{"id":5544,"date":"2010-03-21T16:10:13","date_gmt":"2010-03-21T21:10:13","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/?p=5544"},"modified":"2010-03-21T16:15:48","modified_gmt":"2010-03-21T21:15:48","slug":"till-he-come-charles-h-spurgeon","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/2010\/03\/21\/till-he-come-charles-h-spurgeon\/","title":{"rendered":"Till He Come &#8211; Charles H Spurgeon"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; Title: Till He Come   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; Creator(s): Spurgeon, Charles Hadden (1834-1892)    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; Rights: Public Domain    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; &quot;TILL HE COME.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>COMMUNION MEDITATIONS <\/p>\n<p>&#160; AND <\/p>\n<p>ADDRESSES <\/p>\n<p>&#160; BY <\/p>\n<p>C. H. SPURGEON. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; (Not published in The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit.) <\/p>\n<p>&#160; 1896.   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; PREFATORY NOTE. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; For many years, whether at home or abroad, it was Mr. Spurgeon&#8217;s   <br \/>&#160;&#160; constant custom to observe the ordinance of the Lord&#8217;s supper every    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Sabbath-day, unless illness prevented. This he believed to be in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; accordance with apostolic precedent; and it was his oft-repeated    <br \/>&#160;&#160; testimony that the more frequently he obeyed his Lord&#8217;s command, &quot;This    <br \/>&#160;&#160; do in remembrance of Me,&quot; the more precious did his Saviour become to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; him, while the memorial celebration itself proved increasingly helpful    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and instructive as the years rolled by. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Several of the discourses here published were delivered to thousands of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; communicants in the Metropolitan Tabernacle, while others were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; addressed to the little companies of Christians,&#8211;of different    <br \/>&#160;&#160; denominations, and of various nationalities,&#8211;who gathered around the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion table in Mr. Spurgeon&#8217;s sitting-room at Mentone. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; addresses cover a wide range of subjects; but all of them speak more or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; less fully of the great atoning sacrifice of which the broken bread and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the filled cup are the simple yet significant symbols. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Mr. Spurgeon&#8217;s had intended to publish a selection of his Communion   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Addresses; so this volume may be regarded as another of the precious    <br \/>&#160;&#160; literary legacies bequeathed by him to his brethren and sisters in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ who have yet to tarry a while here below. It is hoped that these    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sermonettes will be the means of deepening the spiritual life of many    <br \/>&#160;&#160; believers, and that they will suggest suitable themes for meditation    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and discourse to those who have the privilege and responsibility of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; presiding at the ordinance.    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>CONTENTS. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; Mysterious Visits. &quot;Thou hast visited me in the night.&quot;&#8211;Psalm xvii. 3. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; &quot;Under His Shadow.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most High shall abide   <br \/>&#160;&#160; under the shadow of the Almighty &quot;&#8211;Psalm xci. 1. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;The shadow of a great rock in a weary land.&quot;&#8211;Isa. xxxii. 2. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;As the apple tree among the trees of the wood, so is my Beloved among   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the sons. I sat down under His shadow with great delight, and His fruit    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was sweet to my taste:&quot; Song of Solomon ii. 3. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Because Thou hast been my help, therefore in the shadow of Thy wings   <br \/>&#160;&#160; will I rejoice.&quot;&#8211;Psalm lxiii. 7. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;And He hath made my mouth like a sharp sword; in the shadow of His   <br \/>&#160;&#160; hand hath He hid me, and made me a polished shaft; in His quiver hath    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He hid me.&quot;&#8211;Isa. xlix. 2. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; Under the Apple Tree. &quot;I sat down under His shadow with great delight, and His   <br \/>&#160; fruit was sweet to my taste.&quot;&#8211; Song of Solomon ii. 3. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; Over the Mountains. &quot;My Beloved is mine, and I am His: He feedeth among the   <br \/>&#160; lilies. Until the day break, and the shadows flee away, turn, my Beloved, and    <br \/>&#160; be Thou like a roe or a young hart upon the mountains of Bether.&quot;&#8211; Song of    <br \/>&#160; Solomon ii. 16, 17. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; Fragrant Spices from the Mountains of Myrrh. &quot;Thou art all fair, My love;   <br \/>&#160; there is no spot in thee.&quot;&#8211;Song of Solomon iv. 7. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; The Well-beloved. &quot;Yea, He is altogether lovely.&quot;&#8211;Song of Solomon v. 16. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; The Spiced Wine of my Pomegranate. &quot;I would cause Thee to drink of spiced wine   <br \/>&#160; of the juice of my pomegranate.&quot;&#8211;Song of Solomon viii. 2. &quot;And of His fulness    <br \/>&#160; have all we received, and grace for grace,&quot;&#8211;John i. 16. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; The Well-beloved&#8217;s Vineyard. &quot;My Well-beloved hath a vineyard in a very   <br \/>&#160; fruitful hill.&quot;&#8211;Isaiah v. 1. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; Redeemed Souls Freed from Fear. &quot;Fear not: for I have redeemed thee.&quot;&#8211;Isaiah   <br \/>&#160; xliii. 1. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; Jesus, the Great Object of Astonishment. &quot;Behold, My Servant shall deal   <br \/>&#160; prudently, He shall be exalted and extolled, and be very high. As many were    <br \/>&#160; astonied at Thee; His visage was so marred more than any man, and His form    <br \/>&#160; more than the sons of men: so shall He sprinkle many nations, the kings shall    <br \/>&#160; shut their mouths at Him: for that which had not been told them shall they    <br \/>&#160; see; and that which they had not heard shall they consider.&quot;&#8211;Isaiah lii.    <br \/>&#160; 13-15. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; Bands of Love; or, Union to Christ. &quot;I drew them with cords of a man, with   <br \/>&#160; bands of love: and I was to them as they that take off the yoke on their jaws,    <br \/>&#160; and I laid meat unto them.&quot;&#8211;Hosea xi. 4. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; &quot;I will Give you Rest.&quot; &quot;I will give you rest.&quot;&#8211;Matthew xi. 28. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; The Memorable Hymn. &quot;And when they had sung an hymn, they went out into the   <br \/>&#160; mount of Olives.&quot;&#8211;Matthew xxvi. 30. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; Jesus Asleep on a Pillow. &quot;And He was in the hinder part of the ship, asleep   <br \/>&#160; on a pillow: and they awake Him, and say unto Him, Master, carest Thou not    <br \/>&#160; that we perish? And He arose, and rebuked the wind, and said unto the sea,    <br \/>&#160; Peace, be still. And the wind ceased, and there was a great calm.&quot;&#8211;Mark iv.    <br \/>&#160; 38, 39. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; Real Contact with Jesus.&quot;And Jesus said, Somebody hath touched Me: for I   <br \/>&#160; perceive that virtue is gone out of Me.&quot;&#8211;Luke viii. 46.Christ and His    <br \/>&#160; Table-companions.&quot;And when the hour was come, He sat down, and the twelve    <br \/>&#160; apostles with Him.&quot;&#8211;Luke xxii. 14. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; A Word from the Beloved&#8217;s Own Mouth. &quot;And ye are clean.&quot;&#8211;John xiii. 10. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; The Believer not an Orphan. &quot;I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to   <br \/>&#160; you.&quot;&#8211;John xiv. 18. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; Communion with Christ and His People. &quot;The cup of blessing which we bless, is   <br \/>&#160; it not the communion of the blood of Christ? The bread which we break, is it    <br \/>&#160; not the communion of the body of Christ? For we being many are one bread, and    <br \/>&#160; one body: for we are all partakers of that one bread.&quot;&#8211;1 Cor. x. 16, 17. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; The Sin-Bearer. &quot;Who His own self bare our sins in His own body on the tree,   <br \/>&#160; that we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness: by whose stripes    <br \/>&#160; ye were healed. For ye were as sheep going astray; but are now returned unto    <br \/>&#160; the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls.&quot;&#8211;1 Peter ii. 24, 25. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; Swooning and Reviving at Christ&#8217;s Feet.&quot;And when I saw Him, I fell at His feet   <br \/>&#160; as dead. And He laid His right hand upon me, saying unto me, Fear not; I am    <br \/>&#160; the first and the last: I am He that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am    <br \/>&#160; alive for evermore, Amen: and have the keys of hell and of death.&quot;&#8211;Revelation    <br \/>&#160; i. 17, 18. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; C.H. Spurgeon&#8217;s Communion Hymn   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; MYSTERIOUS VISITS. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; AN ADDRESS TO A LITTLE COMPANY AT THE COMMUNION TABLE AT MENTONE.&quot;Thou hast   <br \/>&#160; visited me in the night.&quot;&#8211;Psalm xvii. 3. <\/p>\n<p>MYSTERIOUS VISITS. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; IT is a theme for wonder that the glorious God should visit sinful man.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;What is man, that Thou art mindful of him? and the son of man, that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thou visitest him?&quot; A divine visit is a joy to be treasured whenever we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are favoured with it. David speaks of it with great solemnity. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Psalmist was not content barely to speak of it; but he wrote it down in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; plain terms, that it might be known throughout all generations: &quot;Thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hast visited me in the night.&quot; Beloved, if God has ever visited you,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you also will marvel at it, will carry it in your memory, will speak of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it to your friends, and will record it in your diary as one of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; notable events of your life. Above all, you will speak of it to God    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself, and say with adoring gratitude, &quot;Thou hast visited me in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; night.&quot; It should be a solemn part of worship to remember and make    <br \/>&#160;&#160; known the condescension of the Lord, and say, both in lowly prayer and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in joyful psalm, &quot;Thou hast visited me.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; To you, beloved friends, who gather with me about this communion table,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; I will speak of my own experience, nothing doubting that it is also    <br \/>&#160;&#160; yours. If our God has ever visited any of us, personally, by His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Spirit, two results have attended the visit: it has been sharply    <br \/>&#160;&#160; searching, and it has been sweetly solacing. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When first of all the Lord draws nigh to the heart, the trembling soul   <br \/>&#160;&#160; perceives clearly the searching character of His visit. Remember how    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Job answered the Lord: &quot;I have heard of Thee by the hearing of the ear:    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but now mine eye seeth Thee, wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dust and ashes.&quot; We can read of God, and hear of God, and be little    <br \/>&#160;&#160; moved; but when we feel His presence, it is another matter. I thought    <br \/>&#160;&#160; my house was good enough for kings; but when the King of kings came to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it, I saw that it was a hovel quite unfit for His abode. I had never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; known sin to be so &quot;exceeding sinful&quot; if I had not known God to be so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perfectly holy. I had never understood the depravity of my own nature    <br \/>&#160;&#160; if I had not known the holiness of God&#8217;s nature. When we see Jesus, we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fall at His feet as dead; till then, we are alive with vainglorious    <br \/>&#160;&#160; life. If letters of light traced by a mysterious hand upon the wall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; caused the joints of Belshazzar&#8217;s loins to be loosed, what awe    <br \/>&#160;&#160; overcomes our spirits when we see the Lord Himself! In the presence of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so much light our spots and wrinkles are revealed, and we are utterly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ashamed. We are like Daniel, who said, &quot;I was left alone, and saw this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great vision, and there remained no strength in me: for my comeliness    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was turned in me into corruption.&quot; It is when the Lord visits us that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we see our nothingness, and ask, &quot;Lord, what is man?&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I do remember well when God first visited me; and assuredly it was the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; night of nature, of ignorance, of sin. His visit had the same effect    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon me that it had upon Saul of Tarsus when the Lord spake to him out    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of heaven. He brought me down from the high horse, and caused me to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fall to the ground; by the brightness of the light of His Spirit He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; made me grope in conscious blindness; and in the brokenness of my heart    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I cried, &quot;Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?&quot; I felt that I had been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rebelling against the Lord, kicking against the pricks, and doing evil    <br \/>&#160;&#160; even as I could; and my soul was filled with anguish at the discovery.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Very searching was the glance of the eye of Jesus, for it revealed my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sin, and caused me to go out and weep bitterly. As when the Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; visited Adam, and called him to stand naked before Him, so was I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stripped of all my righteousness before the face of the Most High. Yet    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the visit ended not there; for as the Lord God clothed our first    <br \/>&#160;&#160; parents in coats of skins, so did He cover me with the righteousness of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the great sacrifice, and He gave me songs in the night It was night,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but the visit was no dream: in fact, I there and then ceased to dream,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and began to deal with the reality of things. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I think you will remember that, when the Lord first visited you in the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; night, it was with you as with Peter when Jesus came to him. He had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been toiling with his net all the night, and nothing had come of it;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but when the Lord Jesus came into his boat, and bade him launch out    <br \/>&#160;&#160; into the deep, and let down his net for a draught, he caught such a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great multitude of fishes that the boat began to sink. See! the boat    <br \/>&#160;&#160; goes down, down, till the water threatens to engulf it, and Peter, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the fish, and all. Then Peter fell down at Jesus knees, and cried,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Depart from me; for I am a sinful man, O Lord!&quot; The presence of Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was too much for him: his sense of unworthiness made him sink like his    <br \/>&#160;&#160; boat, and shrink away from the Divine Lord. I remember that sensation    <br \/>&#160;&#160; well; for I was half inclined to cry with the demoniac of Gadara, &quot;What    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have I to do with Thee, Jesus, Thou Son of God most high?&quot; That first    <br \/>&#160;&#160; discovery of His injured love was overpowering; its very hopefulness    <br \/>&#160;&#160; increased my anguish; for then I saw that I had slain the Lord who had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come to save me. I saw that mine was the hand which made the hammer    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fall, and drove the nails that fastened the Redeemer&#8217;s hands and feet    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to the cruel tree. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;My conscience felt and own&#8217;d the guilt, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And plunged me in despair; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I saw my sins His blood had spilt, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And help&#8217;d to nail Him there.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This is the sight which breeds repentance: &quot;They shall look upon Him   <br \/>&#160;&#160; whom they have pierced, and mourn for Him.&quot; When the Lord visits us, He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; humbles us, removes all hardness from our hearts, and leads us to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Saviour&#8217;s feet. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When the Lord first visited us in the night it was very much with us as   <br \/>&#160;&#160; with John, when the Lord visited him in the isle that is called Patmos.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He tells us, &quot;And when I saw Him, I fell at His feet as dead.&quot; Yes,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; even when we begin to see that He has put away our sin, and removed our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; guilt by His death, we feel as if we could never look up again, because    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we have been so cruel to our best Friend. It is no wonder if we then    <br \/>&#160;&#160; say, &quot;It is true that He has forgiven me; but I never can forgive    <br \/>&#160;&#160; myself. He makes me live, and I live in Him; but at the thought of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; goodness I fall at His feet as dead. Boasting is dead, self is dead,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and all desire for anything beyond my Lord is dead also.&quot; Well does    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Cowper sing of&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;That dear hour, that brought me to His foot, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And cut up all my follies by the root.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The process of destroying follies is more hopefully performed at Jesus&#8217;   <br \/>&#160;&#160; feet than anywhere else. Oh, that the Lord would come again to us as at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the first, and like a consuming fire discover and destroy the dross    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which now alloys our gold! The word visit brings to us who travel the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; remembrance of the government officer who searches our baggage; thus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; doth the Lord seek out our secret things. But it also reminds us of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; visits of the physician, who not only finds out our maladies, but also    <br \/>&#160;&#160; removes them. Thus did the Lord Jesus visit us at the first. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Since those early days, I hope that you and I have had many visits from   <br \/>&#160;&#160; our Lord. Those first visits were, as I said, sharply searching; but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the later ones have been sweetly solacing. Some of us have had them,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; especially in the night, when we have been compelled to count the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sleepless hours. &quot;Heaven&#8217;s gate opens when this world&#8217;s is shut.&quot; The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; night is still; everybody is away; work is done; care is forgotten, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; then the Lord Himself draws near. Possibly there may be pain to be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; endured, the head may be aching, and the heart may be throbbing; but if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus comes to visit us, our bed of languishing becomes a throne of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glory. Though it is true &quot;He giveth His beloved sleep,&quot; yet at such    <br \/>&#160;&#160; times He gives them something better than sleep, namely; His own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; presence, and the fulness of joy which comes with it. By night upon our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bed we have seen the unseen. I have tried sometimes not to sleep under    <br \/>&#160;&#160; an excess of joy, when the company of Christ has been sweetly mine. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Thou hast visited me in the night.&quot; Believe me, there are such things   <br \/>&#160;&#160; as personal visits from Jesus to His people. He has not left us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; utterly. Though He be not seen with the bodily eye by bush or brook,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nor on tile mount, nor by the sea, yet doth He come and go, observed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; only by the spirit, felt only by the heart. Still he standeth behind    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our wall, He showeth Himself through the lattices. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Jesus, these eyes have never seen <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; That radiant form of Thine! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The veil of sense hangs dark between <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thy blessed face and mine! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;I see Thee not, I hear Thee not, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Yet art Thou oft with me, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And earth hath ne&#8217;er so dear a spot <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; As where I meet with Thee. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Like some bright dream that comes unsought, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When slumbers o&#8217;er me roll, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thine image ever fills my thought, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And charms my ravish&#8217;d soul. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Yet though I have not seen, and still <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Must rest in faith alone; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I love Thee, dearest Lord! and will, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Unseen, but not unknown.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Do you ask me to describe these manifestations of the Lord? It were   <br \/>&#160;&#160; hard to tell you in words: you must know them for yourselves. If you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had never tasted sweetness, no man living could give you an idea of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; honey. Yet if the honey be there, you can &quot;taste and see.&quot; To a man    <br \/>&#160;&#160; born blind, sight must be a thing past imagination; and to one who has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; never known the Lord, His visits are quite as much beyond conception. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; For our Lord to visit us is something more than for us to have the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; assurance of our salvation, though that is very delightful, and none of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us should rest satisfied unless we possess it. To know that Jesus loves    <br \/>&#160;&#160; me, is one thing; but to be visited by Him in love, is more. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Nor is it simply a close contemplation of Christ; for we can picture   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him as exceedingly fair and majestic, and yet not have Him consciously    <br \/>&#160;&#160; near us. Delightful and instructive as it is to behold the likeness of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ by meditation, yet the enjoyment of His actual presence is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; something more. I may wear my friend&#8217;s portrait about my person, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; yet may not be able to say, &quot;Thou hast visited me.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; It is the actual, though spiritual, coming of Christ which we so much   <br \/>&#160;&#160; desire. The Romish church says much about the real presence; meaning    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thereby, the corporeal presence of the Lord Jesus. The priest who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; celebrates mass tells us that he believes in the real presence, but we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reply, &quot;Nay, you believe in knowing Christ after the flesh, and in that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sense the only real presence is in heaven; but we firmly believe in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; real presence of Christ which is spiritual, and yet certain.&quot; By    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spiritual we do not mean unreal; in fact, the spiritual takes the lead    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in real-ness to spiritual men. I believe in the true and real presence    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Jesus with His people: such presence has been real to my spirit.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord Jesus, Thou Thyself hast visited me. As surely as the Lord Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; came really as to His flesh to Bethlehem and Calvary, so surely does He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come really by His Spirit to His people in the hours of their communion    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with Him. We are as conscious of that presence as of our own existence. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When the Lord visits us in the night, what is the effect upon us? When   <br \/>&#160;&#160; hearts meet hearts in fellowship of love, communion brings first peace,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; then rest, and then joy of soul. I am speaking of no emotional    <br \/>&#160;&#160; excitement rising into fanatical rapture; but I speak of sober fact,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when I say that the Lord&#8217;s great heart touches ours, and our heart    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rises into sympathy with Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; First, we experience peace. All war is over, and a blessed peace is   <br \/>&#160;&#160; proclaimed; the peace of God keeps our heart and mind by Christ Jesus. