indeed ye be born again!<\/p>\n<p>   Pain is fraught with precious results (vv. 10, ii). &#8221; Not joyous but<br \/>\n   grievous: nevertheless afterward.&#8221; How full of meaning is the<br \/>\n   &#8220;afterward.&#8221; Who shall estimate the hundredfold of blessing from each<br \/>\n   moment of pain? The Psalms are crystallized tears. The Epistles were in<br \/>\n   many cases written in prison. The greatest teachers of mankind have<br \/>\n   learned their most helpful lessons in sorrow&#8217;s school. The noblest<br \/>\n   characters have been forged in a furnace. Acts which will live forever,<br \/>\n   masterpieces of art and music and literature, have originated in ages<br \/>\n   of storm and tempest and heart-rending agony. And so also is it with<br \/>\n   our earthly discipline. The ripest results are sorrow-born.  &#8220;The path<br \/>\n   of sorrow, and that path alone, Leads to the land where sorrow is<br \/>\n   unknown.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Holiness is the product of sorrow, when sanctified by the grace of God.<br \/>\n   Not that sorrow necessarily makes us holy, because that is the<br \/>\n   prerogative of the divine Spirit; and, as a matter of fact, many<br \/>\n   sufferers are hard and complaining and unlovely. But that sorrow<br \/>\n   predisposes us to turn from the distractions of earth to receive those<br \/>\n   influences of the grace of God which are most operative where the soul<br \/>\n   is calm and still, sitting in a veiled and darkened room, whilst<br \/>\n   suffering plies body or mind. Who of us does not feel willing to<br \/>\n   suffer, if only this precious result shall accrue, that we may be<br \/>\n   &#8220;partakers of his holiness&#8221; ?<\/p>\n<p>   Fruit is another product (ver. 11). Where, think you, does the<br \/>\n   Husbandman of souls most often see the fruit he loves so well, and hear<br \/>\n   the tones of deepest trust? Not where his gifts are most profuse, but<br \/>\n   where they are most meager. Not within the halls of successful ambition<br \/>\n   or satiated luxury, but in cottages of poverty, and rooms dedicated to<br \/>\n   ceaseless pain. Genial almost to a miracle is the soil of sorrow.<br \/>\n   Necessary beyond all count is the pruning-knife of pain.<\/p>\n<p>   Count, if you will, the precious kinds of fruit. There is patience,<br \/>\n   which endures the Father&#8217;s will; and trust that sees the Father&#8217;s hand<br \/>\n   behind the rough disguise; and peace, that lies still, content with the<br \/>\n   Father&#8217;s plan; and righteousness, that conforms itself to the Father&#8217;s<br \/>\n   requirements; and love, that clings more closely than ever to the<br \/>\n   Father&#8217;s heart; and gentleness, which deals leniently with others,<br \/>\n   because of what we have learned of ourselves.<\/p>\n<p>   Nor is it for very long. Jesus, who endured the cross and shame and<br \/>\n   spitting, is now set down on the right hand of the throne of God. Ere<br \/>\n   long we too shall come out of the great tribulation, to sit by his<br \/>\n   side. Every tear kissed away; every throb of anguish stayed; every<br \/>\n   memory of pain allayed by God&#8217;s anodyne of bliss. The results will be<br \/>\n   ours forever. But sorrow and sighing, which may have been our daily<br \/>\n   comrades to the gates of the celestial city, will flee away as we step<br \/>\n   across its threshold, unable to exist in that radiant glory. &#8220;And God<br \/>\n   shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more<br \/>\n   death, neither sorrow nor crying; neither shall there be any more<br \/>\n   pain.&#8221; &#8220;For I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not<br \/>\n   worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us.&#8221;<br \/>\n   &#8220;For our light affliction, which is but for a moment, worketh for us a<br \/>\n   far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory.&#8221; &#8220;Wherefore lift up the<br \/>\n   hands that hang down, and the feeble knees.&#8221;<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                              XXIX. THE IDEAL LIFE<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Follow peace with all men, and holiness, without which no man shall see the<br \/>\n    Lord: looking diligently lest any man fail of the grace of God; lest any<br \/>\n    root of bitterness springing up trouble you, and thereby many be<br \/>\n    defiled.&#8221;-HEBREWS xii. 14, 15.<\/p>\n<p>   How beautiful and solemn are these words, like the swelling cadence of<br \/>\n   heaven&#8217;s own music. Evidently they do not emanate from this<br \/>\n   sorrow-stricken and warring world; they are one of the laws of the<br \/>\n   kingdom of heaven, intended to mold and fashion our life on earth. It<br \/>\n   is quite likely that those who elect to obey them may not achieve name<br \/>\n   and fame amongst men; but they will win something infinitely better-the<br \/>\n   beatitude of blessedness, the smile of the Saviour, and the vision of<br \/>\n   God.<\/p>\n<p>   There are souls among us of whom the world is not worthy; yet for whom<br \/>\n   the world, when it catches sight of them, prepares its bitterest venom;<br \/>\n   who have withdrawn their interest from the ambitions and schemes, the<br \/>\n   excitements and passions of their fellows, and who live a retired life,<br \/>\n   hidden with Christ in God, content to be unknowing and unknown; eager<br \/>\n   only to please God, to know him, or rather to be known of him, and to<br \/>\n   preserve the perfect balance of their nature with him, as its center<br \/>\n   and pivot and final cause. Such souls, perhaps, will best understand<br \/>\n   the infinite meaning and beauty of these deep and blessed words.<\/p>\n<p>   THERE IS OUR ATTITUDE TOWARD GOD. &#8221; Follow after holiness.&#8221; In the<br \/>\n   Revised Version this is rendered sanctification.&#8221; And this in turn is<br \/>\n   only a Latin equivalent for &#8220;setting apart &#8220;, as Sinai among mountains;<br \/>\n   the Sabbath among the days of the week; the Levites among the Jews; and<br \/>\n   the Jews among the nations of the earth.<\/p>\n<p>   But after all there is a deeper thought. Why were people, places, and<br \/>\n   things set apart? Was it not because God was there? He came down in<br \/>\n   might and glory on Sinai; therefore they needed to set bounds around<br \/>\n   its lower declivities. He chose to rest on the seventh day from all his<br \/>\n   work; therefore it was hallowed and sanctified. He selected the Jews to<br \/>\n   be his peculiar people, and the Levites to be his priests; therefore<br \/>\n   they were isolated from all beside. He appeared to Moses in the bush,<br \/>\n   glowing with the light of the Shekinah; therefore the spot was holy<br \/>\n   ground, and the shepherd needed to bare his feet. In other words, it is<br \/>\n   the presence of God which makes holy. There is only one Being in all<br \/>\n   the universe who is really holy. Holiness is the attribute of his<br \/>\n   nature, and of his nature only. We can never be holy apart from God;<br \/>\n   but when God enters the spirit of man, he brings holiness with him.<br \/>\n   Nay, the presence of God in man is holiness.<\/p>\n<p>   A room or public building may be full of delicious sunlight. But that<br \/>\n   sunlight is not the property of the room. It does not belong to it. You<br \/>\n   cannot congratulate it upon its possession. For when the shadows of<br \/>\n   evening gather, and curtain the face of the sun, the chamber is as dark<br \/>\n   as possible. It is light only so long as the sun dwells in it. So the<br \/>\n   human spirit has no holiness apart from God. Holiness is not a<br \/>\n   perquisite or property or attribute to which any of us can lay claim.<br \/>\n   It is the indwelling of God&#8217;s light and glory within us. He is the holy<br \/>\n   man in whom God dwells. He is the holier in whom God dwells more fully.<br \/>\n   He is the holiest who, however poor his intellect and mean his earthly<br \/>\n   lot, is most possessed and filled by the presence of God through the<br \/>\n   Holy Ghost. We need not wonder at the Apostle addressing believers as<br \/>\n   saints, when he was able to say of them: &#8220;Your body is the temple of<br \/>\n   the Holy Ghost, which is in you&#8221; (1 Cor. iii. 16; vi. 19).<\/p>\n<p>   Why, then, does the sacred writer bid us &#8220;follow after holiness,&#8221; as<br \/>\n   though it were an acquisition? Because, though holiness is the<br \/>\n   infilling of man&#8217;s spirit by the Spirit of God, yet there are certain<br \/>\n   very important conditions to be observed by us if we would secure and<br \/>\n   enjoy that blessed gift.<\/p>\n<p>   Give self no quarter. It is always asserting itself in one or other of<br \/>\n   its Protean shapes. Do not expect to be rid of it. Even if you say you<br \/>\n   have conquered it, then it lurks beneath the smile of your<br \/>\n   self-complacency. It may show itself in religious pride, in desire to<br \/>\n   excel in virtue, in the satisfaction with which we hear ourselves<br \/>\n   remarked for our humility. It will need incessant watchfulness, because<br \/>\n   where self is there God cannot come. He will not share his glory with<br \/>\n   another. When we are settling down to slumber, we may expect the cry,<br \/>\n   &#8220;Thine enemy is upon thee; &#8220;for it will invade our closets and our<br \/>\n   places of deepest retirement.<\/p>\n<p>   It is impossible to read the Epistles of the Apostle Peter without<br \/>\n   being impressed with the solemn and awful character of the Christian<br \/>\n   life, the constant need of watchfulness, the urgency for diligence,<br \/>\n   self-restraint, and self-denial. Oh for this holy sensitiveness! always<br \/>\n   exercising the self~watch; never sparing ourselves; merciful to others<br \/>\n   because so merciless to self; continually exercising ourselves to<br \/>\n   preserve a conscience void of offense toward God and men.<\/p>\n<p>   Yield to God. He is ever seeking the point of least resistance in our<br \/>\n   natures. Help him to find it; and when found, be sure to let him have<br \/>\n   his blessed way. &#8220;Whatsoever he saith unto you, do it.&#8221; Work out what<br \/>\n   God works in. Translate the thoughts of God into the vernacular of<br \/>\n   daily obedience. Be as plastic to his touch as clay in the hands of the<br \/>\n   potter, so that you may realize every ideal which is in his heart. Be<br \/>\n   not as the horse and mule, but let your mouth be tender to every motion<br \/>\n   of the divine purpose concerning you. And if you find it difficult to<br \/>\n   maintain this attitude, be sure to tell your difficulty to the Holy<br \/>\n   Spirit, and trust him to keep your heart steadfast and unmovable, fixed<br \/>\n   and obedient.<\/p>\n<p>   Take time to it. &#8220;Follow after.&#8221; This habit is not to be acquired in a<br \/>\n   bound or at a leap. It can be formed in its perfection only after years<br \/>\n   of self-discipline and watchful self-culture. To abide ever in Christ,<br \/>\n   to yield to God, to keep all the windows of the nature open toward his<br \/>\n   gracious infilling, to turn naturally to him, and first, amid peril and<br \/>\n   temptations, in all times of sorrow and trial, this is not natural, but<br \/>\n   it may become as second nature by habitual diligence.<\/p>\n<p>   But it must necessarily be the work of time ere the sense of effort<br \/>\n   ceases and the soul naturally and spontaneously turns to God &#8220;in every<br \/>\n   hour of waking thought.&#8221; And if we are to acquire this blessed and<br \/>\n   perpetual attitude of soul, we must take time to acquire it, as to<br \/>\n   acquire aught else which is really precious. It must be no by~play; nor<br \/>\n   the work of off or leisure hours; nor a pastime: but the serious object<br \/>\n   of life, the purpose which shall thread all the varied beads of life&#8217;s<br \/>\n   chain, and give a beautiful unity to all.<\/p>\n<p>   To such a character there shall be the vision of God. &#8220;Blessed are the<br \/>\n   pure in heart; for they shall see God.&#8221; Had you been beside Moses<br \/>\n   during his forty days in the heart of the cloud, when he saw God face<br \/>\n   to face, you would not have seen him if you had not been holy. Had you<br \/>\n   stood beside the martyr Stephen when he beheld the glory of God, and<br \/>\n   the Son of man standing beside him, your eyes would have discerned<br \/>\n   nothing if you had not been holy. Yea, if it were possible for you<br \/>\n   without holiness to pass within the pearly gate, you would not see the<br \/>\n   sheen, as it were, of sapphire; you would carry with you your own<br \/>\n   circumference of darkness, and the radiant vision would vanish as you<br \/>\n   approached. &#8220;Without holiness no man shall see the Lord.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   The heart has eyes as well as the head; and for want of holiness these<br \/>\n   become seriously impaired, so that the wise in their own conceits see<br \/>\n   not, whilst those who are simple, humble, and pure in heart behold the<br \/>\n   hidden and prepared things of God. The one condition for seeing God in<br \/>\n   his Word, in nature, in daily life, and in closet-fellowship, is<br \/>\n   holiness of heart wrought there by his own indwelling. Follow after<br \/>\n   holiness as men pursue pleasure; as the athlete runs for the prize; as<br \/>\n   the votary of fashion follows in the wake of the crowd.<\/p>\n<p>   THERE IS OUR ATTITUDE TOWARD MEN. &#8221; Follow after peace.&#8221; The effect of<br \/>\n   righteousness is always peace. If you are holy, you will be at peace.<br \/>\n   Peace is broken by sin; but the holy soul takes sin instantly to the<br \/>\n   Blood. Peace is broken by temptation; but the holy soul has learned to<br \/>\n   put Christ between itself and the first breath of the tempter. Peace is<br \/>\n   broken by care, dissatisfaction, and unrest; but the Lord stands around<br \/>\n   the holy soul, as do the mountains around Jerusalem, which shield off<br \/>\n   the cruel winds, and collect the rain which streams down their broad<br \/>\n   sides to make the dwellers in the valleys rejoice and sing. Others may<br \/>\n   be fretful and feverish, the subjects of wild alarms; but there is<br \/>\n   perfect peace to the soul which has God, and is satisfied.<\/p>\n<p>   When a man is full of the peace of God, he will naturally become a son<br \/>\n   of peace. He will follow after peace with them that call on the Lord<br \/>\n   out of a pure heart (2 Tim. ii. 22). He will endeavor to keep the unity<br \/>\n   of the Spirit in the bond of peace (Eph. iv. 3). He will sow harvests<br \/>\n   of peace as he makes peace (James iii. 18). All his epistles, like<br \/>\n   those of the great Apostle, will breathe benedictions of peace; and his<br \/>\n   entrance to a home will seem like a living embodiment of the ancient<br \/>\n   form of benediction: Peace be to this house. He will have a wonderful<br \/>\n   power of calling out responses from like-minded men; but where that is<br \/>\n   not the case, his peace, white-robed and dove-winged, shall come back<br \/>\n   to him again.<\/p>\n<p>   But there must be a definite following after peace. The temperaments of<br \/>\n   some are so trying. They are so apt to look at things in a wrong light,<br \/>\n   to put misconstructions on harmless actions, and to stand out on<br \/>\n   trifles. Hence the need of endeavor and patience and watchfulness, that<br \/>\n   we may exercise a wholesome influence as peacemakers.<\/p>\n<p>   Avoid becoming a party to a quarrel. It takes two to make a quarrel;<br \/>\n   never be one. A soft answer will often turn away wrath, and where it<br \/>\n   does not, yield before the wrong-doer, give place to wrath, let it<br \/>\n   expend itself unhindered by your resistance; it will soon have vented<br \/>\n   itself, to be succeeded by shame, penitence, and regret.<\/p>\n<p>   If opposed to the malice of men, do not avenge yourselves. Our cause is<br \/>\n   more God&#8217;s than it is our own. It is for him to vindicate us; and he<br \/>\n   will. He may permit a temporary cloud to rest on us for some wise<br \/>\n   purpose; but ultimately he will bring out our righteousness as the<br \/>\n   light, and our judgment as the noonday. The non-resistance of evil is<br \/>\n   the dear teaching of Christ (Matt. v.39; Rom. xii. 19; 1 Pet. ii. 21).<br \/>\n   Stand up for the true, the holy, the good, at all costs; but think very<br \/>\n   little of standing up for your own rights. What are your rights? Are<br \/>\n   you anything better than a poor sinner who has forfeited all? You<br \/>\n   deserve to be treated much worse than you were ever treated at the<br \/>\n   worst. Leave God to vindicate you.<\/p>\n<p>   Do not give cause of offense. If you are aware of certain<br \/>\n   susceptibilities on the part of others, where they may be easily<br \/>\n   wounded and irritated, avoid touching them, if you can do so without<br \/>\n   being a traitor to God&#8217;s holy truth. And if thy brother has any true<br \/>\n   bill against you, rest not day nor night, tarry not even at the<br \/>\n   footstool of divine mercy; but go to him forthwith, and seek his<br \/>\n   forgiveness, and make ample restitution, that he may have no cause of<br \/>\n   reproach against thy professions, or against thy Lord (Matt.v.23).<\/p>\n<p>   Oh for more of his peace! -in the face never crossed by impatience; in<br \/>\n   the voice never rising above gentle tones; in the manner never excited<br \/>\n   or morose; in the gesture still and restful, which acts as oil poured<br \/>\n   over the raging billows of the sea when they foam around the bulwarks<br \/>\n   of the ship and are suddenly quelled.<\/p>\n<p>   THERE IS OUR ATTITUDE TOWARD OUR FELLOW CHRISTIANS. &#8220;Looking diligently<br \/>\n   lest any man fail of the grace of God.&#8221; It is a beautiful provision<br \/>\n   that love to common Lord attracts us into the fellowship of his<br \/>\n   disciples; and as no individual life truly develops in Solitariness, so<br \/>\n   no Christian is right or healthy who isolates himself from the<br \/>\n   communion of saints. But we go not there only for selfish<br \/>\n   gratification, but that we may look after one another, not leaving it<br \/>\n   to the officers of the host, but each doing our own share.<\/p>\n<p>   There are three dangers. The laggards. This is the meaning of &#8220;fail.&#8221;<br \/>\n   The idea is borrowed from a party of travelers, some of whom lag<br \/>\n   behind, as in the retreat from Moscow, to fall a prey to Cossacks,<br \/>\n   wolves, or the awful sleep. Let us who are in the front ranks, strong<br \/>\n   and healthy, go back to look after the weaklings who loiter to their<br \/>\n   peril.<\/p>\n<p>   The root of bitterness. There may be some evil root lurking in some<br \/>\n   heart, hidden now, but which Wi1l bear a terrible harvest of misery to<br \/>\n   many. So was it in Israel once, when Achan conceived thoughts of<br \/>\n   covetousness, and brought evil on himself, and mourning on the host<br \/>\n   whose defeat he had brought about. If we can discover the presence of<br \/>\n   such roots of bitterness, let us, with much searching of our own souls,<br \/>\n   humility, and prayer, root them out ere they can spring up to cause<br \/>\n   trouble.<\/p>\n<p>   The profane and early-minded. Of these Esau is the type, &#8220;who for one<br \/>\n   morsel of meat sold his birthright.&#8221; Alas are there not many such? For<br \/>\n   one momentary gratification of the flesh, they forfeit not their<br \/>\n   salvation perhaps (we are not told that even Esau forfeited that); but<br \/>\n   their power to lead, to teach, to receive and hand on blessing to the<br \/>\n   Church.<\/p>\n<p>   Are any such reading these words? Let them beware! Such choices are<br \/>\n   sometimes irrevocable. So was it with Esau. He wept and cried like some<br \/>\n   trapped animal; but he could not alter the destiny he had made for<br \/>\n   himself. The words &#8220;place for repentance&#8221; do not refer to his personal<br \/>\n   salvation, but to the altering of the decision which he had made as a<br \/>\n   young man, and which his father ratified. He could not undo. What he<br \/>\n   had written, he had written. And so there may come a time when you<br \/>\n   would give everything you possess to have again the old power of<br \/>\n   blessing and helping your fellows; but you will find that for one<br \/>\n   moment&#8217;s sensual gratification, the blessed prerogative has slipped<br \/>\n   from your grasp-never-never-never to return. Wherefore, let us eagerly<br \/>\n   and diligently look both to ourselves and our fellow-believers in the<br \/>\n   Church of God.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>XXX. SINAI AND SION<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Ye are come unto Mount Sion, and unto the city of the living God, . . . and<br \/>\n    to an innumerable company of angels; to the general assembly and church of<br \/>\n    the firstborn; . . and to God the Judge of all; and to the spirits of just<br \/>\n    men made perfect; and to Jesus; and to the blood of sprinkling, that<br \/>\n    speaketh better things than that of Abel. &#8220;-HEBREWS xii. 22-24.<\/p>\n<p>   To how great splendor had these Hebrew Christians been<br \/>\n   accustomed-marble courts, throngs of white-robed Levites, splendid<br \/>\n   vestments, the state and pomp of symbol, ceremonial, and choral psalm!<br \/>\n   And to what a contrast were they reduced-a meeting in some hall or<br \/>\n   school, with the poor, afflicted, and persecuted members of a despised<br \/>\n   and hated sect! It was indeed a change, and the inspired writer knew it<br \/>\n   well; and in these magnificent words, the sublime consummation and<br \/>\n   crown of his entire argument, he sets himself to show that, for every<br \/>\n   single item they had renounced, they had become possessed of a<br \/>\n   spiritual counterpart, a reality, an eternal substance, which was<br \/>\n   compensation told over a thousand fimes.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;Ye are come.&#8221; He refuses to admit the thought of it being a future<br \/>\n   experience, reserved for some high day, when the heavenly courts shall<br \/>\n   be thronged by the populations of redeemed and glorified spirits. That<br \/>\n   there will be high days of sacred festivity in that blessed state is<br \/>\n   clear from the Apocalypse of the beloved Apostle. But it is to none of<br \/>\n   them that these words allude. Mark that present tense, &#8220;Ye are come.&#8221;<br \/>\n   Persecuted, weary, humiliated, these Hebrew Christians had already come<br \/>\n   to Mount Sion, to the city of the living God, and to the festal throngs<br \/>\n   of the redeemed. That they saw not these by the eye, and could not<br \/>\n   touch them by the hand of sense, was no reason for doubting that they<br \/>\n   had come to these glorious realities. And what was true of them is true<br \/>\n   of each reader of these lines who is united to the Lord Jesus by a<br \/>\n   living faith.<\/p>\n<p>   WE BELONG TO MOUNT SION. &#8220;Ye are not come unto the mount that might be<br \/>\n   touched and that burned with fire, . . . but ye are come unto Mount<br \/>\n   Sion.&#8221; At the bidding of these two words two mountains rise before us.<br \/>\n   First, Sinai, stern and naked, rifted by tempest, cleft by earthquake,<br \/>\n   the center and focus of the vast sandstone passages which conducted the<br \/>\n   pilgrim host, stage above stage, until it halted at its foot.<\/p>\n<p>   But, grand as Sinai was by nature, it must have been grander far on<br \/>\n   that memorable day in which all elements of terror seemed to converge.<br \/>\n   There was the flash of the forked lightning out of the blackness of the<br \/>\n   brooding clouds. There was the darkness of midnight; the peal of<br \/>\n   thunder, the reverberations of which ran in volumes of sound along<br \/>\n   those resounding corridors; the whirlwind of tempest, and the voice of<br \/>\n   words which they entreated they might not hear any more. And all was<br \/>\n   done to teach the people the majesty, the spirituality, and the<br \/>\n   holiness of God. The result was terror, struck into the hearts of<br \/>\n   sinners, trembling at the contrast between the greatness and holiness<br \/>\n   of God and their own remembered murmurings and shortcomings. Even Moses<br \/>\n   said: &#8220;I exceedingly fear and quake.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   In contrast with this stands Mount Sion, the gray old rock on which<br \/>\n   stood the palace of David and the Temple of God-sites sacred to Jewish<br \/>\n   thought for holy memories and divine associations. &#8220;The Lord hath<br \/>\n   chosen Sion, he hath desired it for his habitation. This is my rest<br \/>\n   forever; here will I dwell; for I have desired it.&#8221; To the pious Jew,<br \/>\n   Mount Sion was the joy of the whole earth, the mountain of holiness,<br \/>\n   the city of the Great King. Her palaces, gray with age, were known to<br \/>\n   be the home and haunt of God. The very aspect of the hoary hills must<br \/>\n   strike panic into the heart of her foes. And her sons walked proudly<br \/>\n   around her ramparts, telling her towers, marking her bulwarks,<br \/>\n   considering her palaces, whilst fathers told to their children the<br \/>\n   Stories of her glory which in their boyhood they too had received<br \/>\n   (Psalm xlviii.).<\/p>\n<p>   The counterpart of this city is ours still, ours forever. The halo of<br \/>\n   glory has faded off those ancient stones, and has passed on to rest on<br \/>\n   the true city of God, of which the foundations are Righteousness, the<br \/>\n   walls Peace, and the gates Praise; which rises beyond the mists and<br \/>\n   clouds of time, in the light that shines not from the sun or moon, but<br \/>\n   from the face of God. In other words, somewhere in this universe there<br \/>\n   is a holy society of souls, pure and lovely, the elite of the family of<br \/>\n   man, gathered in a home which the hand of man has never piled, and the<br \/>\n   sin of man has never soiled. Its walls are jasper, its gates pearl.<br \/>\n   Into it nothing can enter that defiles or works abomination, and deals<br \/>\n   in lies.<\/p>\n<p>   The patriarchs caught sight of that city in their pilgrimage; it<br \/>\n   gleamed before their vision, beckoning them ever forward, and<br \/>\n   forbidding their return to the country from which they had come out.<br \/>\n   And the Seer of Patmos beheld it descending from God out of heaven,<br \/>\n   bathed in the divine glory.<\/p>\n<p>   To that city we have come. It has come down into our hearts; day by day<br \/>\n   we walk its streets; we live in its light, we breathe its atmosphere,<br \/>\n   we enjoy its rights. We have no counterpart in our experience of Mount<br \/>\n   Sinai, with its thunder and terror; but, thank God, we have the reality<br \/>\n   of Mount Sion, with its blessed and holy privileges. Sinai is the law,<br \/>\n   temporary and intermediate; Sion, the Gospel, eternal and abiding.<br \/>\n   Sinai is full of human resolutions and vows, made to be broken; Sion is<br \/>\n   the election of grace. Sinai is terrible with the thunder of law; Sion<br \/>\n   is tender with the appeals of the love of the heart of God.<\/p>\n<p>   WE BELONG TO A GREAT FESTAL THRONG. The converted Jew might miss the<br \/>\n   vast crowds that gathered at the annual feasts, when the tribes of the<br \/>\n   Lord went up; whilst kinsfolk and acquaintance took sweet counsel<br \/>\n   together, as they went to the house of God in company. But, to the<br \/>\n   opened eye of faith, the rooms where they knelt in worship were as full<br \/>\n   of bright and festal multitudes as the mountain of old was full of<br \/>\n   horses and chariots of fire. And these are for us also.<\/p>\n<p>   There is an innumerable company of angels. Myriads. Thousand thousands<br \/>\n   minister to our Lord; ten thousand times ten thousand stand before him.<br \/>\n   When, therefore, the saintly spirit ascends the altar steps of true<br \/>\n   devotion, it passes through a vast host of sympathetic spirits, all of<br \/>\n   whom are devoted to the same Master, and are joining in the same act of<br \/>\n   worship. Listen! Do you not hear the voice of many angels around the<br \/>\n   throne as you draw nigh?<\/p>\n<p>   There is also the general assembly and Church of the first-born. We<br \/>\n   meet the Church of the redeemed each time we sincerely worship God. We<br \/>\n   may belong to some small section of the visible Church, unrecognized<br \/>\n   and unknown by the great bulk of our fellow-believers. We may be<br \/>\n   isolated from all outward fellowship and communion with the saints,<br \/>\n   imprisoned in the sick-chamber, or self-banished to some lone spot for<br \/>\n   the sake of the Gospel; but nothing can exclude us from living<br \/>\n   communion with saintly souls of all communions and sects and<br \/>\n   denominations and names.