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Peace! perfect peace! in this dark world of sin? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The blood of Jesus whispers peace within. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Peace! perfect peace! with sorrows surging round? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; On Jesus&#8217; bosom nought but calm is found.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; At such a time there is a delightful sense of rest; we have no   <br \/>&#160;&#160; ambitions, no desires. A divine serenity and security envelop us. We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have no thought of foes, or fears, or afflictions, or doubts. There is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a joyous laying aside of our own will. We are nothing, and we will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nothing: Christ is everything, and His will is the pulse of our soul.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; We are perfectly content either to be ill or to be well, to be rich or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be poor, to be slandered or to be honoured, so that we may but abide    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the love of Christ. Jesus fills the horizon of our being. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; At such a time a flood of great joy will fill our minds. We shall half   <br \/>&#160;&#160; wish that the morning may never break again, for fear its light should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; banish the superior light of Christ&#8217;s presence. We shall wish that we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could glide away with our Beloved to the place where He feedeth among    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the lilies. We long to hear the voices of the white-robed armies, that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we may follow their glorious Leader whithersoever He goeth. I am    <br \/>&#160;&#160; persuaded that there is no great actual distance between earth and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heaven: the distance lies in our dull minds. When the Beloved visits us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the night, He makes our chambers to be the vestibule of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; palace-halls. Earth rises to heaven when heaven comes down to earth. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now, beloved friends, you may be saying to yourselves, &quot;We have not   <br \/>&#160;&#160; enjoyed such visits as these.&quot; You may do so. If the Father loves you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; even as He loves His Son, then you are on visiting terms with Him. If,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; then, He has not called upon you, you will be wise to call on Him.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Breathe a sigh to Him, and say,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;When wilt Thou come unto me, Lord? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Oh come, my Lord most dear! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Come near, come nearer, nearer still, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I&#8217;m blest when Thou art near. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;When wilt Thou come unto me, Lord? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I languish for the sight; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Ten thousand suns when Thou art hid, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Are shades instead of light. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;When wilt Thou come unto me, Lord? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Until Thou dost appear, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I count each moment for a day, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Each minute for a year.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;As the hart panteth after the water-brooks, so panteth my soul after   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thee, O God!&quot; If you long for Him, He much more longs for you. Never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was there a sinner that was half so eager for Christ as Christ is eager    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for the sinner; nor a saint one-tenth so anxious to behold his Lord as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; his Lord is to behold him. If thou art running to Christ, He is already    <br \/>&#160;&#160; near thee. If thou dost sigh for His presence, that sigh is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; evidence that He is with thee. He is with thee now: therefore be calmly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glad. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Go forth, beloved, and talk with Jesus on the beach, for He oft   <br \/>&#160;&#160; resorted to the sea-shore. Commune with Him amid the olive-groves so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dear to Him in many a night of wrestling prayer. If ever there was a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; country in which men should see traces of Jesus, next to the Holy Land,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this Riviera is the favoured spot. It is a land of vines, and figs, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; olives, and palms; I have called it &quot;Thy land, O Immanuel.&quot; While in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this Mentone, I often fancy that I am looking out upon the Lake of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Gennesaret, or walking at the foot of the Mount of Olives, or peering    <br \/>&#160;&#160; into the mysterious gloom of the Garden of Gethsemane. The narrow    <br \/>&#160;&#160; streets of the old town are such as Jesus traversed, these villages are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; such as He inhabited. Have your hearts right with Him, and He will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; visit you often, until every day you shall walk with God, as Enoch did,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and so turn week-days into Sabbaths, meals into sacraments, homes into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; temples, and earth into heaven. So be it with us! Amen.    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; UNDER HIS SHADOW. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; A BRIEF SACRAMENTAL DISCOURSE DELIVERED AT MENTONE <\/p>\n<p>&#160; TO ABOUT A SCORE BRETHREN.&quot;He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most   <br \/>&#160; High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty.&quot;&#8211;Psalm xci. 1. <\/p>\n<p>UNDER HIS SHADOW. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I MUST confess of my short discourse, as the man did of the axe which   <br \/>&#160;&#160; fell into the stream, that it is borrowed. The outline of it is taken    <br \/>&#160;&#160; from one who will never complain of me, for to the great loss of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Church she has left these lower choirs to sing above. Miss Havergal,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; last and loveliest of our modern poets, when her tones were most    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mellow, and her language most sublime, has been caught up to swell the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; music of heaven. Her last poems are published with the title, &quot;Under    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His Shadow,&quot; and the preface gives the reason for the name. She said,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;I should like the title to be, Under His Shadow.&#8217; I seem to see four    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pictures suggested by that: under the shadow of a rock, in a weary    <br \/>&#160;&#160; plain; under the shadow of a tree; closer still, under the shadow of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His wing; nearest and closest, in the shadow of His hand. Surely that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hand must be the pierced hand, that may oftentimes press us sorely, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; yet evermore encircling, upholding, and shadowing.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Under His Shadow,&quot; is our afternoon subject, and we will in a few   <br \/>&#160;&#160; words enlarge on the Scriptural plan which Miss Havergal has bequeathed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to us. Our text is, &quot;He that dwelleth in the secret place of the most    <br \/>&#160;&#160; High shall abide under the shadow of the Almighty.&quot; The shadow of God    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is not the occasional resort, but the constant abiding-place, of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saint. Here we find not only our consolation, but our habitation. We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ought never to be out of the shadow of God. It is to dwellers, not to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; visitors, that the Lord promises His protection. &quot;He that dwelleth in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the secret place of the most High shall abide under the shadow of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Almighty:&quot; and that shadow shall preserve him from nightly terror and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ghostly ill, from the arrows of war and of pestilence, from death and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; from destruction. Guarded by Omnipotence, the chosen of the Lord are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; always safe; for as they dwell in the holy place, hard by the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mercy-seat, where the blood was sprinkled of old, the pillar of fire by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; night, the pillar of cloud by day, which ever hangs over the sanctuary,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; covers them also. Is it not written, &quot;In the time of trouble He shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hide me in His pavilion, in the secret of His tabernacle shall He hide    <br \/>&#160;&#160; me&quot;? What better security can we desire? As the people of God, we are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; always under the protection of the Most High. Wherever we go, whatever    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we suffer, whatever may be our difficulties, temptations, trials, or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perplexities, we are always &quot;under the shadow of the Almighty.&quot; Over    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all who maintain their fellowship with God the most tender guardian    <br \/>&#160;&#160; care is extended. Their heavenly Father Himself interposes between them    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and their adversaries. The experience of the saints, albeit they are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all under the shadow, yet differs as to the form in which that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; protection has been enjoyed by them, hence the value of the four    <br \/>&#160;&#160; figures which will now engage our attention. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. We will begin with the first picture which Miss Havergal mentions,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; namely, the rock sheltering the weary traveller:&#8211;&quot;The shadow of a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great rock in a weary land&quot; (Isaiah xxxii. 2). <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now, I take it that this is where we begin to know our Lord&#8217;s shadow.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; He was at the first to us a refuge in time of trouble. Weary was the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; way, and great was the heat; our lips were parched, and our souls were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fainting; we sought for shelter, and we found none; for we were in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wilderness of sin and condemnation, and who could bring us deliverance,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; or even hope? Then we cried unto the Lord in our trouble, and He led us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to the Rock of ages, which of old was cleft for us. We saw our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; interposing Mediator coming between us and the fierce heat of justice,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and we hailed the blessed screen. The Lord Jesus was unto us a covering    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for sin, and so a covert from wrath. The sense of divine displeasure,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which had beaten upon our conscience, was removed by the removal of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sin itself, which we saw to be laid on Jesus, who in our place and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stead endured its penalty. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The shadow of a rock is remarkably cooling, and so was the Lord Jesus   <br \/>&#160;&#160; eminently comforting to us. The shadow of a rock is more dense, more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; complete, and more cool than any other shade; and so the peace which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus gives passeth all understanding, there is none like it. No chance    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beam darts through the rock-shade, nor can the heat penetrate as it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will do in a measure through the foliage of a forest. Jesus is a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; complete shelter, and blessed are they who are &quot;under His shadow.&quot; Let    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them take care that they abide there, and never venture forth to answer    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for themselves, or to brave the accusations of Satan. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; As with sin, so with sorrow of every sort: the Lord is the Rock of our   <br \/>&#160;&#160; refuge. No sun shall smite us, nor, any heat, because we are never out    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Christ. The saints know where to fly, and they use their privilege. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;When troubles, like a burning sun, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Beat heavy on their head, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; To Christ their mighty Rock they run, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And find a pleasing shade.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; There is, however, something of awe about this great shadow. A rock is   <br \/>&#160;&#160; often so high as to be terrible, and we tremble in presence of its    <br \/>&#160;&#160; greatness. The idea of littleness hiding behind massive greatness is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; well set forth; but there is no tender thought of fellowship, or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gentleness: even so, at the first, we view the Lord Jesus as our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shelter from the consuming heat of well-deserved punishment, and we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; know little more. It is most pleasant to remember that this is only one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; panel of the four-fold picture. Inexpressibly dear to my soul is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; deep cool rock-shade of my blessed Lord, as I stand in Him a sinner    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saved; yet is there more. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. Our second picture, that of the tree, is to be found in the Song of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Solomon ii. 3: &quot;As the apple tree among the trees of the wood, so is my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Beloved among the sons. I sat down under His shadow with great delight,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and His fruit was sweet to my taste.&quot; Here we have not so much refuge    <br \/>&#160;&#160; from trouble as special rest in times of joy. The spouse is happily    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wandering through a wood, glancing at many trees, and rejoicing in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; music of the birds. One tree specially charms her: the citron with its    <br \/>&#160;&#160; golden fruit wins her admiration, and she sits under its shadow with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great delight; such was her Beloved to her, the best among the good,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the fairest of the fair, the joy of her joy, the light of her delight.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Such is Jesus to the believing soul. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The sweet influences of Christ are intended to give us a happy rest,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; and we ought to avail ourselves of them; &quot;I sat down under His shadow.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; This was Mary&#8217;s better part, which Martha well-nigh missed by being    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cumbered. That is the good old way wherein we are to walk, the way in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which we find rest unto our souls. Papists and papistical persons,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whose religion is all ceremonies, or all working, or all groaning, or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all feeling, have never come to an end. We may say of their religion as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the law, that it made nothing perfect; but under the gospel there is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; something finished, and that something is the sum and substance of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; salvation, and therefore there is rest for us, and we ought to sing, &quot;I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sat down.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Dear friends, is Christ to each one of us a place of sitting down? I do   <br \/>&#160;&#160; not mean a rest of idleness and self-content,&#8211;God deliver us from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that; but there is rest in a conscious grasp of Christ, a rest of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; contentment with Him as our all in all. God give us to know more of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this! This shadow is also meant to yield perpetual solace, for the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spouse did not merely come under it, but there she sat down as one who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; meant to stay. Continuance of repose and joy is purchased for us by our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord&#8217;s perfected work. Under the shadow she found food; she had no need    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to leave it to find a single needful thing, for the tree which shaded    <br \/>&#160;&#160; also yielded fruit; nor did she need even to rise from her rest, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sitting still she feasted on the delicious fruit. You who know the Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus know also what this meaneth. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The spouse never wished to go beyond her Lord. She knew no higher life   <br \/>&#160;&#160; than that of sitting under the Well-beloved&#8217;s shadow. She passed the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cedar, and oak, and every other goodly tree, but the apple-tree held    <br \/>&#160;&#160; her, and there she sat down. &quot;Many there be that say, who will show us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; any good? But as for us, O Lord, our heart is fixed, our heart is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fixed, resting on Thee. We will go no further, for Thou art our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dwelling-place, we feel at home with Thee, and sit down beneath Thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shadow.&quot; Some Christians cultivate reverence at the expense of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; childlike love; they kneel down, but they dare not sit down. Our Divine    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Friend and Lover wills not that it should be so; He would not have us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stand on ceremony with Him, but come boldly unto Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Let us be simple with Him, then, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Not backward, stiff or cold, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; As though our Bethlehem could be <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What Sina was of old.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let us use His sacred name as a common word, as a household word, and   <br \/>&#160;&#160; run to Him as to a dear familiar friend. Under His shadow we are to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; feel that we are at home, and then He will make Himself at home to us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; by becoming food unto our souls, and giving spiritual refreshment to us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; while we rest. The spouse does not here say that she reached up to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tree to gather its fruit, but she sat down on the ground in intense    <br \/>&#160;&#160; delight, and the fruit came to her where she sat. It is wonderful how    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ will come down to souls that sit beneath His shadow; if we can    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but be at home with Christ, He will sweetly commune with us. Has He not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; said, &quot;Delight thyself also in the Lord, and He shall give thee the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; desires of thine heart&quot;? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In this second form of the sacred shadow, the sense of awe gives place   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to that of restful delight in Christ. Have you ever figured in such a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; scene as the sitter beneath the grateful shade of the fruitful tree?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Have you not only possessed security, but experienced delight in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ? Have you sung,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;I sat down under His shadow, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Sat down with great delight; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; His fruit was sweet unto my taste, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And pleasant to my sight&quot;? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This is as necessary an experience as it is joyful: necessary for many   <br \/>&#160;&#160; uses. The joy of the Lord is our strength, and it is when we delight    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ourselves in the Lord that we have assurance of power in prayer. Here    <br \/>&#160;&#160; faith develops, and hope grows bright, while love sheds abroad all the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fragrance of her sweet spices. Oh! get you to the apple-tree, and find    <br \/>&#160;&#160; out who is the fairest among the fair. Make the Light of heaven the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; delight of your heart, and then be filled with heart&#8217;s-ease, and revel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in complete content. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; III. The third view of the one subject is,&#8211;the shadow of his wings,&#8211;a   <br \/>&#160;&#160; precious word. I think the best specimen of it, for it occurs several    <br \/>&#160;&#160; times, is in that blessed Psalm, the sixty-third, verse seven:&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Because Thou hast been my help, therefore in the shadow of Thy wings   <br \/>&#160;&#160; will I rejoice.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Does not this set forth our Lord as our trust in hours of depression?   <br \/>&#160;&#160; In the Psalm now open before us, David was banished from the means of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grace to a dry and thirsty land, where no water was. What is much    <br \/>&#160;&#160; worse, he was in a measure away from all conscious enjoyment of God. He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; says, &quot;Early will I seek Thee. My soul thirsteth for Thee.&quot; He sings    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rather of memories than of present communion with God. We also have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come into this condition, and have been unable to find any present    <br \/>&#160;&#160; comfort. &quot;Thou hast been my help,&quot; has been the highest note we could    <br \/>&#160;&#160; strike, and we have been glad to reach to that. At such times, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; light of God&#8217;s face has been withdrawn, but our faith has taught us to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rejoice under the shadow of His wings. Light there was none; we were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; altogether in the shade, but it was a warm shade. We felt that God who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had been near must be near us still, and therefore we were quieted. Our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God cannot change, and therefore as He was our help He must still be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our help, our help even though He casts a shadow over us, for it must    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be the shadow of His own eternal wings. The metaphor is, of course,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; derived from the nestling of little birds under the shadow of their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mother&#8217;s wings, and the picture is singularly touching and comforting.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The little bird is not yet able to take care of itself, so it cowers    <br \/>&#160;&#160; down under the mother, and is there happy and safe. Disturb a hen for a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; moment, and you will see all the little chickens huddling together, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; by their chirps making a kind of song. Then they push their heads into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; her feathers, and seem happy beyond measure in their warm abode. When    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we are very sick and sore depressed, when we are worried with the care    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of pining children, and the troubles of a needy household, and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; temptations of Satan, how comforting it is to run to our God,&#8211;like the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; little chicks run to the hen,&#8211;and hide away near His heart, beneath    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His Wings. Oh, tried ones, press closely to the loving heart of your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord, hide yourselves entirely beneath His wings! Here awe has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; disappeared, and rest itself is enhanced by the idea of loving trust.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The little birds are safe in their mother&#8217;s love, and we, too, are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beyond measure secure and happy in the loving favour of the Lord. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; IV. The last form of the shadow is that of the hand, and this, it seems   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to me, points to power and position in service. Turn to Isaiah xlix.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; 2:&#8211;&quot;And He hath made my mouth like a sharp sword; in the shadow of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hand hath He kid me, and made me a polished shaft; in His quiver hath    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He hid me.&quot; This undoubtedly refers to the Saviour, for the passage    <br \/>&#160;&#160; proceeds:&#8211;&quot;And said unto me, Thou art my servant, O Israel, in whom I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will be glorified. Then I said, I have laboured in vain, I have spent    <br \/>&#160;&#160; my strength for nought, and in vain: yet surely my judgment is with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord, and my work with my God. And now, saith the Lord that formed me    <br \/>&#160;&#160; from the womb to be His servant, to bring Jacob again to Him, though    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Israel be not gathered, yet shall I be glorious in the eyes of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord, and my God shall be my strength. And He said, It is a light thing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that thou shouldest be My servant to raise up the tribes of Jacob, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to restore the preserved of Israel: I will also give thee for a light    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to the Gentiles, that thou mayest be My salvation unto the end of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; earth.