<\/p>\n<p>   Your name may be written on no communicants&#8217; roll, or church register.<br \/>\n   But is it written in the Lamb&#8217;s Book of Life in heaven? If so, then<br \/>\n   rejoice! This is more important than if the spirits were subject to<br \/>\n   you. And, remember, whenever you worship God you are ascending the<br \/>\n   steps of the true temple, in company with vast hosts of souls, whether<br \/>\n   on this side or on the other of the veil of sense. Neither life nor<br \/>\n   death nor rite nor church order can divide those who, because they are<br \/>\n   one with Christ, are forever one with each other.<\/p>\n<p>   There are also the spirits of just men made perfect. If the former<br \/>\n   phrase rather speaks of the New Testament believers, this may be taken<br \/>\n   to describe the Old Testament saints. Or, if the one designates those<br \/>\n   who are still serving God on earth, the other probably refers to those<br \/>\n   who have passed into the presence of God, and have attained their<br \/>\n   consummation and bliss.<\/p>\n<p>   Who can be lonely and desolate, who can bemoan the past, who can<br \/>\n   disparage the present, when once the spirit is able to realize that<br \/>\n   rejoicing company, in earth and heaven, circling around the Saviour as<br \/>\n   planets around the central sun, and sending in tides and torrents of<br \/>\n   love and worship? Yea, who can forbear to sing, as the ear detects the<br \/>\n   mighty harmonies of every creature which is in heaven, and on the<br \/>\n   earth, and under the earth, saying, &#8220;Blessing, and honor, and glory,<br \/>\n   and power, be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb<br \/>\n   forever.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   WE ARE COME TO THE BLOOD OF JESUS. We dare not approach the august<br \/>\n   Judge of all, were it not for the Mediator between God and men, Jesus<br \/>\n   Christ the righteous. Nor would he avail for his chosen work, unless he<br \/>\n   had shed his most precious blood, which has ratified the new covenant,<br \/>\n   and cleansed away our sins, and now ever avails to sprinkle us from an<br \/>\n   evil conscience, removing each stain of guilt so soon as the soul<br \/>\n   confesses and seeks forgiveness, with tears of penitence and words of<br \/>\n   faith.<\/p>\n<p>   It speaks better things than Abel&#8217;s. That was the blood of martrydom;<br \/>\n   this of sacrifice. That accursed, as it cried from the ground; this<br \/>\n   only pleads for mercy. That denounced wrath; this proclaims reconciling<br \/>\n   love. That led to punishment which branded the murderer; this issues in<br \/>\n   salvation. That was unto death; this is unto life.<\/p>\n<p>   All blood has a cry. Listen to the cry of the blood of Jesus. It speaks<br \/>\n   to man for God. It speak~ to God for man. It tells us that there is no<br \/>\n   condemnation, no wrath, no judgment; because the thunderstorm broke and<br \/>\n   exhausted itself on Calvary. And when we go to our Father, it pleads<br \/>\n   for us from the wounds of the Lamb as it had been slain.<\/p>\n<p>   Oh, precious blood! if better than that of Abel, how much better than<br \/>\n   all the blood of all the beast1 ever slain; than all the sacrifices<br \/>\n   ever offered; than al1 the tears or prayers ever presented in the<br \/>\n   strength of human virtue:  we cannot, we will not refuse thee, or turn<br \/>\n   away from thy pleading cry, or reject him who once spake from the<br \/>\n   cross, and now speaks from heaven!<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                     XXXI. THE THINGS THAT CANNOT BE SHAKEN<\/p>\n<p>    This word, Yet once more, signifieth the removing of those things that are<br \/>\n    shaken, as of things that are made; that those things which cannot be shaken<br \/>\n    may remain.&#8221;-HEBREWS xii. 27.<\/p>\n<p>   WHAT majesty there is in these words! They bear the mint mark of Deity.<br \/>\n   No man could presume to utter them; but they become the august speaker.<br \/>\n   Their original setting is even more magnificent, as we find them in the<br \/>\n   Book of Haggai: &#8220;Thus saith the Lord of hosts; Yet once, it is a little<br \/>\n   while, and I will shake the heavens, and the earth, and the sea, and<br \/>\n   the dry land; and I will shake all nations, and the Desire of all<br \/>\n   nations shall come.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   These words were first spoken to encourage the Jewish exiles on their<br \/>\n   return from Babylon to their ruined Temple and city. The elder men wept<br \/>\n   as they thought of the departed glories of earlier days, and God<br \/>\n   comforted them, as he delights to comfort those who are cast down. &#8220;Be<br \/>\n   comforted,&#8221; said he in effect, &#8220;there is a crisis coming, which will<br \/>\n   test and overthrow all material structures; and in that convulsion the<br \/>\n   outer form will pass away, however fair and costly it may be, whilst<br \/>\n   the inner hidden glory will become more apparent than ever; nay, amid<br \/>\n   all the sounds of wreck and change, there will come the Desire of all<br \/>\n   nations, the substance of which these material objects are but the<br \/>\n   fading and incomplete anticipation.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   These Hebrew Christians were living in the midst of a great shaking. It<br \/>\n   was a time of almost universal trial. God was shaking not earth only,<br \/>\n   but also heaven. The Jewish tenure of Palestine was being shaken by the<br \/>\n   Romans, who claimed it as their conquest. The interpretation given to<br \/>\n   the Word of God by the rabbis was being shaken by the fresh light<br \/>\n   introduced through the words and life and death of Jesus. The supremacy<br \/>\n   of the Temple and its ritual was being shaken by those who taught that<br \/>\n   the true Temple was the Christian Church, and that all the Levitical<br \/>\n   sacrifices had been realized in Christ. The observance of the Sabbath<br \/>\n   was being shaken by those who wished to substitute for it the first day<br \/>\n   of the week.<\/p>\n<p>   The first symptoms of this shaking began when Jesus commenced to teach<br \/>\n   and preach in the crowded cities of Palestine, and all people flocked<br \/>\n   about him. The successive throes became more obvious when the Jewish<br \/>\n   leaders sought to silence the Apostles and stay the onward progress of<br \/>\n   the Church. The Book of the Acts of the Apostles, and the Epistles, are<br \/>\n   full of evidence of the intensity of that revolution which must have<br \/>\n   made many godly people tremble for the Ark of God. And the climax of<br \/>\n   all came in the fearful siege of Jerusalem, when, once and forever, the<br \/>\n   Jewish system was shattered, the Temple burned, the remaining vessels<br \/>\n   sunk in the Tiber, and the Jews were driven from the city which was<br \/>\n   absolutely essential for the performance of their religious rites. The<br \/>\n   whole New Testament is witness to the throes of one of the mightiest<br \/>\n   spiritual revolutions that ever happened; as great in the spiritual<br \/>\n   sphere as the French Revolution was in the temporal.<\/p>\n<p>   It was amidst these fires that this Epistle was written. &#8220;Take heart,&#8221;<br \/>\n   says the inspired writer; &#8220;these shakings come from the hand of God.&#8221;<br \/>\n   Listen to his own words, I shake. And they shall not last forever, yet<br \/>\n   this once; nor will they injure anything of eternal worth and truth. He<br \/>\n   shakes all things, that the material, the sensuous, and the temporal<br \/>\n   may pass away; leaving the essential and eternal to stand out in more<br \/>\n   than former beauty. But not a grain of pure metal shall be lost in the<br \/>\n   fires; not a fragment of heaven&#8217;s masonry shall crumble beneath the<br \/>\n   shock.<\/p>\n<p>   In such a time we are living now. Everything is being shaken and<br \/>\n   tested. But there is a divine purpose in it all, that his eternal truth<br \/>\n   may stand out more clearly and unmistakably, when all human traditions<br \/>\n   and accretions have fallen away, unable to resist the energy of the<br \/>\n   shock. And who will bewail this too bitterly? Who shall weep because<br \/>\n   the winds strip the trees of their old dead leaves, if only the new<br \/>\n   spring verdure may be able to show itself? Who shall lament that the<br \/>\n   heavy blow shatters the mold, if only the perfect image shall stand out<br \/>\n   in complete symmetry? Who shall mourn over the passing away of the<br \/>\n   heaven and the earth, if, as they break up, they reveal beneath them<br \/>\n   the imperishable beauty of the new heavens and the new earth in which<br \/>\n   dwells Righteousness?<\/p>\n<p>   THEOLOGICAL SYSTEMS ARE BEING SHAKEN. There was a time when men<br \/>\n   received their theological beliefs from their teachers, their parents,<br \/>\n   or their Church without a word of question or controversy. There was<br \/>\n   none that moved the wing, or opened the mouth, or chirped. It is not so<br \/>\n   now; the air is filled with questionings. Men are putting into the<br \/>\n   crucible every doctrine which our forefathers held dear. There is no<br \/>\n   veneration shown for time honored creeds or theological distinctions or<br \/>\n   doctrinal formularies. The highest themes, such as the Nature of the<br \/>\n   Atonement, the Necessity of Regeneration, the Duration of Future<br \/>\n   Punishment, are being criticised in the public press.<\/p>\n<p>   Many children of God are very distressed about this, and fear for the<br \/>\n   truth of the Gospel. They speak as if there were no other agents in the<br \/>\n   conflict but those of mortal birth. They lose sight of the eternal<br \/>\n   issues at stake, and the unseen forces which are implicated in the<br \/>\n   conflict. Is it likely that God will allow his precious Gospel to be<br \/>\n   overshadowed or robbed of all essential elements? Has he maintained it<br \/>\n   in its integrity for these ages, and is he now suddenly become a mighty<br \/>\n   man who cannot save? When it seemed as if evangelical doctrine had died<br \/>\n   out of the world in the sixteenth century, because it lingered only<br \/>\n   amid some obscure and humble saints, he raised up one man, who rolled<br \/>\n   back the tides of error, and reared once more the standard of Gospel<br \/>\n   truth; and can he not do it again?<\/p>\n<p>   In these terrible shakings, not one jot or tittle of God&#8217;s Word shall<br \/>\n   perish; not one grain of truth shall fall to the ground; not one stone<br \/>\n   in the fortress shall be dislodged. But they are permitted to come,<br \/>\n   partly to test the chaff and wheat as a winnowing-fan; but chiefly that<br \/>\n   all which is temporal and transient may pass away, whilst the simple<br \/>\n   truth of God becomes more apparent, and shines forth unhidden by the<br \/>\n   scaffolding and rubbish with which the builders have obscured its<br \/>\n   symmetry and beauty. &#8220;The things which cannot be shaken shall remain.<\/p>\n<p>   ECCLESIASTICAL SYSTEMS ARE BEING SHAKEN. It is not enough that any<br \/>\n   religious system should exist; it is asked somewhat rudely to show<br \/>\n   cause why it should continue to exist. The spirit of the age is<br \/>\n   utilitarian, and is reluctant to consider any plea for mercy which is<br \/>\n   not based on a clear evidence of service rendered to its pressing<br \/>\n   necessities.<\/p>\n<p>   The signs of this are abundantly evident. Now it is the<br \/>\n   Disestablishment of the Church which is proposed; a proposal which<br \/>\n   fills with horror those who regard it as necessary for the maintenance<br \/>\n   of Christianity in our midst. Teachers of religion are challenged to<br \/>\n   show reason for assuming their office, or of claiming special<br \/>\n   prerogatives. Methods of work are being weighed in the balances;<br \/>\n   missionary plans trenchantly criticised; religious services<br \/>\n   metamorphosed. Change is threatening the most time-honored customs; and<br \/>\n   all this is very distressing to those who have confused the essence<br \/>\n   with the form, the jewel with the casket, the spirit with the temple in<br \/>\n   which it dwells. But let us not fear. All this is being permitted for<br \/>\n   the wisest ends. There is a great deal of wood, hay, and stubble in all<br \/>\n   our structures which needs to be burned up; but not an ounce of gold or<br \/>\n   silver will ever be destroyed. The waves may wash off the weed which<br \/>\n   has attached itself to the harbor wall; but they will fail to start one<br \/>\n   constituent stone. The simplicity of early Church life has been<br \/>\n   undoubtedly covered over with many accretions which hinder the progress<br \/>\n   of the Church and impede her work; and we may hail any visitation,<br \/>\n   however drastic, which shall set her free. But the Church herself is<br \/>\n   founded on a rock, and the gates of hell shall never prevail against<br \/>\n   her.<\/p>\n<p>   Well was it for the Church of Christ when the days of persecution lay<br \/>\n   sorely on her. Never was she so pure, so spiritually powerful, as then.<br \/>\n   And if such days should ever be allowed to return, and God were to<br \/>\n   shake her fabric with the fierce whirlwinds of martyrdom, there would<br \/>\n   be no need for anxiety. The time-servers, the mere professors, the<br \/>\n   creatures of fashion would stand revealed; but those who had<br \/>\n   experienced the work of God in their souls would endure to the end, and<br \/>\n   their true character would be manifested. &#8220;The things that cannot be<br \/>\n   shaken will remain.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   OUR CHARACTERS AND LIVES ARE CONSTANTLY BEING SHAKEN. What a shake that<br \/>\n   sermon gave us which showed that all our righteousnesses, on which we<br \/>\n   counted so fondly, were but withered leaves! What a shake was that<br \/>\n   commercial disaster which swept away in one blow the savings and credit<br \/>\n   of years, that were engrossing the heart, and left us only what we had<br \/>\n   of spiritual worth! What a shake was that temptation which showed that<br \/>\n   our fancied sinlessness was an empty dream, and that we were as<br \/>\n   sensitive to temptation as those over whom we had been vaunting<br \/>\n   ourselves.<\/p>\n<p>   What has been the net result of all these shakings? Has a hair of our<br \/>\n   heads perished? The old man has perished; but the inward man has been<br \/>\n   daily renewed. The more the marble has wasted, the more the statue has<br \/>\n   grown. As the wooden centers have been knocked down, the solid masonry<br \/>\n   has stood out with growing completeness. &#8220;The things which could not be<br \/>\n   shaken have remained.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;Go on, great Spirit of God: shake with thine earthquakes even more<br \/>\n   violently these characters of ours, that all which is not of thee, but<br \/>\n   of us, and therefore false and selfish, may be revealed and overthrown,<br \/>\n   so that we may learn our true possessions. And as we see them saved to<br \/>\n   us from the general wreck, we shall know that, having been given us by<br \/>\n   thyself, they must partake of thine own permanence and eternity. Let us<br \/>\n   learn the worst of ourselves, that we may learn to prize thy best.&#8221;  At<br \/>\n   the most these shakings are temporary. &#8220;Only this once,&#8221; child of God!<br \/>\n   Then, nevermore!<\/p>\n<p>   THERE ARE A FEW THINGS WHICH CANNOT BE SHAKEN. God&#8217;s Word. Heaven and<br \/>\n   earth may pass away; but God&#8217;s Word-never! All flesh is grass, and all<br \/>\n   the glory of man, his opinions, his pretensions, his pomp and pride, as<br \/>\n   the flower of grass, beautiful, but evanescent; but the Word of the<br \/>\n   Lord shall stand forever, and this is the Word which by the Gospel is<br \/>\n   being preached. Let us not fear modern criticism; it cannot rob us of<br \/>\n   one jot or tittle of God&#8217;s truth. Scripture will shake it off, as the<br \/>\n   Apostle did the viper which fastened on his hand, and felt no hurt.<\/p>\n<p>   God&#8217;s Love. Our friends&#8217; love may be shaken by a rumor, a moment&#8217;s<br \/>\n   neglect, a change in our estate; but God&#8217;s love is like himself,<br \/>\n   immutable. No storm can reach high enough to touch the empyrean of his<br \/>\n   love. He never began to love us for anything in ourselves, nor will he<br \/>\n   cease to love us because of what he discovers us to be. The love of<br \/>\n   God, which is in Jesus Christ our Lord, is unassailable by change or<br \/>\n   shock.<\/p>\n<p>   God&#8217;s Eternal Kingdom. &#8220;We receive a kingdom which cannot be shaken.&#8221;<br \/>\n   Amid all our revolutions and political changes that Kingdom is coming.<br \/>\n   It is assuming body and shape and power. It is now in mystery, but it<br \/>\n   shall soon be revealed. And it cannot be touched by any sudden attack<br \/>\n   or revolt of human passion. &#8220;The God of heaven shall set up a kingdom,<br \/>\n   which shall never be destroyed.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Let us count up our inalienable and imperishable treasures; and though<br \/>\n   around us there is the terror of the darkness or the pestilence of the<br \/>\n   noontide, we shall be kept in perfect peace; as when some petty<br \/>\n   sovereign eyes with equanimity the mob arising to sack his palace,<br \/>\n   because long ago he sent all his treasures to be kept in the strong<br \/>\n   cellars of the Bank of England.<\/p>\n<p>   This world of change and earthquake is not our rest or home. These<br \/>\n   await us where God lives, in the city which hath foundations, and in<br \/>\n   the land where the storm rages not, but the sea of glass lies<br \/>\n   peacefully at the foot of the throne of God. We may well brace<br \/>\n   ourselves to fortitude and patience, to reverence and Godly fear; since<br \/>\n   we have that in ourselves and yonder which partakes of the nature of<br \/>\n   God, and neither thieving time can steal it, nor moth corrupt, nor<br \/>\n   change affect.<\/p>\n<p>   It is out of a spirit like this that we are able to offer service that<br \/>\n   pleases God. Too often there is a self-assumption, a vainglory, an<br \/>\n   energy of the flesh, that must be in the deepest degree objectionable<br \/>\n   to his holy, loving eye. It partakes so much of the unrest and chafe of<br \/>\n   the world around. But when once we breathe the Spirit of the Eternal<br \/>\n   and Infinite, our hand becomes steadier, our heart quieter, and we<br \/>\n   learn to receive his grace. We do not agonize for it; we claim and use<br \/>\n   it, and we serve God with acceptance, through the merits of Jesus<br \/>\n   Christ our Lord.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                          XXXII. GOD A CONSUMING FIRE.<\/p>\n<p>    Our God is a consuming fire.&#8221;-HEBREWS xii. 29.<\/p>\n<p>   THIS is one of the shortest texts in the Bible. It takes rank with<br \/>\n   those other three brief sentences which declare the nature of God: God<br \/>\n   is Light, God is Love, God is Life. But to many it is one of the most<br \/>\n   awful sayings in the whole of Scripture. It rankles in the memory;<br \/>\n   recurs continually to the uneasy conscience; and rings its wild tocsin<br \/>\n   of alarm in the ear of the anxious inquirer. And yet there is an aspect<br \/>\n   in which it may be viewed which will make it one of the most<br \/>\n   comforting, precious passages in the whole range of inspiration.<\/p>\n<p>   Fire is indeed a word significant of horror. To be awakened from sleep<br \/>\n   by that one awful cry will make the flesh tremble and the heart stand<br \/>\n   still. A baby&#8217;s cradle wrapped in flame; a beloved form suddenly<br \/>\n   enveloped in a burning fiery furnace; a ship on fire amid the wild<br \/>\n   expanse of the homeless ocean, and slowly burning down to the level of<br \/>\n   the waves-in any of these figures you have a suggestion of almost<br \/>\n   unparalleled horror.<\/p>\n<p>   And yet, for all that, what comfort and homelikeness and genial<br \/>\n   blessedness there are in the kindly glow of firelight! There is no sign<br \/>\n   of more abject poverty than the fireless grate. And however warm the<br \/>\n   rooms may be in Russia or France, the traveler greedily longs for the<br \/>\n   blaze of the open fireplace of his native land. Besides, what should we<br \/>\n   do without this strong, good-natured giant, which toils for us so<br \/>\n   sturdily? It draws our carriages along the metal track. It drives the<br \/>\n   machinery of our factories. It disintegrates the precious ore from its<br \/>\n   rocky matrix. It induces a momentary softness in our toughest metals,<br \/>\n   so that we can shape them to our will. The arts of civilized life would<br \/>\n   be impossible but for this Titan worker.<\/p>\n<p>   It is obvious, therefore, that whilst Fire is the synonym for horror<br \/>\n   and dismay, yet it is also full of blessing and good-will. It is the<br \/>\n   former only when its necessary laws are violated. It is the latter when<br \/>\n   those laws are rigorously and reverently observed. Yes, and are not<br \/>\n   destruction and ruin the strange and unnatural work of fire? whilst its<br \/>\n   chosen mission is to bless and beautify and enrich; consuming only the<br \/>\n   dross and thorns and rubbish, so that there may be a clearer revelation<br \/>\n   of the enduring realities over which it has no power.<\/p>\n<p>   When, therefore, our God is compared to fire, is it only because of the<br \/>\n   more terrible aspects of his nature, which are to be dreaded by<br \/>\n   transgressors? Is there not also, and perhaps more largely, a<br \/>\n   suggestion of those beneficent qualities which are needed for our<br \/>\n   purity and comfort? Surely there is a strong flavor of such<br \/>\n   characteristics in the assurance given to us by the prophet Isaiah,<br \/>\n   &#8220;The light of Israel shall be for a fire, and his Holy One for a flame:<br \/>\n   and it shall burn and devour his thorns and his briers in one day&#8221;<br \/>\n   (Isa. x. 17).<\/p>\n<p>   Fire in the Word of God is not always terrible. When of old God came<br \/>\n   down on Sinai, its upper peaks were veiled with impenetrable folds of<br \/>\n   smoke, like the smoke of a furnace. And in the heart of the smoke there<br \/>\n   was the appearance of devouring fire. There is dread here! Bounds had<br \/>\n   been set to keep the people back; but a special message must be see fit<br \/>\n   to warn them against breaking through to gaze, lest the fire should<br \/>\n   break forth upon them. But there was no harm so long as they kept<br \/>\n   without the barriers; and when Moses entered into the very heart of it,<br \/>\n   it did not singe a hair of his head, and injured him no more than when<br \/>\n   it played round the fragile acacia bush, which burned with fire without<br \/>\n   being consumed, not a leaf shriveled, nor a twig scorched. It is quite<br \/>\n   true that in the desert pilgrimage there was much of the punitive<br \/>\n   aspect in the divine fire; as when there came out a fire from the Lord,<br \/>\n   and consumed the two hundred and fifty men with censers who had joined<br \/>\n   in Korah&#8217;s rebellion, and had spoken contemptuously of God&#8217;s anointed<br \/>\n   servants: but, on the other hand, it did not hurt one other soul; and<br \/>\n   these were destroyed, awfully indeed, but almost too suddenly to feel<br \/>\n   the keen smart of pain. And surely that fire did a beneficent work in<br \/>\n   staying the further progress of evil, which would have honeycombed the<br \/>\n   whole nation and led to their destruction as a people.<\/p>\n<p>   In the days of Elijah the fire of God consumed two captains and their<br \/>\n   fifties; but the captains and their troops were full of wanton<br \/>\n   insolence. There was no hurt done to him who knelt at the mountain<br \/>\n   foot, beseeching the man of God with reverence and humility. And when,<br \/>\n   shortly afterward, the great prophet was to go home, it was a chariot<br \/>\n   of fire in which he sat himself, as in some congenial and friendly<br \/>\n   element, to waft him to his home.<\/p>\n<p>   And on the day of Pentecost when each head bent low beneath the sound<br \/>\n   as of a mighty rushing wind, a moment afterward each was girt with<br \/>\n   fire. Apostles, disciples, and women alike experienced this sacred<br \/>\n   investiture; but it hurt them not. They were far from being perfect<br \/>\n   characters; and yet there was evidently nothing to fear in the descent<br \/>\n   of that fiery baptism. They were baptized with the Holy Ghost, but they<br \/>\n   were unconsumed.<\/p>\n<p>   Do not these instances shed light upon our text?<\/p>\n<p>   OUR GOD IS A CONSUMING FIRE; AND THERE IS TERROR IN THE SYMBOL. But the<br \/>\n   terror is reserved for those who unceasingly and persistently violate<br \/>\n   his laws and despise his love. For those who willfully follow courses<br \/>\n   of sin, after they have received the knowledge of the truth, there is<br \/>\n   doubtless a fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation. On<br \/>\n   those who will not obey the Gospel of the Lord Jesus, clearly presented<br \/>\n   to them, vengeance will be taken in flaming fire. No words can<br \/>\n   exaggerate the terror, the anguish, the dreadfulness of their fate. Sin<br \/>\n   is no light matter. In this world even it is fearfully avenged. Walk<br \/>\n   through certain wards in our hospitals, and tell me if anything could<br \/>\n   exceed the horror, the agony, of the penalty which is being inflicted<br \/>\n   on those who have flagrantly violated the laws of nature. And, so far<br \/>\n   as we can see, the physical penalties which follow upon wrongdoing are<br \/>\n   not unto life and restoration, but unto death and destruction. It is<br \/>\n   necessary that these sufferings should be veiled from the eye of man;<br \/>\n   but surely they must be taken into account when we estimate God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   treatment of sin. And if such pain, keen as fire, consumes those who<br \/>\n   violate physical law, surely we must admit that there is a still more<br \/>\n   awful doom for those who violate the laws of God&#8217;s love and grace and<br \/>\n   pleading mercy.<\/p>\n<p>   God forbid that we should say one word to lessen men&#8217;s dread of the<br \/>\n   penal consequences of sin. There is a great danger lest, amid our<br \/>\n   growing conceptions of the love of God, we should come to think that he<br \/>\n   is altogether such a one as we are inclined to be in our dealings with<br \/>\n   our children, soft, easy, and indulgent. God is love; and yet he<br \/>\n   permits the little child to be burned, if it plays heedlessly with<br \/>\n   flame. God is love; but he permits bodies to rot in loathsome disease,<br \/>\n   without hope of cure, if men persistently do despite to his law. God is<br \/>\n   love; but he allows the whole course of a life to be blasted by one<br \/>\n   yielding to transgression and sin. And thus, though God is love, it is<br \/>\n   possible for sins to be punished with sufferings, bitter as the gnawing<br \/>\n   worm, keen as the fire that is not quenched.<\/p>\n<p>   If once we realized these things (and we should realize them if we<br \/>\n   would quietly consider the clear statements of the Word of God on such<br \/>\n   matters), we should come to understand much better the desperate nature<br \/>\n   of sin; and to yearn with deeper compassion over those who obstinately<br \/>\n   resist the grace of God, either following the evil courses suggested by<br \/>\n   their own hearts, or led captive by the devil at his will.<\/p>\n<p>   O disobedient soul, who hast read these words thus far, stop and<br \/>\n   bethink thee of thy danger! Beware lest thou be as the chaff or thorns,<br \/>\n   which are burned up with unquenchable fire, on the part of the Lord<br \/>\n   himself. Be quick to turn to him and live. Yet if thou suffer<br \/>\n   irretrievable ruin, remember thou wilt have only thyself to blame;<br \/>\n   because thou hast broken the elementary laws of thy nature, and hast<br \/>\n   set thyself in opposition to the God who loves thee, and would redeem<br \/>\n   thee, but whom thou hast refused and defied. If only thou wouldst bend<br \/>\n   thy stubborn neck and sutbmit to shelter thyself in the person and work<br \/>\n   of Jesus, God&#8217;s perfect holiness would bring thee, not hurt, but<br \/>\n   blessing and help.<\/p>\n<p>   OUR GOD IS A CONSUMING FIRE; AND THERE IS COMFORT AND BLESSING IN THE<br \/>\n   THOUGHT.  When we yield to God&#8217;s love, and open our hearts to him, he<br \/>\n   enters into us, and becomes within us a consuming fire; not to<br \/>\n   ourselves, but to the evil within us. So that, in a very deep and<br \/>\n   blessed sense, we may be said to dwell with the devouring fire, and to<br \/>\n   walk amid the eternal burnings.