&quot; Our Lord Jesus Christ was hidden away in the hand of Jehovah,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be used by Him as a polished shaft for the overthrow of His enemies,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and the victory of His people. Yet, inasmuch as it is Christ, it is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; also all Christ&#8217;s servants, since as He is so are we also in this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; world; and to make quite sure of it, we have the same expression in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sixteenth verse of the fifty-first chapter, where, speaking of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people, He says, &quot;I have covered thee in the shadow of Mine hand.&quot; Is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not this an excellent minister&#8217;s text? Every one of you who will speak    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a word for Jesus shall have a share in it. This is where those who are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; workers for Christ should long to be,&#8211;&quot;in the shadow of His hand,&quot; to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; achieve His eternal purpose. What are any of God&#8217;s servants without    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their Lord but weapons out of the warrior&#8217;s hand, having no power to do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; anything? We ought to be as the arrows of the Lord which He shoots at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His enemies; and so great is His hand of power, and so little are we as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His instruments, that He hides us away in the hollow of His hand,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unseen until He darts us forth. As workers, we are to be hidden away in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the hand of God, or to quote the other figure, &quot;in His quiver hath He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hid me:&quot; we are to be unseen till He uses us. It is impossible for us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not to be known somewhat if the Lord uses us, but we may not aim at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; being noticed, but, on the contrary, if we be as much used as the very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; chief of the apostles, we must truthfully add, &quot;though I be nothing.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Our desire should be that Christ should be glorified, and that self    <br \/>&#160;&#160; should be concealed. Alas! there is a way of always showing self in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; what we do, and we are all too ready to fall into it. You can visit the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; poor in such a way that they will feel that his lordship or her    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ladyship has condescended to call upon poor Betsy; but there is another    <br \/>&#160;&#160; way of doing the same thing so that the tried child of God shall know    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that a brother beloved or a dear sister in Christ has shown a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellow-feeling for her, and has talked to her heart. There is a way of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; preaching, in which a great divine has evidently displayed his vast    <br \/>&#160;&#160; learning and talent; and there is another way of preaching, in which a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; faithful servant of Jesus Christ, depending upon his Lord, has spoken    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in his Master&#8217;s name, and left a rich unction behind. Within the hand    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of God is the place of acceptance, and safety; and for service it is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the place of power, as well as of concealment. God only works with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; those who are in His hand; and the more we lie hidden there, the more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; surely will He use us ere long. May the Lord do unto us according to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His word, &quot;I have put My words in thy mouth, and I have covered thee in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the shadow of My hand.&quot; In this case we shall feel all the former    <br \/>&#160;&#160; emotions combined: awe that the Lord should condescend to take us into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His hand, rest and delight that He should deign to use us, trust that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; out of weakness we shall now be made strong, and to this will be added    <br \/>&#160;&#160; an absolute assurance that the end of our being must be answered, for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that which is urged onward by the Almighty hand cannot miss its mark. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; These are mere surface thoughts. The subject deserves a series of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; discourses. Your best course, my beloved friends, will be to enlarge    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon these hints by a long personal experience of abiding under the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shadow of the Almighty. May God the Holy Ghost lead you into it, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; keep you there, for Jesus&#8217; sake!    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p> UNDER THE APPLE TREE.&quot;I sat down under His shadow with great delight, and His   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; fruit was sweet to my taste.&quot;&#8211;Song of Solomon ii. 3. <\/p>\n<p>UNDER THE APPLE TREE. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Christ known should be Christ used. The spouse knew her Beloved to be   <br \/>&#160;&#160; like a fruit-bearing tree, and at once she sat under His shadow, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fed upon His fruit. It is a pity that we know so much about Christ, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; yet enjoy Him so little. May our experience keep pace with our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; knowledge, and may that experience be composed of a practical using of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our Lord! Jesus casts a shadow, let us sit under it: Jesus yields    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fruit, let us taste the sweetness of it. Depend upon it that the way to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; learn more is to use what you know; and, moreover, the way to learn a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; truth thoroughly is to learn it experimentally. You know a doctrine    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beyond all fear of contradiction when you have proved it for yourself    <br \/>&#160;&#160; by personal test and trial. The bride in the song as good as says, &quot;I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; am certain that my Beloved casts a shadow, for I have sat under it, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I am persuaded that He bears sweet fruit, for I have tasted of it.&quot; The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; best way of demonstrating the power of Christ to save is to trust in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him and be saved yourself; and of all those who are sure of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; divinity of our holy faith, there are none so certain as those who feel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; its divine power upon themselves. You may reason yourself into a belief    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the gospel, and you may by further reasoning keep yourself orthodox;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but a personal trial, and an inward knowing of the truth, are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; incomparably the best evidences. If Jesus be as an apple tree among the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trees of the wood, do not keep away from Him, but sit under His shadow,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and taste His fruit. He is a Saviour; do not believe the fact and yet    <br \/>&#160;&#160; remain unsaved. As far as Christ is known to you, so far make use of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him. Is not this sound common-sense? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We would further remark that we are at liberty to make every possible   <br \/>&#160;&#160; use of Christ. Shadow and fruit may both be enjoyed. Christ in His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; infinite condescension exists for needy souls. Oh, let us say it over    <br \/>&#160;&#160; again: it is a bold word, but it is true,&#8211;as Christ Jesus, our Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; exists for the benefit of His people. A Saviour only exists to save. A    <br \/>&#160;&#160; physician lives to heal. The Good Shepherd lives, yea, dies, for His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sheep. Our Lord Jesus Christ hath wrapped us about His heart; we are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; intimately interwoven with all His offices, with all His honours, with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all His traits of character, with all that He has done, and with all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that He has yet to do. The sinners&#8217; Friend lives for sinners, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sinners may have Him and use Him to the uttermost. He is as free to us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as the air we breathe. What are fountains for, but that the thirsty may    <br \/>&#160;&#160; drink? What is the harbour for but that storm-tossed barques may there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; find refuge? What is Christ for but that poor guilty ones like    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ourselves may come to Him and look and live, and afterwards may have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all our needs supplied out of His fulness? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We have thus the door set open for us, and we pray that the Holy Spirit   <br \/>&#160;&#160; may help us to enter in while we notice in the text two things which we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pray that you may enjoy to the full. First, the heart&#8217;s rest in Christ:    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;I sat down under His shadow with great delight.&quot; And, secondly, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heart&#8217;s refreshment in Christ: &quot;His fruit was sweet to my taste.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. To begin with, we have here the heart&#8217;s rest in Christ. To set this   <br \/>&#160;&#160; forth, let us notice the character of the person who uttered this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sentence. She who said, &quot;I sat down under His shadow with great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; delight,&quot; was one who had known before what weary travel meant, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; therefore valued rest; for the man who has never laboured knows nothing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the sweetness of repose. The loafer who has eaten bread he never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; earned, from whose brow there never oozed a drop of honest sweat, does    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not deserve rest, and knows not what it is. It is to the labouring man    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that rest is sweet; and when at last we come, toil-worn with many miles    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of weary plodding, to a shaded place where we may comfortably sit down,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; then are we filled with delight. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The spouse had been seeking her Beloved, and in looking for Him she had   <br \/>&#160;&#160; asked where she was likely to find Him. &quot;Tell me,&quot; says she, &quot;O Thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whom my soul loveth, where Thou feedest, where Thou makest Thy flock to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rest at noon.&quot; The answer was given to her, &quot;Go thy way forth by the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; footsteps of the flock.&quot; She did go her way; but, after a while, she    <br \/>&#160;&#160; came to this resolution: &quot;I will sit down under His shadow.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Many of you have been sorely wearied with going your way to find peace.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Some of you tried ceremonies, and trusted in them, and the priest came    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to your help; but he mocked your heart&#8217;s distress. Others of you sought    <br \/>&#160;&#160; by various systems of thought to come to an anchorage; but, tossed from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; billow to billow, you found no rest upon the seething sea of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; speculation. More of you tried by your good works to gain rest to your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; consciences. You multiplied your prayers, you poured out floods of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tears, you hoped, by almsgiving and by the like, that some merit might    <br \/>&#160;&#160; accrue to you, and that your heart might feel acceptance with God, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so have rest. You toiled and toiled, like the men that were in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vessel with Jonah when they rowed hard to bring their ship to land, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could not, for the sea wrought and was tempestuous. There was no escape    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for you that way, and so you were driven to another way, even to rest    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in Jesus. My heart looks back to the time when I was under a sense of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sin, and sought with all my soul to find peace, but could not discover    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it, high or low, in any place beneath the sky; yet when &quot;I saw one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hanging on a tree,&quot; as the Substitute for sin, then my heart sat down    <br \/>&#160;&#160; under His shadow with great delight. My heart reasoned thus with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; herself,&#8211;Did Jesus suffer in my stead? Then I shall not suffer. Did He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bear my sin? Then I do not bear it. Did God accept His Son as my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Substitute? Then He will never smite me. Was Jesus acceptable with God    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as my Sacrifice? Then what contents the Lord may well enough content    <br \/>&#160;&#160; me, and so I will go no farther, but: &quot;sit down under His shadow,&quot; and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; enjoy a delightful rest. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; She who said, &quot;I sat down under His shadow with great delight,&quot; could   <br \/>&#160;&#160; appreciate shade, for she had been sunburnt. Did we not read just now    <br \/>&#160;&#160; her exclamation,&#8211;&quot;Look not upon me, for I am black, because the sun    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hath looked upon me&quot;? She knew what heat meant, what the burning sun    <br \/>&#160;&#160; meant; and therefore shade was pleasant to her. You know nothing about    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the deliciousness of shade till you travel in a thoroughly hot country;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; then you are delighted with it. Did you ever feel the heat of divine    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wrath? Did the great Sun&#8211;that Sun without variableness or shadow of a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; turning&#8211;ever dart upon you His hottest rays,&#8211;the rays of his holiness    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and justice? Did you cower down beneath the scorching beams of that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great Light, and say, &quot;We are consumed by Thine anger&quot;? If you have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ever felt that, you have found it a very blessed thing to come under    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the shadow of Christ&#8217;s atoning sacrifice. A shadow, you know, is cast    <br \/>&#160;&#160; by a body coming between us and the light and heat; and our Lord&#8217;s most    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blessed body has come between us and the scorching sun of divine    <br \/>&#160;&#160; justice, so that we sit under the shadow of His mediation with great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; delight. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And now, if any other sun begins to scorch us, we fly to our Lord. If   <br \/>&#160;&#160; domestic trouble, or business care, or Satanic temptation, or inward    <br \/>&#160;&#160; corruption, oppresses us, we hasten to Jesus&#8217; shadow, to hide under    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him, and there &quot;sit down&quot; in the cool refreshment with great delight.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The interposition of our blessed Lord is the cause of our inward quiet.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The sun cannot scorch me, for it scorched Him. My troubles need not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trouble me, for He has taken my trouble, and I have left it in His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hands. &quot;I sat down under His shadow.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Mark well these two things concerning the spouse. She knew what it was   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be weary, and she knew what it was to be sunburnt; and just in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; proportion as you also know these two things, your valuation of Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will rise. You who have never pined under the wrath of God have never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; prized the Saviour. Water is of small value in this land of brooks and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rivers, and so you commonly sprinkle the roads with it; but I warrant    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you that, if you were making a day&#8217;s march over burning sand, a cup of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cold water would be worth a king&#8217;s ransom; and so to thirsty souls    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ is precious, but to none beside. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now, when the spouse was sitting down, restful and delighted, she was   <br \/>&#160;&#160; overshadowed. She says, &quot;I sat down under His shadow.&quot; I do not know a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; more delightful state of mind than to feel quite overshadowed by our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beloved Lord. Here is my black sin, but there is His precious blood    <br \/>&#160;&#160; overshadowing my sin, and hiding it for ever. Here is my condition by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nature, an enemy to God; but He who reconciled me to God by His blood    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has overshadowed that also, so that I forget that I was once an enemy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the joy of being now a friend. I am very weak; but He is strong, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His strength overshadows my feebleness. I am very poor; but He hath all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; riches, and His riches overshadow my poverty. I am most unworthy; but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He is so worthy that if I use His name I shall receive as much as if I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were worthy: His worthiness doth overshadow my unworthiness. It is very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; precious to put the truth the other way, and say, If there be anything    <br \/>&#160;&#160; good in me, it is not good when I compare myself with Him, for His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; goodness quite eclipses and overshadows it. Can I say I love Him? So I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; do, but I hardly dare call it love, for His love overshadows it. Did I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; suppose that I served Him? So I would; but my poor service is not worth    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mentioning in comparison with what He has done for me. Did I think I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had any degree of holiness? I must not deny what His Spirit works in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; me; but when I think of His immaculate life, and all His divine    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perfections, where am I? What am I? Have you not sometimes felt this?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Have you not been so overshadowed and hidden under your Lord that you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; became as nothing? I know myself what it is to feel that if I die in a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; workhouse it does not matter so long as my Lord is glorified. Mortals    <br \/>&#160;&#160; may cast out my name as evil, if they like; but what matters it since    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His dear name shall one day be printed in stars athwart the sky? Let    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him overshadow me; I delight that it should be so. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The spouse tells us that, when she became quite overshadowed, then she   <br \/>&#160;&#160; felt great delight. Great &quot;I&quot; never has great delight, for it cannot    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bear to own a greater than itself, but the humble believer finds his    <br \/>&#160;&#160; delight in being overshadowed by his Lord. In the shade of Jesus we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have more delight than in any fancied light of our own. The spouse had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great delight. I trust that you Christian people do have great delight;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and if not, you ought to ask yourselves whether you really are the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people of God. I like to see a cheerful countenance; ay, and to hear of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; raptures in the hearts of those who are God&#8217;s saints! There are people    <br \/>&#160;&#160; who seem to think that religion and gloom are married, and must never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be divorced. Pull down the blinds on Sunday, and darken the rooms; if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you have a garden, or a rose in flower, try to forget that there are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; such beauties: are you not to serve God as dolorously as you can? Put    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your book under your arm, and crawl to your place of worship in as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mournful a manner as if you were being marched to the whipping-post.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Act thus if you will; but give me that religion which cheers my heart,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fires my soul, and fills me with enthusiasm and delight,&#8211;for that is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; likely to be the religion of heaven, and it agrees with the experience    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the Inspired Song. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Although I trust that we know what delight means, I question if we have   <br \/>&#160;&#160; enough of it to describe ourselves as sitting down in the enjoyment of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it. Do you give yourselves enough time to sit at Jesus&#8217; feet? There is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the place of delight, do you abide in it? Sit down under His shadow. &quot;I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have no leisure,&quot; cries one. Try and make a little. Steal it from your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sleep if you cannot get it anyhow else. Grant leisure to your heart. It    <br \/>&#160;&#160; would be a great pity if a man never spent five minutes with his wife,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but was forced to be always hard at work. Why, that is slavey, is it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not? Shall we not then have time to commune with our Best-beloved?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Surely, somehow or other, we can squeeze out a little season in which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we shall have nothing else to do but to sit down under His shadow with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great delight! When I take my Bible, and want to feed on it for myself,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I generally get thinking about preaching upon the text, and what I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; should say to you from it. This will not do; I must get away from that,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and forget that there is a Tabernacle, that I may sit personally at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus&#8217; feet. And, oh, there is an intense delight in being overshadowed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; by Him! He is near you, and you know it. His dear presence is as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; certainly with you as if you could see Him, for His influence surrounds    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Often have I felt as if Jesus leaned over me, as a friend might look   <br \/>&#160;&#160; over my shoulder. Although no cool shade comes over your brow, yet you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; may as much feel His shadow as if it did, for your heart grows calm;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and if you have been wearied with the family, or troubled with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; church, or vexed with yourself, you come down from the chamber where    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you have seen your Lord, and you feel braced for the battle of life,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ready for its troubles and its temptations, because you have seen the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord. &quot;I sat down&quot; said she, &quot;under His shadow with great delight.&quot; How    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great that delight was she could not tell, but she sat down as one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; overpowered with it, needing to sit still under the load of bliss. I do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not like to talk much about the secret delights of Christians, because    <br \/>&#160;&#160; there are always some around us who do not understand our meaning; but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I will venture to say this much&#8211;that if worldlings could but even    <br \/>&#160;&#160; guess what are the secret joys of believers, they would give their eyes    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to share with us. We have troubles, and we admit it, we expect to have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them; but we have joys which are frequently excessive. We should not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; like that others should be witnesses of the delight which now and then    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tosses our soul into a very tempest of joy. You know what it means, do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you not? When you have been quite alone with the heavenly Bridegroom,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you wanted to tell the angels of the sweet love of Christ to you, a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; poor unworthy one. You even wished to teach the golden harps fresh    <br \/>&#160;&#160; music, for seraphs know not the heights and depths of the grace of God    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as you know them. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The spouse had great delight, and we know that she had, for this one   <br \/>&#160;&#160; reason, that she did not forget it. This verse and the whole Song are a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; remembrance of what she had enjoyed. She says, &quot;I sat down under His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shadow.&quot; It may have been a month, it may have been years ago; but she    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had not forgotten it. The joys of fellowship with God are written in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; marble. &quot;Engraved as in eternal brass&quot; are memories of communion with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ Jesus. &quot;Above fourteen years ago,&quot; says the apostle, &quot;I knew a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; man.&quot; Ah, it was worth remembering all those years! He had not told his    <br \/>&#160;&#160; delight, but he had kept it stored up. He says, &quot;I knew a man in Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; above fourteen years ago (whether in the body, I cannot tell; or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whether out of the body, I cannot tell:)&quot; so great had his delights    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been. When we look back, we forget birthdays, holidays, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bonfire-nights which we have spent after the manner of men, but we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; readily recall our times of fellowship with the Well-beloved. We have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; known our Tabors, our times of transfiguration fellowship, and like    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Peter we remember when we were &quot;with Him in the holy mount.&quot; Our head    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has leaned upon the Master&#8217;s bosom, and we can never forget the intense    <br \/>&#160;&#160; delight; nor will we fail to put on record for the good of others the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; joys with which we have been indulged. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now I leave this first part of the subject, only noticing how   <br \/>&#160;&#160; beautifully natural it is. There was a tree, and she sat down under the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shadow: there was nothing strained, nothing formal. So ought true piety    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ever to be consistent with common-sense, with that which seems most    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fitting, most comely, most wise, and most natural. There is Christ, we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; may enjoy Him, let us not despise the privilege. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. The second part of our subject is, the heart&#8217;s refreshment in   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ. His fruit was sweet to my taste. Here I will not enlarge, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; give you thoughts in brief which you can beat out afterwards. She did    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not feast upon the fruit of the tree till first she was under the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shadow of it. There is no knowing the excellent things of Christ till    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you trust Him. Not a single sweet apple shall fall to the lot of those    <br \/>&#160;&#160; who are outside the shadow. Come and trust Christ, and then all that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; there is in Christ shall be enjoyed by you. O unbelievers, what you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; miss! If you will but sit down under His shadow, you shall have all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; things; but if you will not, neither shall any good thing of Christ&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be yours. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But as soon as ever she was under the shadow, then the fruit was all   <br \/>&#160;&#160; hers. &quot;I sat down under His shadow,&quot; saith she, and then, &quot;His fruit    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was sweet to my taste.&quot; Dost thou believe in Jesus, friend? Then Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ Himself is thine; and if thou dost own the tree, thou mayest    <br \/>&#160;&#160; well eat the fruit. Since He Himself becomes thine altogether, then His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; redemption and the pardon that comes of it, His living power, His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mighty intercession, the glories of His Second Advent, and all that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; belong to Him are made over to thee for thy personal and present use    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and enjoyment. All things are yours, since Christ is yours. Only mind    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you imitate the spouse: when she found that the fruit was hers, she ate    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it. Copy her closely in this. It is a great fault in many believers,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that they do not appropriate the promises, and feed on them. Do not err    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as they do. Under the shadow you have a right to eat the fruit. Deny    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not yourselves the sacred entertainment. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now, it would appear, as we read the text, that she obtained this fruit   <br \/>&#160;&#160; without effort. The proverb says, &quot;He who would gain the fruit must    <br \/>&#160;&#160; climb the tree.&quot; But she did not climb, for she says, &quot;I sat down under    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His shadow.&quot; I suppose the fruit dropped down to her. I know that it is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so with us. We no longer spend our money for that which is not bread,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and our labour for that which satisfieth not; but we sit under our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord&#8217;s shadow, and we eat that which is good, and our soul delights    <br \/>&#160;&#160; itself in sweetness. Come Christian, enter into the calm rest of faith,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; by sitting down beneath the cross, and thou shalt be fed even to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; full. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The spouse rested while feasting: she sat and ate. So, O true believer,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; rest whilst thou art feeding upon Christ! The spouse says, &quot;I sat, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I ate.&quot; Had she not told us in the former chapter that the King sat at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His table? See how like the Church is to her Lord, and the believer to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; his Saviour! We sit down also, and we eat, even as the King doth. Right    <br \/>&#160;&#160; royally are we entertained. His joy is in us, and His peace keeps our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hearts and minds. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Further, notice that, as the spouse fed upon this fruit, she had a   <br \/>&#160;&#160; relish for it. It is not every palate that likes every fruit. Never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dispute with other people about tastes of any sort, for agreement is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not possible. That dainty which to one person is the most delicious is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to another nauseous; and if there were a competition as to which fruit    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is preferable to all the rest, there would probably be almost as many    <br \/>&#160;&#160; opinions as there are fruits. But blessed is he who hath a relish for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ Jesus! Dear hearer, is He sweet to you? Then He is yours. There    <br \/>&#160;&#160; never was a heart that did relish Christ but what Christ belonged to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that heart. If thou hast been feeding on Him, and He is sweet to thee,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; go on feasting, for He who gave thee a relish gives thee Himself to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; satisfy thine appetite. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What are the fruits which come from Christ? Are they not peace with   <br \/>&#160;&#160; God, renewal of heart, joy in the Holy Ghost, love to the brethren? Are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they not regeneration, justification, sanctification, adoption, and all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the blessings of the covenant of grace? And are they not each and all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sweet to our taste? As we have fed upon them, have we not said, &quot;Yes,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; these things are pleasant indeed. There is none like them. Let us live    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon them evermore&quot;? Now, sit down, sit down and feed. It seems a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; strange thing that we should have to persuade people to do that, but in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the spiritual world things are very different from what they are in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; natural. In the case of most men, if you put a joint of meat before    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them, and a knife and fork, they do not need many arguments to persuade    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them to fall to. But I will tell you when they will not do it, and that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is when they are full: and I will also tell you when they will do it,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and that is when they are hungry. Even so, if thy soul is weary after    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ the Saviour, thou wilt feed on Him; but if not, it is useless    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for me to preach to thee, or bid thee come. However, thou that art    <br \/>&#160;&#160; there, sitting under His shadow, thou mayest hear Him utter these    <br \/>&#160;&#160; words: &quot;Eat, O friend: drink, yea, drink abundantly.&quot; Thou canst not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have too much of these good things: the more of Christ, the better the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christian. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We know that the spouse feasted herself right heartily with this food   <br \/>&#160;&#160; from the tree of life, for in after days she wanted more. Will you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; kindly read on in the fourth verse? The verse which contains our text    <br \/>&#160;&#160; describes, as it were, her first love to her Lord, her country love,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; her rustic love. She went to the wood, and she found Him there like an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; apple tree, and she enjoyed Him as one relishes a ripe apple in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; country. But she grew in grace, she learned more of her Lord, and she    <br \/>&#160;&#160; found that her Best-beloved was a King. I should not wonder but what    <br \/>&#160;&#160; she learned the doctrine of the Second Advent, for then she began to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sing, &quot;He brought me to the banqueting house.&quot; As much as to say,&#8211;He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; did not merely let me know Him out in the fields as the Christ in His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; humiliation, but He brought me into the royal palace; and, since He is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a King, He brought forth a banner with His own brave escutcheon, and He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; waved it over me while I was sitting at the table, and the motto of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that banneret was love. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; She grew very full of this. It was such a grand thing to find a great   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Saviour, a triumphant Saviour, an exalted Saviour! But it was too much    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for her, and she became sick of soul with the excessive glory of what    <br \/>&#160;&#160; she had learned; and do you see what her heart craves for? She longs    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for her first simple joys, those countrified delights. &quot;Comfort me with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; apples,&quot; she says. Nothing but the old joys will revive her. Did you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ever feel like that? I have been satiated with delight in the love of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ as a glorious exalted Saviour when I have seen Him riding on His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; white horse, and going forth conquering and to conquer; I have been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; overwhelmed when I have beheld Him in the midst of the throne, with all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the brilliant assembly of angels and archangels adoring Him, and my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thought has gone forward to the day when He shall descend with all the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pomp of God, and make all kings and princes shrink into nothingness    <br \/>&#160;&#160; before the infinite majesty of His glory. Then I have felt as though,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at the sight of Him, I must fall at His feet as dead; and I have wanted    <br \/>&#160;&#160; somebody to come and tell me over again &quot;the old, old story&quot; of how He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; died in order that I might be saved. His throne overpowers me, let me    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gather fruit from His cross. Bring me apples from &quot;the tree&quot; again. I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; am awe-struck while in the palace, let me get away to the woods again.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Give me an apple plucked from the tree, such as I have given out to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; boys and girls in His family, such an apple as this, &quot;Come unto Me all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.&quot; Or this:    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;This man receiveth sinners.&quot; Give me a promise from the basket of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; covenant. Give me the simplicity of Christ, let me be a child and feast    <br \/>&#160;&#160; on apples again, if Jesus be the apple tree. I would fain go back to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ on the tree in my stead, Christ overshadowing me, Christ feeding    <br \/>&#160;&#160; me. This is the happiest state to live in. Lord, evermore give us these    <br \/>&#160;&#160; apples! You recollect the old story we told, years ago, of Jack the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; huckster who used to sing,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;I&#8217;m a poor sinner, and nothing at all, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But Jesus Christ is my all in all.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Those who knew him were astonished at his constant composure. They had   <br \/>&#160;&#160; a world of doubts and fears, and so they asked him why he never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; doubted. &quot;Well,&quot; said he, &quot;I can&#8217;t doubt but what I am a poor sinner,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and nothing at all, for I know that, and feel it every day. And why    <br \/>&#160;&#160; should I doubt that Jesus Christ is my all in all? for He says He is.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Oh!&quot; said his questioner, &quot;I have my ups and downs.&quot; &quot;I don&#8217;t,&quot; says    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jack;&quot; I can never go up, for I am a poor sinner, and nothing at all;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and I cannot go down, for Jesus Christ is my all in all.&quot; He wanted to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; join the church, and they said he must tell his experience. He said,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;All my experience is that I am a poor sinner, and nothing at all, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus Christ is my all in all.&quot; &quot;Well,&quot; they said, &quot;when you come    <br \/>&#160;&#160; before the church-meeting, the minister may ask you questions.&quot; &quot;I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; can&#8217;t help it,&quot; said Jack, &quot;all I know I will tell you; and that is all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I know,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;I&#8217;m a poor sinner, and nothing at all, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But Jesus Christ is my all in all.&#8217;&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; He was admitted into the church, and continued with the brethren,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; walking in holiness; but that was still all his experience, and you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could not get him beyond it. &quot;Why,&quot; said one brother, &quot;I sometimes feel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so full of grace, I feel so advanced in sanctification, that I begin to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be very happy.&quot; &quot;I never do,&quot; said Jack; &quot;I am a poor sinner, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nothing at all.&quot; &quot;But then,&quot; said the other, &quot;I go down again, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; think I am not saved, because I am not as sanctified as I used to be.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;But I never doubt my salvation,&quot; said Jack, &quot;because Jesus Christ is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; my all in all, and He never alters.&quot; That simple story is grandly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; instructive, for it sets forth a plain man&#8217;s faith in a plain    <br \/>&#160;&#160; salvation; it is the likeness of a soul under the apple tree, resting    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the shade, and feasting on the fruit. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now, at this time I want you to think of Jesus, not as a Prince, but as   <br \/>&#160;&#160; an apple tree; and when this is done, I pray you to sit down under His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shadow. It is not much to do. Any child, when it is hot, can sit down    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in a shadow. I want you next to feed on Jesus: any simpleton can eat    <br \/>&#160;&#160; apples when they are ripe upon the tree. Come and take Christ, then.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; You who never came before, come now. Come and welcome. You who have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come often, and have entered into the palace, and are reclining at the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; banqueting table, you lords and peers of Christianity, come to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; common wood and to the common apple tree where poor saints are shaded    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and fed. You had better come under the apple tree, like poor sinners    <br \/>&#160;&#160; such as I am, and be once more shaded with boughs and comforted with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; apples, for else you may faint beneath the palace glories. The best of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saints are never better than when they eat their first fare, and are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; comforted with the apples which were their first gospel feast. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The Lord Himself bring forth His own sweet fruit to you! Amen.   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; OVER THE MOUNTAINS.&quot;My Beloved is mine, and I am His: He feedeth among the   <br \/>lilies. Until the day break, and the shadows flee away, turn, my Beloved, and be    <br \/>Thou like a roe or a young hart upon the mountains of Bether.&quot;&#8211; Song of Solomon    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; ii. 16, 17. <\/p>\n<p>OVER THE MOUNTAINS. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; IT may be that there are saints who are always at their best, and are   <br \/>&#160;&#160; happy enough never to lose the light of their Father&#8217;s countenance. I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; am not sure that there are such persons, for those believers with whom    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I have been most intimate have had a varied experience; and those whom    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I have known, who have boasted of their constant perfectness, have not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been the most reliable of individuals. I hope there is a spiritual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; region attainable where there are no clouds to hide the Sun of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; soul; but I cannot speak with positiveness, for I have not traversed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that happy land. Every year of my life has had a winter as well as a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; summer, and every day its night. I have hitherto seen clear shinings    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and heavy rains, and felt warm breezes and fierce winds. Speaking for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the many of my brethren, I confess that though the substance be in us,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as in the teil-tree and the oak, yet we do lose our leaves, and the sap    <br \/>&#160;&#160; within us does not flow with equal vigour at all seasons. We have our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; downs as well as our ups, our valleys as well as our hills. We are not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; always rejoicing; we are sometimes in heaviness through manifold    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trials. Alas! we are grieved to confess that our fellowship with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Well-beloved is not always that of rapturous delight; but we have at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; times to seek Him, and cry, &quot;Oh, that I knew where I might find Him!&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; This appears to me to have been in a measure the condition of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spouse when she cried, &quot;Until the day break, and the shadows flee away,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; turn, my Beloved.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. These words teach us, first, that communion may be broken. The   <br \/>&#160;&#160; spouse had lost the company of her Bridegroom: conscious communion with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him was gone, though she loved her Lord, and sighed for Him. In her    <br \/>&#160;&#160; loneliness she was sorrowful; but she had by no means ceased to love    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him, for she calls Him her Beloved, and speaks as one who felt no doubt    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon that point. Love to the Lord Jesus may be quite as true, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perhaps quite as strong, when we sit in darkness as when we walk in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; light. Nay, she had not last her assurance of His love to her, and of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their mutual interest in one another; for she says, &quot;My Beloved is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mine, and I am His;&quot; and yet she adds, &quot;Turn, my Beloved.&quot; The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; condition of our graces does not always coincide with the state of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; joys. We may be rich in faith and love, and yet have so low an esteem    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of ourselves as to be much depressed. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; It is plain, from this Sacred Canticle, that the spouse may love and be   <br \/>&#160;&#160; loved, may be confident in her Lord, and be fully assured of her    <br \/>&#160;&#160; possession of Him, and yet there may for the present be mountains    <br \/>&#160;&#160; between her and Him. Yes, we may even be far advanced in the divine    <br \/>&#160;&#160; life, and yet be exiled for a while from conscious fellowship. There    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are nights for men as well as babes, and the strong know that the sun    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is hidden quite as well as do the sick and the feeble. Do not,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; therefore, condemn yourself, my brother, because a cloud is over you;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cast not away your confidence; but the rather let faith burn up in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gloom, and let your love resolve to come at your Lord again whatever be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the barriers which divide you from Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When Jesus is absent from a true heir of heaven, sorrow will ensue. The   <br \/>&#160;&#160; healthier our condition, the sooner will that absence be perceived, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the more deeply will it be lamented. This sorrow is described in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; text as darkness; this is implied in the expression, &quot;Until the day    <br \/>&#160;&#160; break.&quot; Till Christ appears, no day has dawned for us. We dwell in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; midnight darkness; the stars of the promises and the moon of experience    <br \/>&#160;&#160; yield no light of comfort till our Lord, like the sun, arises and ends    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the night. We must have Christ with us, or we are benighted: we grope    <br \/>&#160;&#160; like blind men for the wall, and wander in dismay. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The spouse also speaks of shadows. &quot;Until the day break, and the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; shadows flee away.&quot; Shadows are multiplied by the departure of the sun,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and these are apt to distress the timid. We are not afraid of real    <br \/>&#160;&#160; enemies when Jesus is with us; but when we miss Him, we tremble at a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shade. How sweet is that song, &quot;Yea, though I walk through the valley    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for Thou art with me; Thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rod and Thy staff they comfort me!&quot; But we change our note when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; midnight is now come, and Jesus is not with us: then we people the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; night with terrors: spectres, demons, hobgoblins, and things that never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; existed save in fancy, are apt to swarm about us; and we are in fear    <br \/>&#160;&#160; where no fear is. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The spouse&#8217;s worst trouble was that the back of her Beloved was turned   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to her, and so she cried, &quot;Turn, my Beloved.&quot; When His face is towards    <br \/>&#160;&#160; her, she suns herself in His love; but if the light of His countenance    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is withdrawn, she is sorely troubled. Our Lord turns His face from His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people though He never turns His heart from His people. He may even    <br \/>&#160;&#160; close His eyes in sleep when the vessel is tossed by the tempest, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His heart is awake all the while. Still, it is pain enough to have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grieved Him in any degree: it cuts us to the quick to think that we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have wounded His tender heart. He is jealous, but never without cause.