<\/p>\n<p>   Fire is warmth. We talk of ardent desire, warm emotion, enthusiasm&#8217;s<br \/>\n   glow and fire; and when we speak of God being within us as fire, we<br \/>\n   mean that he will produce in us a strong and constant affection to<br \/>\n   himself. Do you long for more love? you really need more of God: for<br \/>\n   God is love; and when he dwells in the heart, love dwells there in<br \/>\n   power. And there is no difficulty in loving him or loving men with the<br \/>\n   love which has entered in majestic procession in the entrance of God.<br \/>\n   Live in God, make room for God to live in you; and there will be no<br \/>\n   lack to the love which shall exemplify in daily action each precept of<br \/>\n   the holy psalm of love (1 Cor. xiii.).<\/p>\n<p>   Fire is light. We are dark enough in our natural state; but when God<br \/>\n   comes into the tabernacle of our being, the shekinah begins to glow in<br \/>\n   the most holy place, and pours its waves of glory throughout the whole<br \/>\n   being: so that the face is suffused with a holy glow, and there is an<br \/>\n   evident elasticity and buoyancy of spirits which no world joy can<br \/>\n   produce or even imitate. The light that shone on the face of Moses was<br \/>\n   different from that which shone on the face of Jesus. That was flung on<br \/>\n   it from without; this welled up from within. But the latter rather than<br \/>\n   the former is the true type of the blessed effect produced on that<br \/>\n   nature which becomes the temple of the indwelling God.<\/p>\n<p>   Fire is purity. &#8221; How long, think you, would it take a workman with<br \/>\n   hammer and chisel to get the ore from the rocks in which it lies so<br \/>\n   closely imbedded? But if they are flung into the great cylinder, and<br \/>\n   the fires fanned to torrid heat, and the draught roars through the<br \/>\n   burning mass, at nightfall the glowing stream of pure and fluid metal,<br \/>\n   from which all dross and rubbish are parted, flows into the waiting<br \/>\n   mold.&#8221; This is a parable of what God will do for us. Nay, more: he will<br \/>\n   burn up the wood, hay, and stubble, the grit and dross, the selfishness<br \/>\n   and evil of our nature; so that at last only the gold and silver and<br \/>\n   precious stones shall remain. The bonds that fetter us will be<br \/>\n   consumed; but not a hair of our heads shall fall to the ground.<\/p>\n<p>   &#8220;The Lord shall sit as a refiner of silver.&#8221; He the refiner, and he the<br \/>\n   fire. Contact with God, being bathed in his Holy Spirit, the perpetual<br \/>\n   yielding of the nature to him, will work a marvelous change upon us. At<br \/>\n   first the face of the melting metal may be dark and lurid-deep orange<br \/>\n   red, over which a flickering flame shall pass; but, as the process is<br \/>\n   pursued, the color will become lighter, the dark fumes will pass off,<br \/>\n   and the metal shall bear the appearance of the highly polished mirror,<br \/>\n   reflecting the beholder&#8217;s face. The process may be long; but the result<br \/>\n   is sure.<\/p>\n<p>   Is not fire painful and terrible, though applied by infinite love? It<br \/>\n   may be so; but he will not ply us with more than we can bear, and he<br \/>\n   will enable us to endure. And it will be more than a compensation, as<br \/>\n   we find one after another of the old evils losing its power. We shall<br \/>\n   never in this life be free from a sinful tendency, which seems part of<br \/>\n   our human nature. Nor shall we ever, on this side of heaven, be<br \/>\n   perfect; but we may expect to be growingly transformed into the image<br \/>\n   of the Son of God.<\/p>\n<p>   God, who art as fire, be thou a consuming fire to our inbred sins; burn<br \/>\n   deeply into our inmost hearts, until all that grieves thee is compelled<br \/>\n   to yield to the holy intensity of thy grace, and our whole being, made<br \/>\n   free from sin, begins to serve thee in holiness and righteousness,<br \/>\n   through Jesus Christ, who came to kindle thy Sacred Fire on the earth!<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                         XXXIII. THE UNCHANGING SAVIOR<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, and to-day, and forever.&#8221; HEBREWS xiii.<br \/>\n    8.<\/p>\n<p>   THREE times over in this chapter, the closing chapter of an Epistle the<br \/>\n   study of which has been so pleasant and helpful, the sacred writer<br \/>\n   urges his readers to think kindly of those who ruled over them. The<br \/>\n   full force of the Greek word is better represented by the marginal<br \/>\n   rendering guide, than by the word rule. But in any case he referred to<br \/>\n   those who were the spiritual leaders and teachers of the flock. The<br \/>\n   three injunctions are-Remember (ver. 7); Obey (ver. &#8216;7); Salute (ver.<br \/>\n   23).<\/p>\n<p>   It is a proud name for the Christian minister to be called a leader.<br \/>\n   But unless he has some other claim to it than comes from force of<br \/>\n   character, eloquence, or intellectual power, his name will be an empty<br \/>\n   sound, the sign of what he might be rather than of what he is. Those<br \/>\n   who are qualified to lead other men must be themselves close followers<br \/>\n   of Christ; so that they may be able to turn to others and say, &#8220;Be ye<br \/>\n   followers of me, even as I also am of Christ;&#8221;  &#8220;Be followers together<br \/>\n   with Me.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   But the Christian minister must also watch for souls (ver. 17). He is<br \/>\n   not sent to his charge to preach great sermons, to elaborate brilliant<br \/>\n   orations, or to dazzle their intellects; but to watch over their souls,<br \/>\n   as the shepherd watches over his flocks scattered upon the downs, while<br \/>\n   the light changes from the gray morning, through the deep tints of the<br \/>\n   noon, into the last delicate flush of evening far up on the loftiest<br \/>\n   cliffs. He must indeed keep careful watch, for he must give an account<br \/>\n   in the evening; of his hand every missing one will be required.<\/p>\n<p>   It is told of the holy Melville, that his wife would sometimes find him<br \/>\n   on his knees in the cold winter night; and on asking him to return to<br \/>\n   bed, he would reply, &#8220;I have got fifteen hundred souls in my charge,<br \/>\n   and fear that it is going ill with some of them.&#8221; It is not difficult<br \/>\n   to remember or obey or salute men like that. They carry their Master&#8217;s<br \/>\n   sign upon their faces. They are among Christ&#8217;s most precious gifts to<br \/>\n   his Church.<\/p>\n<p>   But there is this sorrow connected with all human leaders and teachers.<br \/>\n   However dear and useful they are, they are not suffered to continue by<br \/>\n   reason of death. One after another they pass away into the spirit<br \/>\n   world, to enter upon their loftier service, to give in their account,<br \/>\n   to see the Master whom they have loved. The last sermon lies unfinished<br \/>\n   on the study table; but they never come there to complete it. The final<br \/>\n   word is spoken. The closing benediction is given. The ministry is done.<br \/>\n   But what a relief it is to turn from men to Christ: from the constant<br \/>\n   change in human teachers to the unchanging Master; from the<br \/>\n   under-shepherds who are here today but gone tomorrow, to the chief<br \/>\n   Shepherd and Bishop of souls who watches his sheep in the evening<br \/>\n   shadows of this era, equally as in the first bright beams of its<br \/>\n   Pentecostal morning!<\/p>\n<p>   This is the meaning of our writer (ver. 7). The verb is in the past<br \/>\n   tense: &#8220;Remember them which had the rule over you, such as spoke unto<br \/>\n   you the word of God: the end of whose life considering, imitate their<br \/>\n   faith.&#8221; Evidently they had been lately called to witness the end of the<br \/>\n   life and ministry of some who had been very precious to them. And, as<br \/>\n   their hearts were sorrowing, their attention was turned from the<br \/>\n   changing guide and leader to the ever-living, unchanging Lord, Jesus<br \/>\n   Christ, who is the same yesterday, to-day, and forever.<\/p>\n<p>   WHAT IS DENIED. It is denied that either time or mood or circumstances<br \/>\n   or provocation or death can alter Jesus Christ our Lord.<\/p>\n<p>   Time changes us. Your portrait, taken years ago, when you were in your<br \/>\n   prime, hangs on the walls of your home. You sometimes sadly contrast it<br \/>\n   with your present self. Then the eye flashed with fires which have been<br \/>\n   quenched with many tears. Then the hair was raven and thick, which is<br \/>\n   now plentifully streaked with the gray symptoms of decay. Then the face<br \/>\n   was unseamed by care, unscarred by conflict; but now how weary and<br \/>\n   furrowed! The upright form is bent, the step has lost its spring.<\/p>\n<p>   But there is a greater difference between two mental and two physical<br \/>\n   portraitures. Opinions alter. The radical becomes conservative; temper<br \/>\n   changes, and affections cool. Names and faces which used to thrill are<br \/>\n   recalled without emotion. Faded chaplets lie where once flowers of<br \/>\n   rarest texture yielded their breath in insufficient adoration. Thus is<br \/>\n   it with those who are born of woman. Time does for them what hardship<br \/>\n   and authority and suffering would fail to effect. And sometimes the<br \/>\n   question arises, Can time alter him whose portrait hangs on the walls<br \/>\n   of our hearts, painted in undying colors by the hands of the four<br \/>\n   Evangelists?<\/p>\n<p>   Of course, time takes no effect on God, who is the f AM; eternal and<br \/>\n   changeless. But Jesus is man as well as God. He has tenses in his<br \/>\n   being: the yesterday of the past, the to-day of the present, the<br \/>\n   to-morrow of the future. It is at least a question whether his human<br \/>\n   nature, keyed to the experiences of man, may not carry with it, even to<br \/>\n   influence his royal heart, that sensitiveness to the touch of time<br \/>\n   which is characteristic of our race. But the question tarries only for<br \/>\n   a second. The moment it utters itself it is drowned by the great<br \/>\n   outburst of voices which exclaim, &#8220;He is the same in the meridian day<br \/>\n   of the present as he was in the yesterday of his earthly life; and he<br \/>\n   will be the same when to-morrow we shall have left far behind us the<br \/>\n   shores of time and are voyaging with him over the tideless, stormless<br \/>\n   depths of the ocean of eternity.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   If we could ask the blessed dead if they had found him altered from<br \/>\n   what they had expected him to be from the pages of the holy Gospels,<br \/>\n   they would reiterate the words of the angels-this same Jesus; they<br \/>\n   would tell us that his hair is white as snow, not with age, but with<br \/>\n   the light of intense purity; that his face shines still as the sun in<br \/>\n   his strength, with no sign of westering; and that his voice is as full<br \/>\n   as when he summoned Lazarus from the grave, as mellifluous as when it<br \/>\n   called Mary to recognize him. Time is foiled in Jesus. He has passed<br \/>\n   out of its sphere, and is impervious to its spell.<\/p>\n<p>   Moods change us. We know people who are like oranges one day and lemons<br \/>\n   the next; now a summer&#8217;s day, and, again, a nipping frost; rock and<br \/>\n   reed alternately. You have to suit yourself to their varying mood,<br \/>\n   asking to-day what you would not dare to mention to-morrow; and thus<br \/>\n   there is continual unrest and scheming in the hearts of their friends.<\/p>\n<p>   But it is not so with Jesus. Never tired, or put out, or variable.<br \/>\n   Without shadow cast by turning. In his earthly life, wherever we catch<br \/>\n   sight of him-on the mountainside, on the waters of the lake, beneath<br \/>\n   the olive trees in the evening; in the synagogue, or alone; at work in<br \/>\n   the sunlight, at prayer in the moonlight, at supper in the upper room,<br \/>\n   he was always the same Jesus. And the apparent exceptions when, for a<br \/>\n   certain purpose, he entered his manner and made himself strange, only<br \/>\n   brought his essential sameness into stronger relief. And so is he<br \/>\n   to-day. And we shall become happy and strong when we remove from all<br \/>\n   thought of others&#8217; moods or our own, and settlt down under the<br \/>\n   unchanging empyrean of his love.<\/p>\n<p>   Circumstances change us. Men who in poverty and obscurity have been<br \/>\n   accessible and genial, become imperious and haughty when they become<br \/>\n   idolized for their genius and fawned on for their wealth. The butler<br \/>\n   who would have done any favor for Joseph in the prison forgot him when<br \/>\n   he was reinstated in the palace. New friends, new spheres, new<br \/>\n   surroundings, alter men marvelously.<\/p>\n<p>   What a change has passed over Jesus Christ since mortal eyes beheld<br \/>\n   him! Crowned with glory and honor; seated at the right hand of the<br \/>\n   Father; occupied with the government of all worlds; worshiped by the<br \/>\n   loftiest spirits. Can this be he who trod our world, confessing his<br \/>\n   ignorance of times and seasons, surrounded by a handful of the poor and<br \/>\n   despised, an outcast and a sufferer? It is indeed he. But surely it<br \/>\n   were too much to expect that he should be quite the same! Nay, but he<br \/>\n   is. And one proof of it is that the graces which he shed on the first<br \/>\n   age of the Church were of exactly the same quality as those which we<br \/>\n   now enjoy.<\/p>\n<p>   We know that the texture of light is unaltered; because the analysis of<br \/>\n   a ray, which has just reached us from some distant star, whence it<br \/>\n   started as Adam stepped across the threshold of Eden, is of precisely<br \/>\n   the same nature as the analysis of the ray of light now striking on<br \/>\n   this page. And we know that Jesus Christ is the same as he was; because<br \/>\n   the life which throbbed in the first believers resulted in those very<br \/>\n   fruits which are evident in our own hearts and lives, all having<br \/>\n   emanated from himself. He has to govern the worlds; but he is still as<br \/>\n   accessible to the vilest, as gentle and tender-hearted, as humble and<br \/>\n   lovely, as when that Jewish woman could not restrain her envy of the<br \/>\n   mother who had borne him, and when he sat to rest amid the sycamores of<br \/>\n   Bethany, and the sisters rested by his feet.<\/p>\n<p>   Sin and provocation change us. We forgive seven times, but draw the<br \/>\n   line at eight. Our souls close up to those who have deceived our<br \/>\n   confidence. We are friendly outwardly, but there is frost within. We<br \/>\n   forgive, but we do not forget; and we are never the same afterward as<br \/>\n   before. But sin cannot change Christ&#8217;s heart, though it may affect his<br \/>\n   behavior. If it could do so, it must have changed his feelings to<br \/>\n   Peter. But the only apparent alteration made by that sad denial was an<br \/>\n   increased tenderness and considerateness. &#8220;Go, tell my disciples, and<br \/>\n   Peter, that I am risen.&#8221; &#8220;He was seen of Cephas, then of the twelve.&#8221;<br \/>\n   &#8220;He said unto Peter, Lovest thou me?&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Your sins may be many and aggravated; and you are disposed to think<br \/>\n   that you should give up all profession of being his at all. But you do<br \/>\n   not know him. He is not oblivious to your sins; he has noticed each one<br \/>\n   with sharp pangs of pain. His eye has followed you in all your way ward<br \/>\n   wanderings; but he is absolutely unchanged. You are as dear to him as<br \/>\n   when, in the first blush of your young hope, you knelt at his feet, and<br \/>\n   were clothed, as the old warriors used to be, by a stainless tunic over<br \/>\n   your armor of proof. Naught that you have said or done has lessened his<br \/>\n   love by a single grain, or turned it aside by a hair&#8217;s-breadth. He<br \/>\n   loved you in eternity; he foreknew all that you would be before he set<br \/>\n   his heart upon you; he cannot be surprised by any sudden outburst of<br \/>\n   your evil. You may be, but he cannot be; and he laid his account for<br \/>\n   this, and more, when he undertook to redeem. Your sins, child of God,<br \/>\n   can no more alter your Lord&#8217;s heart than can the petulance of a child<br \/>\n   alter its mother&#8217;s.<\/p>\n<p>   WHAT IS AFFIRMED. He is the same in his Person (Heb. i. 12). His<br \/>\n   vesture alters. He has exchanged the gaberdine of the peasant for the<br \/>\n   robes of which he stripped himself on the eve of his incarnation; but<br \/>\n   beneath those robes beats the same heart as heaved with anguish at the<br \/>\n   grave where his friend lay dead. We shall yet see, though in<br \/>\n   resurrection glory, the face on which stood the bead-drops of bloody<br \/>\n   sweat; and touch the hands that were nailed to the cross; and hear the<br \/>\n   voice of the Son of man. What does the mystery of the forty days teach<br \/>\n   us, except this, that he carried with him from the grave, and upward to<br \/>\n   his home, the identical body of his incarnation-though the corruptible<br \/>\n   had put on incorruption, and the mortal had put on immortality? Thus he<br \/>\n   is the same as &#8220;Jesus.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   He is also the same in his once (Heb. vii. 24). Aaron died on Hor, and<br \/>\n   all his successors in mystic procession followed him. Ancient<br \/>\n   burying-grounds are closely packed with the remains of priests, abbots,<br \/>\n   and fathers. The ashes of the shepherds are mingled with those of their<br \/>\n   flocks. The office remains, but the occupants pass. But Christ, as the<br \/>\n   Anointed Priest, is ever the same. Unweariedly he pursues his chosen<br \/>\n   work as the Mediator, Priest, and Inter cessor of men. He does not<br \/>\n   fail, nor is he discouraged. Though the great world of men neither<br \/>\n   knows nor heeds him, yet does he bear it up upon his heart, as when he<br \/>\n   first pleaded for his murderers from his cross. &#8220;Forgive them, Father,<br \/>\n   forgive them !&#8221; is his unwearying constant cry. And though the age be<br \/>\n   black with tempest and red with blood, his pity wells up like one of<br \/>\n   those perennial fountains which heat cannot scorch, nor cold freeze;<br \/>\n   because they draw their supplies from everlasting sources. He is the<br \/>\n   same as &#8220;Christ.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   WHAT IT IMPLIES. It implies that he is God. It implies, too, that the<br \/>\n   Gospels are a leaf out of his eternal diary, and may be taken as a true<br \/>\n   record of his present life. What he was, he is. He still sails with us<br \/>\n   in the boat; walks in the afternoon with us to Emmaus; stands in our<br \/>\n   rnidst at nightfall, opening to us the Scriptures. He wakes our<br \/>\n   children in the morning with his &#8220;Talitha cumi&#8221;; calls the boys to his<br \/>\n   knees; watches them at their play; and rebukes those who would forbid<br \/>\n   their Hosannas. He feeds us with bread and fish; lights fires on the<br \/>\n   sands to warm us; shows us the right side of the ship for our nets; and<br \/>\n   interests himself with the results of our toils. He takes us with him<br \/>\n   to the brow of the Transfiguration Mount, and into the glades of<br \/>\n   Gethsemane.<\/p>\n<p>   When we are slow to believe, he is slower still to anger. He teaches us<br \/>\n   many things, graduating his lessons, according to our ability to<br \/>\n   understand. When we cannot bear more, he shades the light. When we<br \/>\n   strive for high places, he rebukes. When soiled, he washes our feet.<br \/>\n   When in peril, he comes across the yeasty waves to our help. When<br \/>\n   weary, he leads us aside to rest.<\/p>\n<p>   Oh, do not read the Gospels as a record merely of the past, but as a<br \/>\n   transcript of what he is ever doing. Each miracle and parable and trait<br \/>\n   is a specimen of eternal facts, which are taking place by myriads, at<br \/>\n   every moment of the day and night; the achievements of the ever-<br \/>\n   living, ever-working Lord. No lake without that figure treading its<br \/>\n   waters. No storm without that voice mightier than its roar. No meal<br \/>\n   without that face uplifted in blessing, or that hand engaged in<br \/>\n   breaking. No grave without that tender heart touched with sorrow. No<br \/>\n   burden without those willing shoulders to share the yoke.<\/p>\n<p>   Oh, take me not back through the long ages to a Christ that was! He is!<br \/>\n   He lives! He is here! I can never again be alone, never grope in the<br \/>\n   dark for a hand, never be forsaken or forlorn. Never need a Guide, a<br \/>\n   Master, a Friend, or a Husband to my soul. I have him, who suffices for<br \/>\n   uncounted myriads in the dateless noon of eternity. He who was<br \/>\n   everything in the yesterday of the past, and who will be everything in<br \/>\n   the to-morrow of the future, is mine to-day; and at each present moment<br \/>\n   of my existence-here, and in all worlds.<\/p>\n<p>   The Revised Version adds a significant yea to this verse, to bring out<br \/>\n   the emphatic accentuation which the writer lays upon the<br \/>\n   unchangeableness of Jesus. It is well placed. And with what a thunder<br \/>\n   of assent might that word be uttered! All who are of this opinion<br \/>\n   answer YEA. First, the innumerable company of angels utters it; then<br \/>\n   the spirits of just men made perfect reaffirm it; then the universe of<br \/>\n   created things, the regularity of whose laws and processes is due to<br \/>\n   it, bursts forth with one great Amen. God himself says Amen; &#8220;for how<br \/>\n   many soever be the promises of God, in him is the yea: wherefore also<br \/>\n   through him is the Amen, unto the glory of God.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                          XXXIV. THE ESTABLISHED HEART<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;It is a good thing that the heart be established with grace; not with<br \/>\n    meats, which have not profited them that have been occupied therein.&#8221;<br \/>\n    HEBREWS xiii. 9.<\/p>\n<p>   IT is a good thing to have an established heart. With too many of us<br \/>\n   the inner life is variable and fickle. Sometimes we have days of deep<br \/>\n   religious earnestness, when it seems impossible for us to spend too<br \/>\n   long a time in prayer and fellowship with God. The air is so clear that<br \/>\n   we can see across the waters of the dividing sea, to the very outlines<br \/>\n   of the heavenly coasts. But a very little will mar our peace, and bring<br \/>\n   a veil of mist over our souls, to enwrap us perhaps for long weeks. Oh<br \/>\n   for an established heart!<\/p>\n<p>   Now there is one thing which will not bring about this blessed state of<br \/>\n   establishment. And that is indicated by the expression, &#8220;meats&#8221;; which<br \/>\n   stands for the ritualism of the Jewish law. There is ever a tendency in<br \/>\n   the human heart toward a religion of rites. It is so much easier to<br \/>\n   observe the prescriptions of an outward ceremonial than to brace the<br \/>\n   soul to faith and love and spiritual worship. Set the devotee a round<br \/>\n   of external observance, it matters little how rigorous and searching<br \/>\n   your demands, and the whole will be punctually and slavishly performed,<br \/>\n   with a secret sense of satisfaction in being thus permitted to do<br \/>\n   something toward procuring acceptance and favor with God.<\/p>\n<p>   There is a great increase of ritualistic observance amongst us. We<br \/>\n   behold with astonishment the set of our times toward genuflexions; the<br \/>\n   austerities of Lent; the careful observance of prolonged and incessant<br \/>\n   services; and all the demands of a severe ritual. People who give no<br \/>\n   evidence in their character or behavior of real religion are most<br \/>\n   punctilious in these outward religious rites. Young men will salve<br \/>\n   their consciences for a day of Sabbath-breaking by an early<br \/>\n   celebration. In many cases these things are revivals of ancient<br \/>\n   Babylonish customs, passed into the professing Church in the worst and<br \/>\n   darkest days of its history. But their revival points to the strong<br \/>\n   religious yearnings of human nature, and the fascination which is<br \/>\n   exerted by outward rites in the stead of inward realities.<\/p>\n<p>   But &#8220;meats&#8221; can never establish the inner life. The most ardent<br \/>\n   ritualist must confess to the sense of inward dissatisfaction and<br \/>\n   unrest, as the soul is condemned to pace continually the arid desert of<br \/>\n   a weary formalism, where it comes not to the green pastures or the<br \/>\n   waters of rest. &#8220;They have not profited them that have been occupied<br \/>\n   therein.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Another obstruction to an established heart arises from the curiosity<br \/>\n   which is ever running after divers and strange doctrines. In all ages<br \/>\n   of the Church, men have caught up single aspects of truth, distorting<br \/>\n   them out of the harmony of the Gospel, and carrying them into<br \/>\n   exaggerated and dangerous excess; and directly any one truth is viewed<br \/>\n   out of its place in the equilibrium of the Gospel, it becomes a heresy,<br \/>\n   leading souls astray with the deceitfulness of the false lights that<br \/>\n   wreckers wave along the beach. And when once we begin to follow the<br \/>\n   vagaries and notions of human teachers, apart from the teaching of the<br \/>\n   Spirit of God, we get into an unsettled, restless condition, which is<br \/>\n   the very antipodes to the established heart.<\/p>\n<p>   There is only one foundation which never rocks, one condition which<br \/>\n   never alters. &#8220;It is good that the heart be established with grace.&#8221;<br \/>\n   Primarily, of course, the established heart is the gift of God. &#8220;He<br \/>\n   which stablisheth us with you in Christ is God.&#8221; &#8220;The Lord shall<br \/>\n   establish thee an holy people unto himself.&#8221; &#8220;The God of all grace make<br \/>\n   you perfect, stablish, strengthen, settle you.&#8221; We need therefore to<br \/>\n   pray to him to give us the heart established in grace. But there are<br \/>\n   certain conditions also indicated in this context with which we do well<br \/>\n   to comply.<\/p>\n<p>   WE MUST FEED ON CHRIST. The very denial of the tenth verse proves that<br \/>\n   there is an altar whereof we have a right to eat. Not the Jews only,<br \/>\n   but Christians also, lay stress on eating; but ah, how different the<br \/>\n   food which forms their diet ! In the case of that ancient system out of<br \/>\n   which these Hebrew Christians had just emerged, the priests ate a<br \/>\n   considerable portion of the sacrifices which the people offered on the<br \/>\n   altar of God. This was the means of their subsistence. In consideration<br \/>\n   of their being set apart wholly to the divine service, and having no<br \/>\n   inheritance in the land, &#8220;they lived by the altar.&#8221; But we, who are<br \/>\n   priests by a &#038;viner right, have left behind us the Tabernacle, with its<br \/>\n   ritual and sacrifices, and cannot feed on these outward meats without<br \/>\n   betraying the spirituality of the holy religion we profess.<\/p>\n<p>   Our altar is the cross. Our sacrifice is the dying Saviour. Our food is<br \/>\n   to eat his flesh. &#8220;This is the bread which cometh down from heaven,<br \/>\n   that a man may eat thereof, and not die.&#8221; &#8220;The bread is my flesh, which<br \/>\n   I will give for the life of the world.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   Eating consists of three processes: apprehension, mastication, and<br \/>\n   assimilation; and each of these has its spiritual counterpart in that<br \/>\n   feeding upon Christ which is the very life of our life. We, too, must<br \/>\n   apprehend him, by the careful reading of the Word of God. The Word is<br \/>\n   in the words. His words are spirit and life. We need not be always<br \/>\n   reading them, any more than we should be always eating. But just as a<br \/>\n   good meal will go on nourishing us long after we have taken it, and<br \/>\n   indeed when we have ceased to think about it, so a prolonged prayerful<br \/>\n   study of the Word of God will nourish our souls for long afterward.