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; If He turns His back upon us for a while, He has doubtless a more than    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sufficient reason. He would not walk contrary to us if we had not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; walked contrary to Him. Ah, it is sad work this! The presence of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord makes this life the preface to the life celestial; but His absence    <br \/>&#160;&#160; leaves us pining and fainting, neither doth any comfort remain in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; land of our banishment. The Scriptures and the ordinances, private    <br \/>&#160;&#160; devotion and public worship, are all as sun-dials,&#8211;most excellent when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the sun shines, but of small avail in the dark. O Lord Jesus, nothing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; can compensate us for Thy loss! Draw near to Thy beloved yet again, for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; without Thee our night will never end. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;See! I repent, and vex my soul, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; That I should leave Thee so! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Where will those vile affections roll <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; That let my Saviour go?&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When communion with Christ is broken, in all true hearts there is a   <br \/>&#160;&#160; strong desire to win it back again. The man who has known the joy of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion with Christ, if he loses it, will never be content until it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is restored. Hast thou ever entertained the Prince Emmanuel? Is He gone    <br \/>&#160;&#160; elsewhere? Thy chamber will be dreary till He comes back again. &quot;Give    <br \/>&#160;&#160; me Christ or else I die,&quot; is the cry of every spirit that has lost, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dear companionship of Jesus. We do not part with such heavenly delights    <br \/>&#160;&#160; without many a pang. It is not with us a matter of &quot;maybe He will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; return, and we hope He will;&quot; but it must be, or we faint and die. We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot live without Him; and this is a cheering sign; for the soul that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot live without Him shall not live without Him: He comes speedily    <br \/>&#160;&#160; where life and death hang on His coming. If you must have Christ you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall have Him. This is just how the matter stands: we must drink of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this well or die of thirst; we must feed upon Jesus or our spirit will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; famish. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. We will now advance a step, and say that when communion with Christ   <br \/>&#160;&#160; is broken, there are great difficulties in the way of its renewal. It    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is much easier to go down hill than to climb to the same height again.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; It is far easier to lose joy in God than to find the lost jewel. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spouse speaks of &quot;mountains&quot; dividing her from her Beloved: she means    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that the difficulties were great. They were not little hills, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mountains, that closed up her way. Mountains of remembered sin, Alps of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; backsliding, dread ranges of forgetfulness, ingratitude, worldliness,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; coldness in prayer, frivolity, pride, unbelief. Ah me, I cannot teach    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you all the dark geography of this sad experience! Giant walls rose    <br \/>&#160;&#160; before her like the towering steeps of Lebanon. How could she come at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; her Beloved? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The dividing difficulties were many as well as great. She does not   <br \/>&#160;&#160; speak of &quot;a mountain&quot;, but of &quot;mountains&quot;: Alps rose on Alps, wall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; after wall. She was distressed to think that in so short a time so much    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could come between her and Him of whom she sang just now, &quot;His left    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hand is under my head, and His right hand doth embrace me.&quot; Alas, we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; multiply these mountains of Bether with a sad rapidity! Our Lord is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; jealous, and we give Him far too much reason, for hiding His face. A    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fault, which seemed so small at the time we committed it, is seen in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the light of its own consequences, and then it grows and swells till it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; towers aloft, and hides the face of the Beloved. Then has our sun gone    <br \/>&#160;&#160; down, and fear whispers, &quot;Will His light ever return? Will it ever be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; daybreak? Will the shadows ever flee away?&quot; It is easy to grieve away    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the heavenly sunlight, but ah, how hard to clear the skies, and regain    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the unclouded brightness! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Perhaps the worst thought of all to the spouse was the dread that the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; dividing barrier might be permanent. It was high, but it might    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dissolve; the walls were many, but they might fall; but, alas, they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were mountains, and these stand fast for ages! She felt like the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Psalmist, when he cried, &quot;My sin is ever before me.&quot; The pain of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord&#8217;s absence becomes: intolerable when we fear that we are hopelessly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shut out from Him. A night one can bear, hoping for the morning; but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; what if the day should never break? And you and I, if we have wandered    <br \/>&#160;&#160; away from Christ, and feel that there are ranges of immovable mountains    <br \/>&#160;&#160; between Him and us, will feel sick at heart. We try to pray, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; devotion dies on our lips. We attempt to approach the Lord at the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion table, but we feel more like Judas than John. At such times    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we have felt that we would give our eyes once more to behold the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Bridegroom&#8217;s face, and to know that He delights in us as in happier    <br \/>&#160;&#160; days. Still there stand the awful mountains, black, threatening,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; impassable; and in the far-off land the Life of our life is away, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grieved. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; So the spouse seems to have come to the conclusion that the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; difficulties in her way were insurmountable by her own power. She does    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not even think of herself going over the mountains to her Beloved, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; she cries, &quot;Until the day break, and the shadows flee away, turn, my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Beloved, and be Thou like a roe or a young hart upon the mountains of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Bether.&quot; She will not try to climb the mountains, she knows she cannot:    <br \/>&#160;&#160; if they had been less high, she might have attempted it; but their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; summits reach to heaven. If they had been less craggy or difficult, she    <br \/>&#160;&#160; might have tried to scale them; but these mountains are terrible, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; no foot may stand upon their lone crags. Oh, the mercy of utter    <br \/>&#160;&#160; self-despair! I love to see a soul driven into that close corner, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; forced therefore to look to God alone. The end of the creature is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beginning of the Creator. Where the sinner ends the Saviour begins. If    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the mountains can be climbed, we shall have to climb them; but if they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are quite impassable, then the soul cries out with the prophet, &quot;Oh,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that Thou wouldest rend the heavens, that Thou wouldest come down, that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the mountains might flow down at Thy presence. As when the melting fire    <br \/>&#160;&#160; burneth, the fire causeth the waters to boil, to make Thy name known to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thine adversaries, that the nations may tremble at Thy presence. When    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thou didst terrible things which we looked not for, Thou camest down,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the mountains flowed down at Thy presence.&quot; Our souls are lame, they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot move to Christ, and we turn our strong desires to Him, and fix    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our hopes alone upon Him; will He not remember us in love, and fly to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us as He did to His servant of old when He rode upon a cherub, and did    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fly, yea, He did fly upon the wings of the wind? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; III. Here arises that prayer of the text which fully meets the case.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Turn, my Beloved, and be Thou like a roe or a young hart upon the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mountains of division.&quot; Jesus can come to us when we cannot go to Him.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The roe and the young hart, or, as you may read it, the gazelle and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ibex, live among the crags of the mountains, and leap across the abyss    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with amazing agility. For swiftness and sure-footedness they are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unrivalled. The sacred poet said, &quot;He maketh my feet like hinds&#8217; feet,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and setteth me upon my high places,&quot; alluding to the feet of those    <br \/>&#160;&#160; creatures which are so fitted to stand securely on the mountain&#8217;s side.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Our blessed Lord is called, in the title of the twenty-second Psalm,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;the Hind of the morning &quot;; and the spouse in this golden Canticle    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sings, &quot;My Beloved is like a roe or a young hart; behold He cometh,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; leaping upon the mountains, skipping upon the hills.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Here I would remind you that this prayer is one that we may fairly   <br \/>&#160;&#160; offer, because it is the way of Christ to come to us when our coming to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him is out of the question. &quot;How?&quot; say you. I answer that of old He did    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this; for we remember &quot;His great love wherewith He loved us even when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we were dead in trespasses and in sins.&quot; His first coming into the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; world in human form, was it not because man could never come to God    <br \/>&#160;&#160; until God had come to him? I hear of no tears, or prayers, or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; entreaties after God on the part of our first parents; but the offended    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord spontaneously gave the promise that the Seed of the woman should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bruise the serpent&#8217;s head. Our Lord&#8217;s coming into the world was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unbought, unsought, unthought of; he came altogether of His own free    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will, delighting to redeem. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;With pitying eyes, the Prince of grace <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Beheld our helpless grief; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; He saw, and (oh, amazing love!) <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; He ran to our relief.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; His incarnation was a type of the way in which He comes to us by His   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Spirit. He saw us cast out, polluted, shameful, perishing; and as He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; passed by, His tender lips said, &quot;Live!&quot; In us is fulfilled that word,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;I am found of them that sought Me not.&quot; We were too averse to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; holiness, too much in bondage to sin, ever to have returned to Him if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He had not turned to us. What think you? Did He come to us when we were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; enemies, and will He not visit us now that we are friends? Did He come    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to us when we were dead sinners, and will He not hear us now that we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are weeping saints? If Christ&#8217;s coming to the earth was after this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; manner, and if His coming to each one of us was after this style, we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; may well hope that now He will come to us in like fashion, like the dew    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which refreshes the grass, and waiteth not for man, neither tarrieth    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for the sons of men. Besides, He is coming again in person, in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; latter-day, and mountains of sin, and error, and idolatry, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; superstition, and oppression stand in the way of His kingdom; but He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will surely come and overturn, and overturn, till He shall reign over    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all. He will come in the latter-days, I say, though He shall leap the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hills to do it, and because of that I am sure we may comfortably    <br \/>&#160;&#160; conclude that He will draw near to us who mourn His absence so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bitterly. Then let us bow our heads a moment, and silently present to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His most excellent Majesty the petition of our text: &quot;Turn, my Beloved,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and be Thou like a roe or a young hart upon the mountains of division.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Our text gives us sweet assurance that our Lord is at home with those   <br \/>&#160;&#160; difficulties which are quite insurmountable by us. Just as the roe or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the young hart knows the passes of the mountains, and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stepping-places among the rugged rocks, and is void of all fear among    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the ravines and the precipices, so does our Lord know the heights and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; depths, the torrents and the caverns of our sin and sorrow. He carried    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the whole of our transgression, and so became aware of the tremendous    <br \/>&#160;&#160; load of our guilt. He is quite at home with the infirmities of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nature; He knew temptation in the wilderness, heart-break in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; garden, desertion on the cross. He is quite at home with pain and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; weakness, for &quot;Himself took our infirmities, and bare our sicknesses.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He is at home with despondency, for He was &quot;a Man of sorrows, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; acquainted with grief.&quot; He is at home even with death, for He gave up    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the ghost, and passed through the sepulchre to resurrection. O yawning    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gulfs and frowning steeps of woe, our Beloved, like hind or hart, has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; traversed your glooms! O my Lord, Thou knowest all that divides me from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thee; and Thou knowest also that I am far too feeble to climb these    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dividing mountains, so that I may come at Thee; therefore, I pray Thee,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come Thou over the mountains to meet my longing spirit! Thou knowest    <br \/>&#160;&#160; each yawning gulf and slippery steep, but none of these can stay Thee;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; haste Thou to me, Thy servant, Thy beloved, and let me again live by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thy presence. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; It is easy, too, for Christ to come over the mountains for our relief.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; It is easy for the gazelle to cross the mountains, it is made for that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; end; so is it easy for Jesus, for to this purpose was He ordained from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of old that He might come to man in his worst estate, and bring with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him the Father&#8217;s love. What is it that separates us from Christ? Is it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a sense of sin? You have been pardoned once, and Jesus can renew most    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vividly a sense of full forgiveness. But you say, &quot;Alas! I have sinned    <br \/>&#160;&#160; again: fresh guilt alarms me.&quot; He can remove it in an instant, for the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fountain appointed for that purpose is opened, and is still full. It is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; easy for the dear lips of redeeming love to put away the child&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; offences, since He has already obtained pardon for the criminal&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; iniquities. If with His heart&#8217;s blood He won our pardon from our Judge,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; he can easily enough bring us the forgiveness of our Father. Oh, yes,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it is easy enough for Christ to say again, &quot;Thy sins be forgiven&quot;! &quot;But    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I feel so unfit, so unable to enjoy communion.&quot; He that healed all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; manner of bodily diseases can heal with a word your spiritual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; infirmities. Remember the man whose ankle-bones received strength, so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that he ran and leaped; and her who was sick of a fever, and was healed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at once, and arose, and ministered unto her Lord. &quot;My grace is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sufficient for thee; for My strength is made perfect in weakness.&quot; &quot;But    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I have such afflictions, such troubles, such sorrows, that I am    <br \/>&#160;&#160; weighted down, and cannot rise into joyful fellowship.&quot; Yes, but Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; can make every burden light, and cause each yoke to be easy. Your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trials can be made to aid your heavenward course instead of hindering    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it. I know all about those heavy weights, and I perceive that you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot lift them; but skilful engineers can adapt ropes and pulleys in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; such a way that heavy weights lift other weights. The Lord Jesus is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great at gracious machinery, and He has the art of causing a weight of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tribulation to lift from us a load of spiritual deadness, so that we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ascend by that which, like a millstone, threatened to sink us down. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What else doth hinder? I am sure that, if it were a sheer   <br \/>&#160;&#160; impossibility, the Lord Jesus could remove it, for things impossible    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with men are possible with God. But someone objects, &quot;I am so unworthy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Christ. I can understand eminent saints and beloved disciples being    <br \/>&#160;&#160; greatly indulged, but I am a worm, and no man; utterly below such    <br \/>&#160;&#160; condescension.&quot; Say you so? Know you not that the worthiness of Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; covers your unworthiness, and He is made of God unto you wisdom,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; righteousness, sanctification, and redemption? In Christ, the Father    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thinks not so meanly of you as you think of yourself; you are not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; worthy to be called His child, but He does call you so, and reckons you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be among His jewels. Listen, and you shall hear Him say,&quot; Since thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wast precious in My sight, thou hast been honourable, and I have loved    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thee. I gave Egypt for thy ransom; Ethiopia and Seba for thee.&quot; Thus,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; then, there remains nothing which Jesus cannot overleap if He resolves    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to come to you, and re-establish your broken fellowship. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; To conclude, our Lord can do all this directly. As in the twinkling of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; an eye the dead shall be raised incorruptible, so in a moment can our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dead affections rise to fulness of delight. He can say to this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mountain, &quot;Be thou removed hence, and be thou cast into the midst of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the sea,&quot; and it shall be done. In the sacred emblems now upon this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; supper table, Jesus is already among us. Faith cries, &quot;He has come!&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Like John the Baptist, she gazes intently on Him, and cries, &quot;Behold    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lamb of God!&quot; At this table Jesus feeds us with His body and His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blood. His corporeal presence we have not, but His real spiritual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; presence we perceive. We are like the disciples when none of them durst    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ask Him, &quot;Who art Thou?&quot; knowing that it was the Lord. He is come. He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; looketh forth at these windows,&#8211;I mean this bread and wine; showing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself through the lattices of this instructive and endearing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ordinance. He speaks. He saith, &quot;The winter is past, the rain is over    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and gone.&quot; And so it is; we feel it to be so: a heavenly springtide    <br \/>&#160;&#160; warms our frozen hearts. Like the spouse, we wonderingly cry, &quot;Or ever    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I was aware, my soul made me like the chariots of Amminadib.&quot; Now in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; happy fellowship we see the Beloved, and hear His voice; our heart    <br \/>&#160;&#160; burns; our affections glow; we are happy, restful, brimming over with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; delight. The King has brought us into his banqueting-house, and His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; banner over us is love. It is good to be here! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Friends, we must now go our ways. A voice saith, &quot;Arise, let us go   <br \/>&#160;&#160; hence.&quot; O Thou Lord of our hearts, go with us! Home will not be home    <br \/>&#160;&#160; without Thee. Life will not be life without Thee. Heaven itself would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not be heaven if Thou wert absent. Abide with us. The world grows dark,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the gloaming of time draws on. Abide with us, for it is toward evening.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Our years increase, and we near the night when dews fall cold and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; chill. A great future is all about us, the splendours of the last age    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are coming down; and while we wait in solemn, awe-struck expectation,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our heart continually cries within herself, &quot;Until the day break, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the shadows flee away, turn, my Beloved, and be Thou like a roe or a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; young hart upon the mountains of division.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Hasten, Lord! the promised hour; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Come in glory and in power; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Still Thy foes are unsubdued; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Nature sighs to be renew&#8217;d. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Time has nearly reach&#8217;d its sum, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; All things with Thy bride say Come;&#8217; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Jesus, whom all worlds adore, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Come and reign for evermore!&quot;   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p> FRAGRANT SPICES FROM THE MOUNTAINS OF MYRRH.&quot;Thou art all fair, My love; there   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; is no spot in thee.&quot;&#8211;Song of Solomon iv. 7. <\/p>\n<p>FRAGRANT SPICES FROM THE MOUNTAINS OF MYRRH. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; HOW marvellous are these words! &quot;Thou art all fair, My love; there is   <br \/>&#160;&#160; no spot in thee.&quot; The glorious Bridegroom is charmed with His spouse,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and sings soft canticles of admiration. When the bride extols her Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; there is no wonder, for He deserves it well, and in Him there is room    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for praise without possibility of flattery. But does He who is wiser    <br \/>&#160;&#160; than Solomon condescend to praise this sunburnt Shulamite? Tis even so,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for these are His own words, and were uttered by His own sweet lips.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Nay, doubt not, O young believer, for we have more wonders to reveal!    <br \/>&#160;&#160; There are greater depths in heavenly things than thou hast at present    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dared to hope. The Church not only is all fair in the eyes of her    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Beloved, but in one sense she always was so. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;In God&#8217;s decree, her form He view&#8217;d; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; All beauteous in His eyes she stood, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Presented by Th&#8217; eternal name, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Betroth&#8217;d in love, and free from blame. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Not as she stood in Adam&#8217;s fall, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When guilt and ruin cover&#8217;d all; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But as she&#8217;ll stand another day, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Fairer than sun&#8217;s meridian ray.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; He delighted in her before she had either a natural or a spiritual   <br \/>&#160;&#160; being, and from the beginning could He say, &quot;My delights were with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sons of men.&quot; (Prov. viii. 31.) Having covenanted to be the Surety of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the elect, and having determined to fulfil every stipulation of that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; covenant, He from all eternity delighted to survey the purchase of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blood, and rejoiced to view His Church, in the purpose and decree, as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; already by Him delivered from sin, and exalted to glory and happiness. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Oh, glorious grace, mysterious plan <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Too great for angel-mind to scan, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Our thoughts are lost, our numbers fail; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; All hail, redeeming love, all hail!&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now with joy and gladness let us approach the subject of Christ&#8217;s   <br \/>&#160;&#160; delight in His Church, as declared by Him whom the Spirit has sealed in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our hearts as the faithful and true Witness. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Our first bundle of myrrh lies in the open hand of the text. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. Christ has a high esteem for his church. He does not blindly admire   <br \/>&#160;&#160; her faults, or even conceal them from Himself. He is acquainted with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; her sin, in all its heinousness of guilt, and desert of punishment.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; That sin He does not shun to reprove. His own words are, &quot;As many as I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love, I rebuke and chasten.&quot; (Rev iii. 19.) He abhors sin in her as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; much as in the ungodly world, nay even more, for He sees in her an evil    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which is not to be found in the transgressions of others,&#8211;sin against    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love and grace. She is black in her own sight, how much more so in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; eyes of her Omniscient Lord! Yet there it stands, written by the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; inspiration of the Holy Spirit, and flowing from the lips of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Bridegroom, &quot;Thou art all fair, My love; there is no spot in thee.&quot; How    <br \/>&#160;&#160; then is this? Is it a mere exaggeration of love, an enthusiastic    <br \/>&#160;&#160; canticle, which the sober hand of truth must strip of its glowing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fables? Oh, no! The King is full of love, but He is not so overcome    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with it as to forget His reason. The words are true, and He means us to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; understand them as the honest expression of His unbiassed judgment,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; after having patiently examined her in every part. He would not have us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; diminish aught, but estimate the gold of His opinions by the bright    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glittering of His expressions; and, therefore, in order that there may    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be no mistake, He states it positively: &quot;Thou art all fair, My love,&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and confirms it by a negative: &quot;there is no spot in thee.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When He speaks positively, how complete is His admiration! She is   <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;fair&quot;, but that is not a full description; He styles her &quot;all fair.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He views her in Himself, washed in His sin-atoning blood, and clothed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in His meritorious righteousness, and He considers her to be full of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; comeliness and beauty. No wonder that such is the case, since it is but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His own perfect excellences that He admires, seeing that the holiness,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glory, and perfection of His Church are His own garments on the back of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His own well-beloved spouse, and she is &quot;bone of His bone, and flesh of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His flesh.&quot; She is not simply pure, or well-proportioned; she is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; positively lovely and fair! She has actual merit! Her deformities of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sin are removed; but more, she has through her Lord obtained a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; meritorious righteousness by which an actual beauty is conferred upon    <br \/>&#160;&#160; her. Believers have a positive righteousness given to them when they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; become &quot;accepted in the Beloved.&quot; (Eph. i. 6.) <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Nor is the Church barely lovely, she is superlatively so. Her Lord   <br \/>&#160;&#160; styles her, &quot;Thou fairest among women.&quot; (Sol. Song i. 8.) She has a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; real worth and excellence which cannot be rivalled by all the nobility    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and royalty of the world. If Jesus could exchange His elect bride for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all the queens and empresses of earth, or even for the angels in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heaven, He would not, for He puts her first and foremost,&#8211;&quot;fairest    <br \/>&#160;&#160; among women.&quot; Nor is this an opinion which He is ashamed of, for He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; invites all men to hear it. He puts a &quot;behold&quot; before it, a special    <br \/>&#160;&#160; note of exclamation, inviting and arresting attention. &quot;Behold, thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; art fair, My love; behold, thou art fair.&quot; (Sol. Song iv. 1.) His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; opinion He publishes abroad even now, and one day from the throne of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His glory He will avow the truth of it before the assembled universe.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Come, ye blessed of My Father&quot; (Matt. xxv. 34), will be His solemn    <br \/>&#160;&#160; affirmation of the loveliness of His elect. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let us mark well the repeated sentences of His approbation. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Lo, thou art fair! lo, thou art fair! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Twice fair thou art, I say; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; My righteousness and graces are <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thy double bright array. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;But since thy faith can hardly own <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; My beauty put on thee; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Behold! behold! twice be it known <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thou art all fair to Me!&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; He turns again to the subject, a second time looks into those doves&#8217;   <br \/>&#160;&#160; eyes of hers, and listens to her honey-dropping lips. It is not enough    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to say, &quot;Behold, thou art fair, My love;&quot; He rings that golden bell    <br \/>&#160;&#160; again, and sings again, and again, &quot;Behold, thou art fair.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; After having surveyed her whole person with rapturous delight, He   <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot be satisfied until He takes a second gaze, and afresh recounts    <br \/>&#160;&#160; her beauties. Making but little difference between His first    <br \/>&#160;&#160; description and the last, he adds extraordinary expressions of love to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; manifest His increased delight. &quot;Thou art beautiful, O My love, as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Tirzah, comely as Jerusalem, terrible as an army with banners. Turn    <br \/>&#160;&#160; away thine eyes from Me, for they have overcome Me: thy hair is as a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; flock of goats that appear from Gilead. Thy teeth are as a flock of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sheep which go up from the washing, whereof every one beareth twins,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and there is not one barren among them. As a piece of a pomegranate are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thy temples within thy locks. . . . My dove, My undefiled is but one;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; she is the only one of her mother, she is the choice one of her that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bare her.&quot; (Sol. Song vi. 4-7, 9.) <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The beauty which He admires is universal, He is as much enchanted with   <br \/>&#160;&#160; her temples as with her breasts. All her offices, all her pure    <br \/>&#160;&#160; devotions, all her earnest labours, all her constant sufferings, are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; precious to His heart. She is &quot;all fair.&quot; Her ministry, her psalmody,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; her intercessions, her alms, her watching, all are admirable to Him,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when performed in the Spirit. Her faith, her love, her patience, her    <br \/>&#160;&#160; zeal, are alike in His esteem as &quot;rows of jewels&quot; and &quot;chains of gold.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; (Sol. Song i. 10.) He loves and admires her everywhere. In the house of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bondage, or in the land of Canaan, she is ever fair. On the top of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lebanon His heart is ravished with one of her eyes, and in the fields    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and villages He joyfully receives her loves. He values her above gold    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and silver in the days of His gracious manifestations, but He has an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; equal appreciation of her when He withdraws Himself, for it is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; immediately after He had said, &quot;Until the day break, and the shadows    <br \/>&#160;&#160; flee away, I will get Me to the mountain of myrrh, and to the hill of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; frankincense,&quot; (Sol. Song iv. 6,) that He exclaims, in the words of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; text, &quot;Thou art all fair, My love.&quot; At all seasons believers are very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; near the heart of the Lord Jesus, they are always as the apple of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; eye, and the jewel of His crown. Our name is still on His breastplate,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and our persons are still in His gracious remembrance. He never thinks    <br \/>&#160;&#160; lightly of His people; and certainly in all the compass of His Word    <br \/>&#160;&#160; there is not one syllable which looks like contempt of them. They are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the choice treasure and peculiar portion of the Lord of hosts; and what    <br \/>&#160;&#160; king will undervalue his own inheritance? What loving husband will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; despise his own wife? Let others call the Church what they may, Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; does not waver in His love to her, and does not differ in His judgment    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of her, for He still exclaims, &quot;How fair and how pleasant art thou, O    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love, for delights!&quot; (Sol. Song vii. 6.) <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let us remember that He who pronounces the Church and each individual   <br \/>&#160;&#160; believer to be &quot;all fair&quot; is none other than the glorious Son of God,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; who is &quot;very God of very God.&quot; Hence His declaration is decisive, since    <br \/>&#160;&#160; infallibility has uttered it. There can be no mistake where the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all-seeing Jehovah is the Judge. If He has pronounced her to be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; incomparably fair, she is so, beyond a doubt; and though hard for our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; poor puny faith to receive, it is nevertheless as divine a verity as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; any of the undoubted doctrines of revelation. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Having thus pronounced her positively full of beauty, He now confirms   <br \/>&#160;&#160; His praise by a precious negative: &quot;There is no spot in thee.&quot; As if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the thought occurred to the Bridegroom that the carping world would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; insinuate that He had only mentioned her comely parts, and had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; purposely omitted those features which were deformed or defiled, He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sums all up by declaring her universally and entirely fair, and utterly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; devoid of stain. A spot may soon be removed, and is the very least    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thing that can disfigure beauty, but even from this little blemish the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Church is delivered in her Lord&#8217;s sight. If He had said there is no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hideous scar, no horrible deformity, no filthy ulcer, we might even    <br \/>&#160;&#160; then have marvelled; but when He testifies that she is free from the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; slightest spot, all these things are included, and the depth of wonder    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is increased. If He had but promised to remove all spots, we should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have had eternal reason for joy; but when He Speaks of it as already    <br \/>&#160;&#160; done, who can restrain the most intense emotions of satisfaction and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; delight? O my soul, here is marrow and fatness for thee; eat thy full,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and be abundantly glad therein! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Christ Jesus has no quarrel with His spouse. She often wanders from   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him, and grieves His Holy Spirit, but He does not allow her faults to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; affect His love. He sometimes chides, but it is always in the tenderest    <br \/>&#160;&#160; manner, with the kindest intentions;&#8211;it is &quot;My love&quot; even then. There    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is no remembrance of our follies, He does not cherish ill thoughts of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us, but He pardons, and loves as well after the offence as before it.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; It is well for us it is so, for if Jesus were as mindful of injuries as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we are, how could He commune with us? Many a time a believer will put    <br \/>&#160;&#160; himself out of humour with the Lord for some slight turn in providence,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but our precious Husband knows our silly hearts too well to take any    <br \/>&#160;&#160; offence at our ill manners. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; If He were as easily provoked as we are, who among us could hope for a   <br \/>&#160;&#160; comfortable look or a kind salutation? but He is &quot;ready to pardon, slow    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to anger.&quot; (Neh. ix. 17.) He is like Noah&#8217;s sons, He goes backward, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; throws a cloak over our nakedness; or we may compare Him to Apelles,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; who, when he painted Alexander, put his finger over the scar on the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cheek, that it might not be seen in the picture. &quot;He hath not beheld    <br \/>&#160;&#160; iniquity in Jacob, neither hath He seen perverseness in Israel&quot; (Num.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; xxiii. 21); and hence He is able to commune with the erring sons of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; men. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But the question returns,&#8211;How is this? Can it be explained, so as not   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to clash with the most evident fact that sin remaineth even in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hearts of the regenerate? Can our own daily bewailings of sin allow of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; anything like perfection as a present attainment? The Lord Jesus saith    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it, and therefore it must be true; but in what sense is it to be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; understood? How are we &quot;all fair&quot; though we ourselves feel that we are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; black, because the sun hath looked upon us? (Sol. Song i. 6.) The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; answer is ready, if we consider the analogy of faith. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; 1. In the matter of justification, the saints are complete and without   <br \/>&#160;&#160; sin. As Durham says, these words are spoken &quot;in respect of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; imputation of Christ&#8217;s righteousness wherewith they are adorned, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which they have put on, which makes them very glorious and lovely, so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that they are beautiful beyond all others, through His comeliness put    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon them.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And Dr. Gill excellently expresses the same idea, when he writes,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;though all sin is seen by God, in articulo providentiae, in the matter    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of providence, wherein nothing escapes His all-seeing eye; yet in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; articula iustificationis, in the matter of justification, He sees no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sin in His people, so as to reckon it to them, or condemn them for it;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for they all stand holy and unblameable and unreproveable in His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sight.&#8217;&quot; (Col. i. 22.) The blood of Jesus removes all stain, and His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; righteousness confers perfect beauty; and, therefore, in the Beloved,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the true believer is at this hour as much accepted and approved, in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sight of God, as He will be when He stands before the throne in heaven.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The beauty of justification is at its fulness the moment a soul is by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; faith received into the Lord Jesus. This is righteousness so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; transcendent that no one can exaggerate its glorious merit. Since this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; righteousness is that of Jesus, the Son of God, it is therefore divine,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and is, indeed, the holiness of God; and, hence, Kent was not too    <br \/>&#160;&#160; daring when, in a bold flight of rapture, he sang,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;In thy Surety thou art free, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; His dear hands were pierced for thee; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; With His spotless vesture on, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Holy as the Holy One. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Oh, the heights and depths of grace, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Shining with meridian blaze; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Here the sacred records show <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Sinners black, but comely too!&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; 2. But perhaps it is best to understand this as relating to the design   <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Christ concerning them. It is His purpose to present them without    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing.&quot; (Eph. v. 27.) They shall be holy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and unblameable and unreproveable in the sight of the Omniscient God.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; In prospect of this, the Church is viewed as being virtually what she    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is soon to be actually. Nor is this a frivolous antedating of her    <br \/>&#160;&#160; excellence; for be it ever remembered that the Representative, in whom    <br \/>&#160;&#160; she is accepted, is actually complete in all perfections and glories at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this very moment. As the Head of the body is already without sin, being    <br \/>&#160;&#160; none other than the Lord from heaven, it is but in keeping that the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whole body should be pronounced comely and fair through the glory of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Head. The fact of her future perfection is so certain that it is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spoken of as if it were already accomplished, and indeed it is so in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the mind of Him to whom a thousand years are but as one day. &quot;Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; often expounds an honest believer, from His own heart, purpose and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; design; in which respect they get many titles, otherwise unsuitable to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their present condition. (Durham.) Let us magnify the name of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus, who loves us so well that He will overleap the dividing years of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our pilgrimage, that He may give us even now the praise which seems to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be only fitted for the perfection of Paradise. As Erskine sings,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;My love, thou seem&#8217;st a loathsome worm: <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Yet such thy beauties be, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I spoke but half thy comely form; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thou&#8217;rt wholly fair to Me. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Whole justified, in perfect dress; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Nor justice, nor the law <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Can in thy robe of righteousness <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Discern the smallest flaw. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Yea, sanctified in ev&#8217;ry part, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thou art perfect in design: <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And I judge thee by what thou art <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In thy intent and Mine. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Fair love, by grace complete in Me, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Beyond all beauteous brides; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Each spot that ever sullied thee <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; My purple vesture hides.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. Our Lord&#8217;s admiration is sweetened by love. He addresses the spouse   <br \/>&#160;&#160; as &quot;My love.&quot; The virgins called her &quot;the fairest among women&quot;; they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saw and admired, but it was reserved for her Lord to love her. Who can    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fully tell the excellence of His love? Oh, how His heart goeth forth    <br \/>&#160;&#160; after His redeemed! As for the love of David and Jonathan, it is far    <br \/>&#160;&#160; exceeded in Christ. No tender husband was ever so fond as He. No    <br \/>&#160;&#160; figures can completely set forth His heart&#8217;s affection, for it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; surpasses all the love that man or woman hath heard or thought of. Our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blessed Lord, Himself, when He would declare the greatness of it, was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; compelled to compare one inconceivable thing with another, in order to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; express His own thoughts. &quot;As the Father hath loved Me, so have I loved    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you.&quot; (John xv. 9.) All the eternity, fervency, immutability, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; infinity which are to be found in the love of Jehovah the Father,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; towards Jehovah-Jesus the Son, are copied to the letter in the love of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord Jesus towards His chosen ones. Before the foundation of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; world He loved His people, in all their wanderings He loved them, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unto the end He will abide in His love. (John xiii. 1.) He has given    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them the best proof of His affection, in that He gave Himself to die    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for their sins, and hath revealed to them complete pardon as the result    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of His death. The willing manner of His death is further confirmation    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of His boundless love. How Christ did delight in the work of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; redemption! &quot;Lo, I come: in the volume of the book it is written of Me,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I delight to do Thy will, O my God.&quot; (Psalm xl. 7, 8.) When He came    <br \/>&#160;&#160; into the world to sacrifice His life for us, it was a freewill    <br \/>&#160;&#160; offering. &quot;I have a baptism to be baptized with.&quot; (Luke xii. 50.)    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ was to be, as it were, baptized in His own blood, and how did He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thirst for that time! &quot;How am I straitened till it be accomplished.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; There was no hesitation, no desire to be quit of His engagement. He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; went to His crucifixion without once halting by the way to deliberate    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whether He should complete His sacrifice. The stupendous mass of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fearful debt He paid at once, asking neither delay nor diminution. From    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the moment when He said, &quot;Not My will, but Thine, be done&quot; (Luke xxii.