<\/p>\n<p>   We, too, must fulfill the second process of eating by meditating long<br \/>\n   and thoughtfully on all that is revealed to us in the Word of the<br \/>\n   person and work of the Lord Jesus. It is only by allowing our heart and<br \/>\n   mind to dwell musingly on these sacred themes that they become so real<br \/>\n   as to nourish us. Better read less and meditate more, than read much<br \/>\n   and meditate little.<\/p>\n<p>   We too must assimilate Christ, until he becomes part of our very being,<br \/>\n   and we begin to live, yet not we, because Christ lives in us, and has<br \/>\n   become our very life. Our Lord told his disciples that he lived by the<br \/>\n   Father; and said that, if they desired to live in the same dependent<br \/>\n   state on himself, they must &#8220;eat him &#8221; (John vi. 57). In Christ&#8217;s own<br \/>\n   case his being had reached such a pitch of union with his Father&#8217;s that<br \/>\n   to see or hear or know him was to see and hear and know God. And if we<br \/>\n   would only spend more time alone with him in prayerful, loving<br \/>\n   fellowship, a great change would pass over us also, and we should be<br \/>\n   transformed into his likeness in successive stages of glory upon glory.<\/p>\n<p>   At regular intervals we meet around the table of the Lord to eat the<br \/>\n   bread and drink the wine. But our feeding on him ought to be as<br \/>\n   frequent as our daily ordinary meals.<\/p>\n<p>   Why should we feed the spiritless than we do the body? Alas! how we<br \/>\n   pamper the latter, and starve the former, until we get past the sense<br \/>\n   of desire! We spoil our appetite by feeding it with the cloying<br \/>\n   sweetmeats and morsels of sense. We are content to live as parasites on<br \/>\n   the juices of others, instead of acquiring nourishment at first hand<br \/>\n   for ourselves. What wonder that we are carried about by every wind of<br \/>\n   doctrine, and lack the established heart? And perhaps there would be<br \/>\n   nothing better for the whole of us Christian people than a revival of<br \/>\n   Bible study, a fresh consecration of the morning hour, a regular and<br \/>\n   systematic maintenance of seasons of prolonged fellowship with our<br \/>\n   Master and Lord.<\/p>\n<p>   IF WE WOULD FEED ON CHRIST, WE MUST GO WITHOUT THE CAMP. In the solemn<br \/>\n   ritual of the great Day of Atonement it was ordained that the bodies of<br \/>\n   all the victims which had suffered death as sin-offerings, and of which<br \/>\n   the blood had been sprinkled before the mercy-seat, should be burned<br \/>\n   Without the camp (Lev. xvi. 27). And in this mysterious specification,<br \/>\n   two truths were probably symbolized: first, that in the fullness of<br \/>\n   time, Jesus, the true sin-offering of the world, would suffer outside<br \/>\n   the city gate; and secondly, that men must leave the principles and<br \/>\n   rites of earthly systems behind them, if they Would realize all the<br \/>\n   blessedness of acceptance with God through the sacrifice of Christ.<\/p>\n<p>   If, then, we would have Jesus as our food, our joy, our life, we must<br \/>\n   not expect to find him in the camps which have been pitched by men of<br \/>\n   this world. We must go forth from all such; from the camp of the<br \/>\n   world&#8217;s religiousness equally as from that of its sensuality; from the<br \/>\n   tents of its formalism and ritualism, as well as from those of its<br \/>\n   vanity.<\/p>\n<p>   The policy of going forth without the camp is the only safe course for<br \/>\n   ourselves, as it is the only helpful one for the world itself. There<br \/>\n   are plenty who argue that the wisest policy is to stop within the camp,<br \/>\n   seeking to elevate its morals. They do not realize that, if we adopt<br \/>\n   their advice, we must remain there alone; for our Lord has already<br \/>\n   gone. It is surely unbefitting that we should find a home where he is<br \/>\n   expelled. What is there in us which makes us so welcome, when our<br \/>\n   Master was cast out to the fate of the lowest criminals? Besides, it<br \/>\n   will not be long before we discover that, instead of our influencing<br \/>\n   the camp for good, the atmosphere of the camp will infect us with its<br \/>\n   evil. Instead of our leveling it up, it will level us down.<\/p>\n<p>   The only principle of moving the world is to emulate Archimedes in<br \/>\n   getting a point without it. All the men who have left a mark in the<br \/>\n   elevation of their times have been compelled to join the pilgrim host<br \/>\n   which is constantly passing through the city gates, and taking up its<br \/>\n   stand by the cross on which Jesus died. Looking back on that memorable<br \/>\n   spot, we seem to see it thronged with the apostles, martyrs, reformers,<br \/>\n   and prophets of every age, who invite us to join them. It remains with<br \/>\n   us to say whether we will linger amid the luxury and fascinations which<br \/>\n   allure us to the camp; or whether we will dare to take up our cross,<br \/>\n   and follow our Master along the Via Dolorosa, bearing his reproach. Ah,<br \/>\n   young hearts, secret disciples, halters between two opinions, the issue<br \/>\n   of such a choice cannot be doubtful! With the cry, Deus vult, you will<br \/>\n   join this new crusade, and take your stand with Jesus, at the<br \/>\n   trysting-place of his cross.<\/p>\n<p>   IF WE GO OUTSIDE THE CAMP, WE MUST BEAR HIS REPROACH. It is related of<br \/>\n   the good Charles Simeon, of Cambridge, that, at the commencement of his<br \/>\n   career as an evangelical clergyman at Cambridge, he encountered such<br \/>\n   virulent abuse and opposition that his spirit seemed on the point of<br \/>\n   being crushed. Turning to the Word of God for direction and<br \/>\n   encouragement, his eye lighted on the following passage: &#8221; As they came<br \/>\n   out they found a man of Cyrene, Simon by name; him they compelled to<br \/>\n   bear his cross.&#8221; The similarity of the name to his own arrested him,<br \/>\n   and he was moved to new courage with the thought of his oneness with<br \/>\n   the sufferings of Jesus. So is it with us all. If we are reproached for<br \/>\n   the name of Jesus, happy are we; and we should rejoice, inasmuch as we<br \/>\n   are partakers of Christ&#8217;s sufferings, that, when his glory is revealed,<br \/>\n   we also may be glad with exceeding joy.<\/p>\n<p>   How marvelous is it to learn the closeness of the bonds by which we are<br \/>\n   bound to the saints of the past When we are reproached for being<br \/>\n   Christians, we know something of what Moses felt when taunted in the<br \/>\n   royal palace of Egypt with his Hebrew origin; but &#8220;he esteemed the<br \/>\n   reproach of Christ greater riches than all the treasures of Egypt,<br \/>\n   because he had respect unto the recompense of reward.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   BUT WHILST BEARING CHRIST&#8217;S REPROACH, WE SHALL FIND THE ONLY CONTINUING<br \/>\n   CITY. It is very remarkable that, as we tear ourselves away from the<br \/>\n   gate of the city, and say farewell to what had seemed to be a symbol of<br \/>\n   the most enduring fabrics of earthly permanence, we are really passing<br \/>\n   out of the transient and unreal to become citizens of the only enduring<br \/>\n   and continuing City.<\/p>\n<p>   The greatest cities of human greatness have not continued. Babylon,<br \/>\n   Nineveh, Thebes, the mighty cities of Mexico-all have passed. Buried in<br \/>\n   mounds, on which grass grows luxuriantly; while wild beasts creep<br \/>\n   through the moldering relics of the past. But, amid all, there is<br \/>\n   arising from age to age a permanent structure, an enduring City, a<br \/>\n   confederation which gathers around the unchanging Saviour, and has in<br \/>\n   it no elements of decay. Do we enough live in this City in our habitual<br \/>\n   experience? It is possible to tread its golden streets as we plod along<br \/>\n   the thoroughfares of earth&#8217;s great cities; to mingle in its blessed<br \/>\n   companies, and share its holy exercises, though apparently we spend our<br \/>\n   days in dark city offices, and amid money-loving companions. The true<br \/>\n   pilgrim to tho City really lives in the City. It will not be long, and<br \/>\n   it shall not be only an object for faith and spiritual vision, it shall<br \/>\n   become manifest. See, it comes! it comes! the holy City out of heaven<br \/>\n   from God, radiant with his light, vocal with song, the home of saints,<br \/>\n   the metropolis of a redeemed earth, the Bride of the Lamb, for whom the<br \/>\n   universe was made.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                            XXXV. THE CLOSING PRAYER<\/p>\n<p>    &#8220;Now the God of peace, that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that<br \/>\n    great Shepherd of the sheep, through the blood of the everlasting covenant,<br \/>\n    make you perfect in every good work to do his will, working in you that<br \/>\n    which is well pleasing in his sight, through Jesus Christ; to whom be glory<br \/>\n    forever and ever. HEBREWS xiii. 20, 21.<\/p>\n<p>   THROUGHOUT this Epistle, the inspired writer has been appealing to man.<br \/>\n   Through successive paragraphs he has poured forth a burning stream of<br \/>\n   argument, remonstrance, or appeal; now opening the full peal of Sinai&#8217;s<br \/>\n   thunders, and now the wail of Calvary&#8217;s broken heart, and finally<br \/>\n   summoning the most honored names in Hebrew story to enforce his words.<\/p>\n<p>   All this is over now. He can say no more. The plowing and sowing and<br \/>\n   harrowing are alike complete. He must turn from earth to heaven, from<br \/>\n   man to God; and leave his converts and his work with that glorious<br \/>\n   Being whose cause he had striven so faithfully to plead, and who alone<br \/>\n   could crown his labors with success. There are many splendid outbursts<br \/>\n   of prayer beginning these Epistles; but amongst them all, it is<br \/>\n   impossible to find one more striking or beautiful than this.<\/p>\n<p>   THE BURDEN OF THE PRAYER is that these Hebrew Christians may be made<br \/>\n   perfect to do God&#8217;s will. The word &#8220;perfect&#8221; means to set in joint, or<br \/>\n   articulate. Naturally, we are out of joint, or, at the best, work<br \/>\n   stiffly; but the ideal of Christian living is to be so perfectly &#8220;set&#8221;<br \/>\n   that God&#8217;s purposes may be easily and completely realized in us.<\/p>\n<p>   There is no higher aim in life than to do the will of God. It was the<br \/>\n   supreme object for which our Saviour lived. This brought him from<br \/>\n   heaven. This determined his every action. This fed his inner life with<br \/>\n   hidden meat. This cleared and lit up his judgment. This led him with<br \/>\n   unfaltering decision into the valley of death. This was the stay and<br \/>\n   solace of his spirit as he drank the bitter cup of agony. Throughout<br \/>\n   his mortal life his one glad shout of assurance and victory was, &#8220;I<br \/>\n   delight to do thy will, my God; yea, thy law is within my heart.&#8221; And<br \/>\n   human lives climb up from the lowlands to the upland heights just in<br \/>\n   proportion as they do the will of God on earth as it is done in heaven.<br \/>\n   If every reader of these lines would resolve from this moment to do the<br \/>\n   will of God in the very smallest things-with scrupulous care, counting<br \/>\n   nothing insignificant, shrinking from no sacrifice, evading no<br \/>\n   command-life would assume entirely a new aspect. There might be a<br \/>\n   momentary experience of suffering and pain; but it would be succeeded<br \/>\n   by the light of resurrection, and the new song of heaven, stealing like<br \/>\n   morning through the chambers of the soul.<\/p>\n<p>   God is love; to do his will is to scatter love in handfuls of blessing<br \/>\n   on a weary world. God is light; to do his will is to tread a path that<br \/>\n   shines more and more unto the perfect day. God is life; to do his will<br \/>\n   is to eat of the Tree of Life, and live forever, and to drink deep<br \/>\n   draughts of the more abundant life which Jesus gives. God is the God of<br \/>\n   hope; to do his will is to be full of all joy and peace, and to abound<br \/>\n   in hope. God is the God of all comfort; to do his will is to be<br \/>\n   comforted in all our tribulation by the tender love of a mother. God is<br \/>\n   the God of peace; to do his will is to learn the secret inner calm,<br \/>\n   which no storm can reach, no tempest ruffle. God is the God of truth;<br \/>\n   to do his will is to be on the winning side, and to be assured of the<br \/>\n   time when he will bring out our righteousness as the light, and our<br \/>\n   judgment as the noonday.<\/p>\n<p>   Why will you not, my readers, who have followed these chapters thus far<br \/>\n   to the last, resolve from this moment that your will shall henceforth<br \/>\n   say &#8220;Yes&#8221;to God&#8217;s will, and that you will live out what be wills and<br \/>\n   works within? Probably, at the very outset, you will be tested by your<br \/>\n   attitude to some one thing. Do not try to answer all the suggestions or<br \/>\n   inquiries that may be raised tumultuously within, but deal immediately<br \/>\n   and decisively with that single item. Dare to say, with respect to it,<br \/>\n   &#8220;I will thy will, my God.&#8221; And immediately the gate will open into the<br \/>\n   rapture of a new life. But remember that his will must be done in every<br \/>\n   work to which you put your hands; and then every work will be good.<\/p>\n<p>   We cannot tell how the mysterious promptings of our will are able to<br \/>\n   express themselves in our limbs and members. We only know that what we<br \/>\n   will in ourselves is instantly wrought out through the wonderful<br \/>\n   machinery of nerve and muscle. And we are quick to perceive when,<br \/>\n   through some injury or dislocation, the mandate of the will fails to be<br \/>\n   instantly and completely fulfilled. Nor do we rest content until the<br \/>\n   complete communication is restored.<\/p>\n<p>   But in all this there is a deep spiritual analogy. We are members,<br \/>\n   through grace, of the body of Christ. The will lies with him; and if we<br \/>\n   were living as we ought, we should be incessantly conscious of its holy<br \/>\n   impulses, withdrawing us from this, or prompting us to that. Our will<br \/>\n   would not be obliterated, but would elect to work in perpetual<br \/>\n   obedience and subordination to the will of its King. Alas! this is not<br \/>\n   our case. We are too little sensible of those holy impulses. On rare<br \/>\n   occasions we realize and yield to them. But how many of them fail to<br \/>\n   reach or move us, because we are out of joint! What prayer could better<br \/>\n   befit our lips than that the God of peace, the true surgeon of souls,<br \/>\n   would put us in joint, to do his will, with unerring accuracy,<br \/>\n   promptitude, and completeness!<\/p>\n<p>   MARK THE GUARANTEES THAT THIS PRAYER SHALL BE REALIZED. The appeal is<br \/>\n   made to the God of peace. He whose nature is never swept by the storms<br \/>\n   of desire or unrest; whose one aim is to introduce peace into the heart<br \/>\n   and life; whose love to us will not brook disappointment in achieving<br \/>\n   our highest blessedness, he must undertake this office; he will do it<br \/>\n   most tenderly and delicately; nor will he rest until the obstruction to<br \/>\n   the inflow of his nature is removed, and there is perfect harmony<br \/>\n   between the promptings of his will and our immediate and joyous<br \/>\n   response.<\/p>\n<p>   He brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of<br \/>\n   the sheep. To have given us a Shepherd was much; but to have given us<br \/>\n   so great a Shepherd is marvelous. He is the great Shepherd who died,<br \/>\n   just as he is the good Shepherd who knows his flock, and the chief<br \/>\n   Shepherd who is coming again. He is great, because of the intrinsic<br \/>\n   dignity of his nature; because of his personal qualifications to save<br \/>\n   and bless us; because of the greatness of his unknown sufferings; and<br \/>\n   because of the height of glory to which the Father hath exalted him.<br \/>\n   The words &#8220;brought again&#8221; are very expressive. They contain the idea of<br \/>\n   &#8220;brought up.&#8221; More is meant than the reanimation of the dead body of<br \/>\n   Christ. There is included, also, his exaltation by the right hand of<br \/>\n   God, to be a Prince and a Saviour. And, surely, if our God has given us<br \/>\n   such a Shepherd, and raised him to such a glory, that he may help us<br \/>\n   the more efficiently, there is every reason why we should confidently<br \/>\n   count on his doing all that may needed in us, as he has done all that<br \/>\n   was needed for us.<\/p>\n<p>   He will certainly respect the everlasting covenant, which has been<br \/>\n   sealed with blood.   God has entered into an eternal covenant with us<br \/>\n   to be our God and Friend. That covenant, which does not depend on<br \/>\n   anything in us, but rests on his own unchanging nature, has been<br \/>\n   ratified by the precious blood of his Son. As the first covenant was<br \/>\n   sealed by the sprinkled blood of slain beasts, so the second was sealed<br \/>\n   by the precious blood of Christ. &#8220;This is my blood of the new<br \/>\n   testament, which is shed for many for the remission of sins.&#8221; Thus<br \/>\n   spoke our Saviour on the eve of his death, with a weight of meaning<br \/>\n   which this Epistle was needed to explain. And is it likely that he who<br \/>\n   has entered into such a covenant with our souls-a covenant so<br \/>\n   everlasting, so divine, so solemn-will ever go back from it, or allow<br \/>\n   anything to remain undone which may be needed to secure its perfect and<br \/>\n   efficient operation? It cannot be! We may count, without the slightest<br \/>\n   hesitation, on the God of peace doing all that is required to perfect<br \/>\n   us in every good work to do his will.<\/p>\n<p>   THE DIVINE METHOD will be to work in us. It is necessary first that we<br \/>\n   should be adjusted so that there may be no waste or diversion of the<br \/>\n   divine energy. When that is done, then it will begin to pass into and<br \/>\n   through us in mighty tides of power. &#8220;God working in you.&#8221; It is a<br \/>\n   marvelous expression! We know how steam works mightily within the<br \/>\n   cylinder, forcing up and down the ponderous piston. We know how sap<br \/>\n   works mightily within the branches, forcing itself out in bud and leaf<br \/>\n   and blossom. We read of a time when men and women were so possessed of<br \/>\n   devils that they spoke and acted as the inward promptings led them.<br \/>\n   These are approximations to the conception of the text, which towers<br \/>\n   infinitely beyond.<\/p>\n<p>   Have we not all been conscious of some of these workings? They do not<br \/>\n   work in us mightily as they did in the Apostle Paul, because we have<br \/>\n   not yielded to them as he did. Still, we have known them when the<br \/>\n   breath of holy resolution has Swept through our natures; or we have<br \/>\n   conceived some noble purpose; or have been impelled to some deed of<br \/>\n   self-sacrifice for others. These are the workings of God within the<br \/>\n   heart, not in the tornado only, but in the zephyr; not in the thunder<br \/>\n   alone, but in the still small voice. Every sigh for the better life,<br \/>\n   every strong and earnest resolution, every determination to leave the<br \/>\n   nets and fishing-boats to follow Jesus, every appetite for fellowship,<br \/>\n   every aspiration heavenward-all these are the result of God&#8217;s<br \/>\n   in-working.<\/p>\n<p>   How careful we should be to gather up every divine impulse, and<br \/>\n   translate it into action! We must work out what he works in. We must<br \/>\n   labor according to his working, which works in us mightily. We must be<br \/>\n   swift to seize the fugitive and transient expression, embodying it in<br \/>\n   the permanent act.<\/p>\n<p>   It does not seem so difficult to live and work for God when it is<br \/>\n   realized that the eternal God is energizing within. You cannot be<br \/>\n   sufficiently patient to that querulous invalid, your patience is<br \/>\n   exhausted; but God is working his patience within you: let it come out<br \/>\n   through you. You cannot muster strength for that obvious Christian<br \/>\n   duty; but God is working that fruit in your innermost nature; be<br \/>\n   content to let it manifest itself by you. You are incompetent to<br \/>\n   sustain that Christian work, with its manifold demands; but stand<br \/>\n   aside, and let the eternal God work in and through you, to do by his<br \/>\n   strength what you in your weakness cannot do.<\/p>\n<p>   The Christian is the workshop of God. In that mortal but renewed nature<br \/>\n   the divine Artisan is at work, elaborating products of exquisite beauty<br \/>\n   and marvelous skill. Would that we might be less eager to give the<br \/>\n   world ourselves, and more determined that there should be a<br \/>\n   manifestation through all the gateways of our being of the wondrous<br \/>\n   in-working of the God of peace! Then we might say, with some approach<br \/>\n   to the words of our Lord, to such as demand evidences of his<br \/>\n   resurrection and life, &#8220;How sayest thou, Prove to me the resurrection<br \/>\n   of Jesus? the words which I speak, I speak not of myself; but my<br \/>\n   Saviour, who dwelleth in me, he doeth the works.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   THE RESULT will be that we shall be well-pleasing in his sight, through<br \/>\n   Jesus Christ. Our good works can never be the ground of our acceptance<br \/>\n   or justification. The very best of them can only please God through<br \/>\n   Jesus Christ. Our purest tears need washing again in his blood. Our<br \/>\n   holiest actions need to be cleansed ere they can be viewed by a holy<br \/>\n   God. Our best prayers and gifts need to be laid on the altar which<br \/>\n   sanctifies all it touches. We could not stand before God for a moment,<br \/>\n   save by that one sufficient substitutionary sacrifice, once offered by<br \/>\n   Jesus on the cross, and now pleaded by him before the throne.<\/p>\n<p>   At the same time, our Father is pleased with our obedient loyalty to<br \/>\n   his will. He gives us this testimony, that we please him; as Enoch did,<br \/>\n   who walked with him before the flood. And it should be the constant<br \/>\n   ambition of our lives so to walk as to please him, and to obtain from<br \/>\n   him a faint echo of those memorable words which greeted our Saviour as<br \/>\n   he stepped upon the waters of Baptism: &#8220;This is my beloved Son, in whom<br \/>\n   I am well pleased.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>   To him be glory forever and ever! Directly the soul is right with God,<br \/>\n   it becomes a vehicle for God; and thus a revenue of glory begins to<br \/>\n   accrue to God, which ceases not, but augments as the years roll by. And<br \/>\n   the time will never come when the spirit shall not still pour forth its<br \/>\n   glad rejoicings to the glory of him to whom is due the praise of all.<\/p>\n<p>   If your life is not bringing glory to God, see to it that at once you<br \/>\n   set to work to ascertain the cause. Learning it, let it be dealt with<br \/>\n   forthwith. Hand yourself over to God to make you and keep you right.<br \/>\n   And thus begin a song of love and praise, which shall rise through all<br \/>\n   coming ages, to the Father who chose you in Christ, to the Saviour who<br \/>\n   bought you with his blood, and to the Spirit who sanctifies the heart;<br \/>\n   one adorable Trinity, to whom be the glory forever and ever, Amen.<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>                                    Indexes<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>Index of Scripture References<\/p>\n<p>   Genesis<\/p>\n<p>   [2]1:26-28   [3]1:27   [4]1:28   [5]14:19-20   [6]15:17   [7]22:16<\/p>\n<p>   Exodus<\/p>\n<p>   [8]16   [9]17   [10]19:5-6   [11]21:6   [12]21:14   [13]23:22-31<br \/>\n   [14]24:10-11   [15]25:9   [16]25:36   [17]25:40   [18]26:30<br \/>\n   [19]27:8   [20]29:37   [21]30:6   [22]30:34-38<\/p>\n<p>   Leviticus<\/p>\n<p>   [23]2   [24]16:11-13   [25]16:27   [26]17<\/p>\n<p>   Numbers<\/p>\n<p>   [27]13<\/p>\n<p>   Deuteronomy<\/p>\n<p>   [28]12:23   [29]33:2<\/p>\n<p>   2 Kings<\/p>\n<p>   [30]7:8<\/p>\n<p>   Job<\/p>\n<p>   [31]7:17   [32]7:20<\/p>\n<p>   Psalms<\/p>\n<p>   [33]2   [34]8   [35]8:4   [36]8:5-6   [37]40:6   [38]45   [39]48<br \/>\n   [40]68:17   [41]90   [42]95:7   [43]97:7   [44]102   [45]104:4<br \/>\n   [46]106:24-26   [47]110   [48]110   [49]118:27   [50]144:3<\/p>\n<p>   Isaiah<\/p>\n<p>   [51]10:17   [52]53:5<\/p>\n<p>   Jeremiah<\/p>\n<p>   [53]31:31-34<\/p>\n<p>   Hosea<\/p>\n<p>   [54]1<\/p>\n<p>   Micah<\/p>\n<p>   [55]6:6<\/p>\n<p>   Zechariah<\/p>\n<p>   [56]4:2<\/p>\n<p>   Matthew<\/p>\n<p>   [57]5   [58]22:44<\/p>\n<p>   Mark<\/p>\n<p>   [59]16:19<\/p>\n<p>   Luke<\/p>\n<p>   [60]1:9   [61]10:9   [62]24   [63]24:20<\/p>\n<p>   John<\/p>\n<p>   [64]1   [65]1:3   [66]1:12   [67]2   [68]3:2   [69]5   [70]6:53-56<br \/>\n   [71]6:57   [72]6:63   [73]12:31   [74]13   [75]13:4   [76]16   [77]17<br \/>\n   [78]19:34<\/p>\n<p>   Acts<\/p>\n<p>   [79]2:34   [80]2:34   [81]4   [82]7:53   [83]7:53   [84]27:23-24<\/p>\n<p>   Romans<\/p>\n<p>   [85]3:24-25   [86]4:16   [87]4:24   [88]5   [89]8:34   [90]12:19<br \/>\n   [91]42:11-12<\/p>\n<p>   1 Corinthians<\/p>\n<p>   [92]1   [93]3:16   [94]13   [95]15:24-26<\/p>\n<p>   Galatians<\/p>\n<p>   [96]3:19<\/p>\n<p>   Ephesians<\/p>\n<p>   [97]1:3   [98]2:8   [99]4:3<\/p>\n<p>   Philippians<\/p>\n<p>   [100]2:7-8   [101]2:8-9<\/p>\n<p>   Colossians<\/p>\n<p>   [102]1:16<\/p>\n<p>   1 Timothy<\/p>\n<p>   [103]1:1<\/p>\n<p>   2 Timothy<\/p>\n<p>   [104]2:22   [105]3<\/p>\n<p>   Hebrews<\/p>\n<p>   [106]1:1-2   [107]1:3   [108]1:3-4   [109]1:4   [110]1:12   [111]2:1<br \/>\n   [112]2:2   [113]2:5-9   [114]2:6   [115]2:8   [116]2:10   [117]2:10<br \/>\n   [118]2:14-15   [119]2:17   [120]3:12   [121]4:9   [122]4:12<br \/>\n   [123]4:16   [124]5:7-8   [125]6:4-6   [126]6:12   [127]6:17-18<br \/>\n   [128]7:6-7   [129]7:17   [130]7:24   [131]7:25   [132]8:5   [133]8:10<br \/>\n   [134]9:2   [135]9:9   [136]9:14   [137]9:22   [138]9:26   [139]10:5<br \/>\n   [140]10:10   [141]10:14   [142]10:20   [143]10:38   [144]11:1<br \/>\n   [145]12:1-2   [146]12:6   [147]12:14-15   [148]12:22-24   [149]12:27<br \/>\n   [150]12:29   [151]13:8   [152]13:9   [153]13:20-21<\/p>\n<p>   James<\/p>\n<p>   [154]3:18<\/p>\n<p>   1 Peter<\/p>\n<p>   [155]1   [156]2:21   [157]2:24<\/p>\n<p>   2 Peter<\/p>\n<p>   [158]1:3   [159]1:11<\/p>\n<p>   1 John<\/p>\n<p>   [160]1:7   [161]3:3   [162]5:6<\/p>\n<p>   Revelation<\/p>\n<p>   [163]1:5   [164]1:6   [165]1:9   [166]3:17-20   [167]5:9   [168]8:3<br \/>\n   [169]21:12<br \/>\n     __________________________________________________________________<\/p>\n<p>Index of Scripture Commentary<\/p>\n<p>   Hebrews<\/p>\n<p>   [170]1:1-2   [171]1:3-4   [172]1:4   [173]2:1   [174]2:5-9<br \/>\n   [175]2:10   [176]2:14-15   [177]2:17   [178]3:12   [179]4:9<br \/>\n   [180]4:12   [181]4:16   [182]5:7-8   [183]6:4-6   [184]6:12<br \/>\n   [185]7:17   [186]7:25   [187]8:5   [188]8:10   [189]9:2   [190]9:14<br \/>\n   [191]9:22   [192]9:26   [193]10:5   [194]10:38   [195]11:1<br \/>\n   [196]12:1-2   [197]12:6   [198]12:14-15   [199]12:22-24   [200]12:27<br \/>\n   [201]12:29   [202]13:8   [203]13:9   [204]13:20-21<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>__________________________________________________________________ Title: The Way Into the Holiest Creator(s): Meyer, F.B. (1847-1929) LC Subjects: The Bible New Testament Special parts of the New Testament __________________________________________________________________ THE WAY INTO THE HOLIEST: EXPOSITIONS OF THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS. F.B. Meyers B.A., Author of: &#8220;Tried by fire&#8221;; &#8220;The Life and Light of Men&#8221;; &#8220;The Psalms: Notes on Readings&#8221;;&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":14,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"twitterCardType":"","cardImageID":0,"cardImage":"","cardTitle":"","cardDesc":"","cardImageAlt":"","cardPlayer":"","cardPlayerWidth":0,"cardPlayerHeight":0,"cardPlayerStream":"","cardPlayerCodec":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-5035","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5035","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/14"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=5035"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5035\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5035"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=5035"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=5035"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}