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; 42), His course was swift and unswerving; as if He had been hastening    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to a crown rather than to a cross. The fulness of time was His only    <br \/>&#160;&#160; remembrancer; He was not driven by bailiffs to discharge the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; obligations of His Church, but joyously, even when full of sorrow, He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; met the law, answered its demands, and cried, &quot;It is finished.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; How hard it is to talk of love so as to convey out meaning with it! How   <br \/>&#160;&#160; often have our eyes been full of tears when we have realized the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thought that Jesus loves us! How has our spirit been melted within us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at the assurance that He thinks of us and bears us on His heart! But we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot kindle the like emotion in others, nor can we give, by word of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mouth, so much as a faint idea of the bliss which coucheth in that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; exclamation, &quot;Oh, how He loves!&quot; Come, reader, canst thou say of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thyself, &quot;He loved me&quot;? (Gal. ii. 20.) Then look down into this sea of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love, and endeavour to guess its depth. Doth it not stagger thy faith,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that He should love thee? Or, if thou hast strong confidence, say, does    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it not enfold thy spirit in a flame of admiring and adoring gratitude?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; O ye angels, such love as this ye never knew! Jesus doth not bear your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; names upon His hands, or call you His bride. No! this highest    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellowship he reserves for worms whose only return is tearful, hearty    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thanksgiving and love. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; III. Let us note that Christ delights to think upon his Church, and to   <br \/>&#160;&#160; look upon her beauty. As the bird returneth often to its nest, and as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the wayfarer hastens to his home, so doth the mind continually pursue    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the object of its choice. We cannot look too often upon that face which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we love; we desire always to have our precious things in our sight. It    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is even so with our Lord Jesus. From all eternity, &quot;His delights were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with the sons of men;&quot; His thoughts rolled onward to the time when His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; elect should be born into the world; He viewed them in the mirror of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His fore-knowledge. &quot;In thy book,&quot; He says, &quot;all my members were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; written, which in continuance were fashioned, when as yet there was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; none of them.&quot; (Ps. cxxxix. 16.) When the world was set upon its    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pillars, He was there, and He set the bounds of the people according to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the number of the children of Israel. Many a time, before His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; incarnation, He descended to this earth in the similitude of a man; on    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the plains of Mamre (Gen. xviii.), by the brook of Jabbok (Gen. xxxii.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; 24-30), beneath the walls of Jericho (Josh. v. 13), and in the fiery    <br \/>&#160;&#160; furnace of Babylon (Dan. iii. 19-25), the Son of man did visit His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people. Because His soul delighted in them, He could not rest away from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them, for His heart longed after them. Never were they absent from His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heart, for He had written their names upon His hands, and graven them    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon His heart. As the breast-plate containing the names of the tribes    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Israel was the most brilliant ornament worn by the high priest, so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the names of Christ&#8217;s elect were His most precious Jewels, which He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ever hung nearest His heart. We may often forget to meditate upon the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perfections of our Lord, but He never ceases to remember us. He cares    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not one half so much for any of His most glorious works as He does for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His children. Although His eye seeth everything that hath beauty and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; excellence in it, He never fixes His gaze anywhere with that admiration    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and delight which He spends upon His purchased ones. He charges His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; angels concerning them, and calls upon those holy beings to rejoice    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with Him over His lost sheep. (Luke xv. 4-7.) He talked of them to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself, and even on the tree of doom He did not cease to soliloquize    <br \/>&#160;&#160; concerning them. He saw of the travail of His soul, and He was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; abundantly satisfied. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;That day acute of ignominious woe, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Was, notwithstanding, in a perfect sense, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &#8216;The day of His heart&#8217;s gladness,&#8217; for the joy <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; That His redeem&#8217;d should be brought home at last <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; (Made ready as in robes of bridal white), <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Was set before Him vividly,&#8211;He look&#8217;d;&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And for that happiness anticipate, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Endurance of all torture, all disgrace, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Seem&#8217;d light infliction to His heart of love.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Like a fond mother, Christ Jesus, our thrice-blessed Lord, sees every   <br \/>&#160;&#160; dawning of excellence, and every bud of goodness in us, making much of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our litties, and rejoicing over the beginnings of our graces. As He is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be our endless song, so we are His perpetual prayer. When He is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; absent He thinks of us, and in the black darkness He has a window    <br \/>&#160;&#160; through which He looks upon us. When the sun sets in one part of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; earth, he rises in another place beyond our visible horizon; and even    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so Jesus, our Sun of Righteousness, is only pouring light upon His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people in a different way, when to our apprehension He seems to have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; set in darkness. His eye is ever upon the vineyard, which is His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Church: &quot;I the Lord do keep it; I will water it every moment: lest any    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hurt it, I will keep it night and day.&quot; (Isa. xxvii. 3.) He will not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trust to His angels to do it, for it is His delight to do all with His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; own hands. Zion is in the centre of His heart, and He cannot forget    <br \/>&#160;&#160; her, for every day His thoughts are set upon her. When the bride by her    <br \/>&#160;&#160; neglect of Him hath hidden herself from His sight, He cannot be quiet    <br \/>&#160;&#160; until again He looks upon her. He calls her forth with the most wooing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; words, &quot;O My dove, that art in the clefts of the rock, in the secret    <br \/>&#160;&#160; places of the stairs, let Me see thy countenance; let Me hear thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; voice; for sweet is thy voice, and thy countenance is comely.&quot; (Sol.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Song ii. 14.) She thinks herself unmeet to keep company with such a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Prince, but He entices her from her lurking-place, and inasmuch as she    <br \/>&#160;&#160; comes forth trembling, and bashfully hides her face with her veil, He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bids her uncover her face, and let her Husband gaze upon her. She is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ashamed to do so, for she is black in her own esteem, and therefore He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; urges that she is comely to Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Nor is He content with looking, He must feed His ears as well as His   <br \/>&#160;&#160; eyes, and therefore He commends her speech, and intreats her to let Him    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hear her voice. See how truly our Lord rejoiceth in us. Is not this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unparalleled love! We have heard of princes who have been smitten by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the beauty of a peasant&#8217;s daughter, but what of that? Here is the Son    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of God doting upon a worm, looking with eyes of admiration upon a poor    <br \/>&#160;&#160; child of Adam, and listening with joy to the lispings of poor flesh and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blood. Ought we not to be exceedingly charmed by such matchless    <br \/>&#160;&#160; condescension? And should not our hearts as much delight in Him as He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; doth in us? O surprising truth! Christ Jesus rejoices over His poor,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tempted, tried, and erring people. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; IV. It is not to be forgotten that sometimes the Lord Jesus tells His   <br \/>&#160;&#160; people His love thoughts. &quot;He does not think it enough behind her back    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to tell it, but in her very presence, He says, Thou art all fair, My    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love.&#8217; It is true, this is not His ordinary method; He is a wise lover,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that knows when to keep back the intimation of love, and when to let it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; out; but there are times when He will make no secret of it; times when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He will put it beyond all dispute in the souls of His people.&quot; [1] <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The Holy Spirit is often pleased in a most gracious manner to witness   <br \/>&#160;&#160; with our spirits of the love of Jesus. He takes of the things of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ, and reveals them unto us. No voice is heard from the clouds,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and no vision is seen in the night, but we have a testimony more sure    <br \/>&#160;&#160; than either of these. If an angel should fly from heaven, and inform    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the saint personally of the Saviour&#8217;s love to him, the evidence would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not be one whir more satisfactory than that which is borne in the heart    <br \/>&#160;&#160; by the Holy Ghost. Ask those of the Lord&#8217;s people who have lived the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nearest to the gates of heaven, and they will tell you that they have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had seasons when the love of Christ towards them has been a fact so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; clear and sure, that they could no more doubt it than they could    <br \/>&#160;&#160; question their own existence. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Yes, beloved believer, you and I have had times of refreshing from the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; presence of the Lord, and then our faith has mounted to the topmost    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heights of assurance. We have had confidence to lean our heads upon the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bosom of our Lord, and we have had no more question about our Master&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; affection than John had when in that blessed posture, nay, nor so much;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for the dark question, &quot;Lord, is it I that shall betray Thee?&quot; has been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; put far from us. He has kissed us with the kisses of His love, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; killed our doubts by the closeness of His embrace. His love has been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sweeter than wine to our souls. We felt that we could sing, &quot;His left    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hand is under my head, and His right hand doth embrace me.&quot; (Sol. Song    <br \/>&#160;&#160; viii. 3.) Then all earthly troubles were light as the chaff of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; threshing-floor, and the pleasures of the world as tasteless as the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; white of an egg. We would have welcomed death as the messenger who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; would introduce us to our Lord to whom we were in haste to be gone; for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His love had stirred us to desire more of Him, even His immediate and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glorious presence. I have, sometimes, when the Lord has assured me of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His love, felt as if I could not contain more joy and delight. My eyes    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ran down with tears of gratitude. I fell upon my knees to bless Him,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but rose again in haste, feeling as if I had nothing more to ask for,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but must stand up and praise Him; then have I lifted my hands to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heaven, longing to fill my arms with Him; panting to talk with Him, as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a man talketh with his friend, and to see Him in His own person, that I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; might tell Him how happy He had made His unworthy servant, and might    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fall on my face, and kiss His feet in unutterable thankfulness and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love. Such a banquet have I had upon one word of my Beloved,&#8211;&quot;thou art    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Mine,&quot;&#8211;that I wished, like Peter, to build tabernacles in that mount,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and dwell for ever. But, alas, we have not, all of us, yet learned how    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to preserve that blessed assurance. We stir up our Beloved and awake    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him, then He leaves our unquiet chamber, and we grope after Him, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; make many a weary journey trying to find Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; If we were wiser and more careful, we might preserve the fragrance of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ&#8217;s words far longer; for they are not like the ordinary manna    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which soon rotted, but are comparable to that omer of it which was put    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the golden pot, and preserved for many generations. The sweet Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus has been known to write his love-thoughts on the heart of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people in so clear and deep a manner, that they have for months, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; even for years, enjoyed an abiding sense of His affection. A few doubts    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have flitted across their minds like thin clouds before a summer&#8217;s sun,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but the warmth of their assurance has remained the same for many a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gladsome day. Their path has been a smooth one, they have fed in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; green pastures beside the still waters, for His rod and staff have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; comforted them, and His right hand hath led them. I am inclined to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; think that there is more of this in the Church than some men would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; allow. We have a goodly number who dwell upon the hills, and behold the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; light of the sun. There are giants in these days, though the times are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not such as to allow them room to display their gigantic strength; in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; many a humble cot, in many a crowded workshop, in many a village manse    <br \/>&#160;&#160; there are to be found men of the house of David, men after God&#8217;s own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heart, anointed with the holy oil. It is, however, a mournful truth,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that whole ranks in the army of our Lord are composed of dwarfish    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Littlefaiths. The men of fearful mind and desponding heart are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; everywhere to be seen. Why is this? Is it the Master&#8217;s fault, or ours?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Surely He cannot be blamed. Is it not then a matter of enquiry in our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; own souls, Can I not grow stronger? Must I be a mourner all my days?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; How can I get rid of my doubts? The answer must be: yes, you can be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; comforted, but only the mouth of the Lord can do it, for anything less    <br \/>&#160;&#160; than this will be unsatisfactory. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I doubt not that there are means, by the use of which those who are now   <br \/>&#160;&#160; weak and trembling may attain unto boldness in faith and confidence in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hope; but I see not how this can be done unless the Lord Jesus Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; manifest His love to them, and tell them of their union to Him. This He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will do, if we seek it of Him. The importunate pleader shall not lack    <br \/>&#160;&#160; his reward. Haste thee to Him, O timid one, and tell Him that nothing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will content thee but a smile from His own face, and a word from His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; own lips! Speak to Him, and say, &quot;O my Lord Jesus, I cannot rest unless    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I know that Thou lovest me! I desire to have proof of Thy love under    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thine own hand and seal. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I cannot live upon guesses and surmises; nothing but certainty will   <br \/>&#160;&#160; satisfy my trembling heart. Lord, look upon me, if, indeed, Thou lovest    <br \/>&#160;&#160; me, and though I be less than the least of all saints, say unto my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; soul, I am thy salvation.&#8217;&quot; When this prayer is heard, the castle of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; despair must totter; there is not one stone of it which can remain upon    <br \/>&#160;&#160; another, if Christ whispers forth His love. Even Despondency and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Much-afraid will dance, and Ready-to-Halt leap upon his crutches. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Oh, for more of these Bethel visits, more frequent visitations from the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; God of Israel! Oh, how sweet to hear Him say to us, as He did to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Abraham, &quot;Fear not, Abram, I am thy shield, and thy exceeding great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reward.&quot; (Gen. xv. 1.) To be addressed as Daniel was of old, &quot;O man    <br \/>&#160;&#160; greatly beloved&quot; (Dan. x. 19), is worth a thousand ages of this world&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; joy. What more can a creature want this side of heaven to make him    <br \/>&#160;&#160; peaceful and happy than a plain avowal of love from his Lord&#8217;s own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; lips? Let me ever hear Thee, speak in mercy to my soul, and, O my Lord,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I ask no more while here I dwell in the land of my pilgrimage! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Brethren, let us labour to obtain a confident assurance of the Lord&#8217;s   <br \/>&#160;&#160; delight in us, for this, as it enables Him to commune with us, will be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; one of the readiest ways to produce a like feeling in our hearts    <br \/>&#160;&#160; towards Him. Christ is well pleased with us; let us approach Him with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; holy familiarity; let us unbosom our thoughts to Him, for His delight    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in us will secure us an audience. The child may stay away from the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; father, when he is conscious that he has aroused his father&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; displeasure, but why should we keep at a distance when Christ Jesus is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; smiling upon us? No! since His smiles attract us, let us enter into His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; courts, and touch His golden sceptre. O Holy Spirit, help us to live in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; happy fellowship with Him whose soul is knit unto us! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;O Jesus! let eternal blessings dwell <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; On Thy transporting name. * * * <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let me be wholly Thine from this blest hour. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let Thy lov&#8217;d image be for ever present; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Of Thee be all my thoughts, and let my tongue <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Be sanctified with the celestial theme. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Dwell on my lips, Thou dearest, sweetest name! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Dwell on my lips, till the last parting breath! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Then let me die, and bear the charming sound <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In triumph to the skies. In other strains, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In language all divine, I&#8217;ll praise Thee then; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; While all the Godhead opens in the view <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Of a Redeemer&#8217;s love. Here let me gaze, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; For ever gaze; the bright variety <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Will endless joy and admiration yield. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let me be wholly Thine from this blest hour. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Fly from my soul all images of sense, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Leave me in silence to possess my Lord: <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; My life, my pleasures, flow from Him alone, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; My strength, my great salvation, and my hope. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thy name is all my trust; O name divine! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Be Thou engraven on my inmost soul, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And let me own Thee with my latest breath, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Confess Thee in the face of ev&#8217;ry horror, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; That threat&#8217;ning death or envious hell can raise; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Till all their strength subdu&#8217;d, my parting soul <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Shall give a challenge to infernal rage, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And sing salvation to the Lamb for ever.&quot;   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [1]   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; THE WELL-BELOVED. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; A COMMUNION ADDRESS AT MENTONE.&quot;Yea, He is altogether lovely.&quot;&#8211;Song of   <br \/>&#160; Solomon v. 16. <\/p>\n<p>THE WELL-BELOVED. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; THE soul that is familiar with the Lord worships Him in the outer court   <br \/>&#160;&#160; of nature, wherein it admires His works, and is charmed by every    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thought of what He must be who made them all. When that soul enters the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nearer circle of inspiration, and reads the wonderful words of God, it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is still more enraptured, and its admiration is heightened. In    <br \/>&#160;&#160; revelation, we see the same all-glorious Lord as in creation, but the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vision is more clear, and the consequent love is more intense. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The Word is an inner court to the Creation; but there is yet an   <br \/>&#160;&#160; innermost sanctuary, and blessed are they who enter it, and have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellowship with the Lord Himself. We come to Christ, and in coming to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him we come to God; for Jesus says, &quot;He that hath seen Me hath seen the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Father.&quot; When we know the Lord Jesus, we stand before the mercy-seat,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; where the glory of Jehovah shineth forth. I like to think of the text    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as belonging to those who are as priests unto God, and stand in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Holy of holies, while they say, &quot;Yea, He is altogether lovely.&quot; His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; works are marvellous, His words are full of majesty, but He Himself is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; altogether lovely. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Can we come into this inner circle? All do not enter here. Alas! many   <br \/>&#160;&#160; are far off from Him, and are blind to His beauties. &quot;He was despised    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and rejected of men,&quot; and He is so still. They do not see God in His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; works, but dream that these wonders were evolved, and not created by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Great Primal Cause. As for His words, they seem to them as idle    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tales, or, at best, as inspired only in the same sense as the language    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Shakespeare or Spenser. They see not the Lord in the stately aisles    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Holy Scripture; and have no vision of Himself. May He, who openeth    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the eyes of the blind, have pity on them! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Certain others are in a somewhat happier position, for they are   <br \/>&#160;&#160; enquirers after Christ. They are like the persons who, in the ninth    <br \/>&#160;&#160; verse of the chapter, asked, &quot;What is thy Beloved more than another    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beloved, O thou fairest among women? What is thy Beloved more than    <br \/>&#160;&#160; another beloved, that thou dost so charge us?&quot; They want to know who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this Jesus is. But they have not seen Him yet, and cannot join with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spouse in saying, &quot;He is altogether lovely.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; If we enter this sacred inner circle, we must become witnesses, as she   <br \/>&#160;&#160; does who speaks of Christ, &quot;Yea, He is altogether lovely.&quot; She knows    <br \/>&#160;&#160; what He is, for she has seen Him. The verses which precede the text are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a description of every feature of the heavenly Bridegroom; all His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; members are there set forth with richness of Oriental imagery. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spouse speaks what she knows. Have we, also, seen the Lord? Are we His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; familiar acquaintances? If so, may the Lord help us to understand our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; text! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; If we are to know the full joy of the text, we must come to our Lord as   <br \/>&#160;&#160; His intimates. He permits us this high honour, since, in this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ordinance, He makes us His table-companions. He says, &quot;Henceforth I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; call you not servants; but I have called you friends.&quot; He calls upon us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to eat bread with Him; yea, to partake of Himself, by eating His flesh    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and drinking His blood. Oh, that we may pass beyond the outward signs    <br \/>&#160;&#160; into the closest intimacy with Himself! Perhaps, when you are at home,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you will examine the spouse&#8217;s description of her Lord. It is a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wonderful piece of tapestry. She has wrought into its warp and woof all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; things charming, sweet, and precious. In Him she sees all lovely    <br \/>&#160;&#160; colours,&#8211;&quot;My Beloved is white and ruddy.&quot; In comparison with Him all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; others fail, for He is &quot;chief among ten thousand&quot; chieftains. She    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot think of Him as comparable to anything less valuable than &quot;fine    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gold.&quot; She sees, soaring in the air, birds of divers wing; and these    <br \/>&#160;&#160; must aid her, whether it be the raven or the dove. The rivers of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; waters, and the beds of spices and myrrh-dropping lilies, must come    <br \/>&#160;&#160; into the picture, with sweet flowers and goodly cedars. All kinds of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; treasured things are in Him; for He is like to gold rings set with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beryl, and bright ivory overlaid with sapphires, and pillars of marble    <br \/>&#160;&#160; set upon sockets of fine gold. She labours to describe His beauty and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His excellency, and strains all comparisons to their utmost use, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; somewhat more; and yet she is conscious of failure, and therefore sums    <br \/>&#160;&#160; up all with the pithy sentence, &quot;Yea, He is altogether lovely.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; If the Holy Spirit will help me, I should like to lift the veil, that   <br \/>&#160;&#160; we may, in sacred contemplation, look on our Beloved. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. We would do so, first, with reverent emotions. In the words before   <br \/>&#160;&#160; us, &quot;Yea, He is altogether lovely,&quot; two emotions are displayed, namely,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; admiration and affection. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; It is admiration which speaks of Him as &quot;altogether lovely&quot; or   <br \/>&#160;&#160; beautiful. This admiration rises to the highest degree. The spouse    <br \/>&#160;&#160; would fain show that her Beloved is more than any other beloved;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; therefore she cries, &quot;He is altogether lovely.&quot; Surely no one else has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reached that point. Many are lovely, but no one save Jesus is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;altogether lovely.&quot; We see something that is lovely in one, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; another point is lovely in another; but all loveliness meets in Him.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Our soul knows nothing which can rival Him: He is the gathering up of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all sorts of loveliness to make up one perfect loveliness. He is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; climax of beauty; the crown of glory; the uttermost of excellence. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Our admiration of Him, also, is unrestrained. The spouse dared to say,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; even in the presence of the daughters of Jerusalem, who were somewhat    <br \/>&#160;&#160; envious, &quot;Yea, He is altogether lovely.&quot; They knew not, as yet, His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perfections; they even asked, &quot;What is thy Beloved more than another    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beloved?&quot; But she was not to be blinded by their want of sympathy,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; neither did she withhold her testimony from fear of their criticism. To    <br \/>&#160;&#160; her, He was &quot;altogether lovely&quot;, and she could say no less. Our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; admiration of Christ is such that we would tell the kings of the earth    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that they have no majesty in His presence; and tell the wise men that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He alone is wisdom; and tell the great and mighty that He is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blessed and only Potentate, King of kings, and Lord of lords. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Our admiration of our Lord is inexpressible. We can never tell all we   <br \/>&#160;&#160; know of our Lord; yet all our knowledge is little. All that we know is,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that His love passeth knowledge, that His excellence baffles    <br \/>&#160;&#160; understanding, that His glory is unutterable. We can embrace Him by our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love, but we can scarcely touch Him with our intellect, He is so high,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so glorious. As to describing Him, we cry, with Mr. Berridge,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Then my tongue would fain express <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; All His love and loveliness; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But I lisp, and falter forth <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Broken words, not half His worth. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Vex&#8217;d, I try and try again, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Still my efforts all are vain: <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Living tongues are dumb at best, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We must die to speak of Christ.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;He is altogether lovely.&quot; Do we not feel an inexpressible admiration   <br \/>&#160;&#160; for Him? There is none like unto Thee, O Son of God! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Still, our paramount emotion is not admiration, but affection. &quot;He is   <br \/>&#160;&#160; altogether&quot;&#8211;not beautiful, nor admirable,&#8211;but &quot;lovely.&quot; All His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beauties are loving beauties towards us, and beauties which draw our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hearts towards Him in humble love. He charms us, not by a cold    <br \/>&#160;&#160; comeliness, but by a living loveliness, which wins our hearts. His is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; an approachable beauty, which not only overpowers us with its glory,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but holds us captive by its charms. We love Him: we cannot do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; otherwise, for &quot;He is altogether lovely.&quot; He has within Himself and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unquenchable flame of love, which sets our soul on fire. He is all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love, and all the love in the world is less than His. Put together all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the loves of husband wives, parents, children, brothers, sisters, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they only make a drop compared with His great deeps of love, unexplored    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and unexplorable. This love of His has a wonderful power to beget love    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in unlovely hearts, and to nourish it into a mighty force. &quot; It is a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; torrent which sweeps all before it when its founts break forth within    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the soul. It is a Gulf Stream in which all icebergs melt. When our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heart is full of love to Jesus, His loveliness becomes the passion of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the soul, and sin and self are swept away. May we feel it now! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; There He stands: we know Him by the thorn-crown, and the wounds, and   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the visage more marred than that of any man! He suffered all this for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us. O Son of man! O Son of God! With the spouse, we feel, in the inmost    <br \/>&#160;&#160; depths of our soul, that Thou art &quot;altogether lovely.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. Now would I lift the veil a second time, with deep solemnity, not   <br \/>&#160;&#160; so much to suggest emotions as to secure your intelligent assurance of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the fact that &quot;He is altogether lovely.&quot; We say this with absolute    <br \/>&#160;&#160; certainty. The spouse places a &quot;Yea&quot; before her enthusiastic    <br \/>&#160;&#160; declaration, because she is sure of it. She sees her Beloved, and sees    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him to be altogether lovely. This is no fiction, no dream, no freak of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; imagination, no outburst of partiality. The highest love to Christ does    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not make us speak more than the truth; we are as reasonable when we are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; filled with love to Him as ever we were in our lives; nay, never are we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; more reasonable than when we are carried clean away by a clear    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perception of His superlative excellence. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let us meditate upon the proof of our assertion. &quot;He is altogether   <br \/>&#160;&#160; lovely&quot; in His person. He is God. The glory of Godhead I must leave in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; lowly silence. Yet is our Jesus also man, more emphatically man than    <br \/>&#160;&#160; any one here present this afternoon, for we are English, American,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; French, German, Dutch, Russian; but Christ is man, the second Adam, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Head of the race: as truly as He is very God of very God, so is He man,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the substance of His mother. What a marvellous union! The miracle of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; miracles! In his incomparible personality He is altogether lovely; for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in Him we see how God comes down to man in condescension, and how man    <br \/>&#160;&#160; goes up to God in close relationship. There is no other such as He, in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all respects, even in heaven itself: in His personality He must ever    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stand alone, in the eyes of both God and man, &quot;altogether lovely.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; As for His character, time would fail us to enter upon that vast   <br \/>&#160;&#160; subject; but the more we know of the character of our Lord, and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; more we grow like Him, the more lovely will it appear to us. In all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; aspects, it is lovely; in all its minutiae and details, it is perfect;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and as a whole, it is perfection&#8217;s model. Take any one action of His,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; look into its mode, its spirit, its motive, and all else that can be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; revealed by a microscopic examination, and it is &quot;altogether lovely.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Consider his life, as a whole, in reference to God, to man, to His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; friends, to His foes, to those around Him, and to the ages yet to be,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and you shall find it absolutely perfect. More than that: there is such    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a thing as a cold perfection, with which one can find no fault, and yet    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it commands no love; but in Christ, our Well-beloved, every part of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; character attracts. To a true heart, the life of Christ is as much an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; object of love as of reverence: &quot;He is altogether lovely.&quot; We must love    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that which we see in Him: admiration is not the word. When cold critics    <br \/>&#160;&#160; commend Him, their praise is half an insult: what know these frozen    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hearts of our Beloved? As for a word against Him, it wounds us to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; soul. Even an omission of His praise is a torture to us. If we hear a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sermon which has no Christ in it, we weary of it. If we read a book    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that contains a slighting syllable of Him, we abhor it. He, Himself,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has become everything to us now, and only in the atmosphere of fervent    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love to Him can we feel at home. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Passing from His character to His sacrifice; there especially &quot;He is   <br \/>&#160;&#160; altogether lovely.&quot; You may have read &quot;Rutherford&#8217;s Letters&quot;; I hope    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you have. How wondrously he writes, when he describes his Lord in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; garments red from His sweat of blood, and with hands bejewelled with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His wounds! When we view His body taken down from the cross, all pale    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and deathly, and wrapped in the cerements of the grave, we see a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; strange beauty in Him. He is to us never more lovely than when we read    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in our Beloved&#8217;s white and red that His Sacrifice is accomplished, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He has been obedient unto death for us. In Him, as the sacrifice once    <br \/>&#160;&#160; offered, we see our pardon, our life, our heaven, our all. So lovely is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ in His sacrifice, that He is for ever most pleasing to the great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Judge of all, ay, so lovely to His Father, that He makes us also lovely    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to God the Father, and we are &quot;accepted in the Beloved.&quot; His sacrifice    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has such merit and beauty in the sight of heaven, that in Him God is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; well pleased, and guilty men become in Him pleasant unto the Lord. Is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not His sacrifice most sweet to us? Here our guilty conscience finds    <br \/>&#160;&#160; peace; here we see ourselves made comely in His comeliness. We cannot    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stand at Calvary, and see the Saviour die, and hear Him cry, &quot;It is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; finished,&quot; without feeling that &quot;He is altogether lovely.&quot; Forgive me    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that I speak so coolly! I dare not enter fully into a theme which would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pull up the sluices of my heart. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Remember what He was when He rose from the grave on the third day. Oh,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to have seen Him in the freshness of His resurrection beauty! And what    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will He be in His glory, when He comes again the second time, and all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His holy angels with Him, when He shall sit upon the throne of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glory, and heaven and earth shall flee away before His face? To His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people He will then be &quot;altogether lovely.&quot; Angels will adore Him,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saints made perfect will fall on their faces before Him; and we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ourselves shall feel that, at last, our heaven is complete. We shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; see Him, and being like Him, we shall be satisfied. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Every feature of our Lord is lovely. You cannot think of anything that   <br \/>&#160;&#160; has to do with Him which is unworthy of our praise. All over glorious    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is our Lord. The spouse speaks of His head, His locks, His eyes, His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cheeks, His lips, His hands, His legs, His countenance, His mouth; and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when she has mentioned them all, she sums up with reference to all by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saying, &quot;Yea, He is altogether lovely.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; There is nothing unlovely about Him. Certain persons would be beautiful   <br \/>&#160;&#160; were it not for a wound or a bruise, but our Beloved is all the more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; lovely for His wounds; the marring of His countenance has enhanced its    <br \/>&#160;&#160; charms. His scars are, for glory and for beauty, the jewels of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; King. To us He is lovely even from that side which others dread: His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; very frown has comfort in it to His saints, since He only frowns on    <br \/>&#160;&#160; evil. Even His feet, which are &quot;like unto fine brass, as if they burned    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in a furnace,&quot; are lovely to us for His sake; these are His poor    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saints, who are sorely tried, but are able to endure the fire.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Everything of Christ, everything that partakes of Christ, everything    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that hath a flavour or savour of Christ, is lovely to us. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; There is nothing lacking about His loveliness. Some would be very   <br \/>&#160;&#160; lovely were there a brightness in their eyes, or a colour in their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; countenances: but something is away. The absence of a tooth or of an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; eyebrow may spoil a countenance, but in Christ Jesus there is no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; omission of excellence. Everything that should be in Him is in Him;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; everything that is conceivable in perfection is present to perfection    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In Him is nothing excessive. Many a face has one feature in it which is   <br \/>&#160;&#160; overdone; but in our Lord&#8217;s character everything is balanced and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; proportionate. You never find His kindness lessening His holiness, nor    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His holiness eclipsing His wisdom, nor His wisdom abating His courage,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nor His courage injuring His meekness. Everything is in our Lord that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; should be there, and everything in due measure. Like rare spices, mixed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; after the manner of the apothecary, our Lord&#8217;s whole person, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; character, and sacrifice, are as incense sweet unto the Lord. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Neither is there anything in our Lord which is incongruous with the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; rest. In each one of us there is, at least, a little that is out of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; place. We could not be fully described without the use of a &quot;but.&quot; If    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we could all look within, and see ourselves as God sees us, we should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; note a thousand matters, which we now permit, which we should never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; allow again. But in the Well-beloved all is of a piece, all is lovely;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and when the sum of the whole is added up, it comes to an absolute    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perfection of loveliness: &quot;Yea, He is altogether lovely.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We are sure that the Lord Jesus must be Himself exceedingly lovely,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; since He gives loveliness to His people. Many saints are lovely in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their lives; one reads biographies of good men and women which make us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wish to grow like them; yet all the loveliness of all the most holy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; among men has come from Jesus their Lord, and is a copy of His perfect    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beauty. Those who write well do so because He sets the copy. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What is stranger and more wonderful still, our Lord Jesus makes sinners   <br \/>&#160;&#160; lovely. In their natural state, men are deformed and hideous to the eye    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of God; and as they have no love to God, so He has no delight in them.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He is weary of them, and is grieved that He made men upon the earth.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The Lord is angry with the wicked every day. Yet, when our Lord Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; comes in, and covers these sinful ones with His righteousness, and, at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the same time, infuses into them His life, the Lord is well pleased    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with them for His Son&#8217;s sake. Even in heaven, the infinite Jehovah sees    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nothing which pleases Him like His Son. The Father from eternity loved    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His Only-begotten, and again and again He hath said of Him, &quot;This is My    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.&quot; What higher encomium can be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; passed upon Him? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; If we had time to think over this subject, we should say of our Lord   <br \/>&#160;&#160; that He is lovely in every office. He is the most admirable Priest, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; King, and Prophet that ever yet exercised the office. He is a lovely    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Shepherd of a chosen flock, a lovely Friend, lovely Husband, a lovely    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Brother: He is admirable in every position that He occupies for our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sakes. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Our Lord&#8217;s loveliness appears in every condition: in the manger, or in   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the temple; by the well, or on the sea; in the garden, or on the cross;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the tomb, or in the resurrection; in His first, or in His second    <br \/>&#160;&#160; coming. He is not as the herb, which flowers only at one season; or as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the tree, which loses its leaves in winter; or as the moon, which waxes    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and wanes; or as the sea, which ebbs and flows. In every condition, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at every time, &quot;He is altogether lovely.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; He is lovely, whichever way we look at Him. If we view Him as in the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; past, entering into a covenant of peace on our behalf; or, in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; present, yielding Himself to us as Intercessor, Representative, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Forerunner; or, in the future, coming, reigning, and glorifying His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people; &quot;He is altogether lovely.&quot; Behold Him from heaven, view Him    <br \/>&#160;&#160; from the gates of hell, regard Him as he goes before, look up to Him as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He sits above; He is as beautiful from one point of view as from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; another; &quot;Yea, He is altogether lovely.&quot; Wherever we may be, He is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; same in His perfection. How lovely He was to my eyes when I was sinking    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in despair! To see Him suffering for my sin upon the tree, was as the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; opening of the gates of the morning to my darkened soul. How lovely He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is to us when we are sick, and the hours of night seem lengthened into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; days! &quot;He giveth songs in the night.&quot; How lovely has He been to us when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the world has frowned, and friends have forsaken, and worldly goods    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have been scant! To see &quot;the King in His beauty&quot; is a sight sufficient,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; even if we never saw another ray of comfort. How blessed, when we lie    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dying, to hear Him say, &quot;I am the resurrection and the life&quot;! Mark that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; word; He says not, &quot;I will give you resurrection and life,&quot; but, &quot;I am    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the resurrection and the life.&quot; Blessed are the eyes which can see that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in Jesus which is really in Him. When we think of seeing Him as He is,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and being like Him, how heaven approaches us! We shall soon behold the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beatific vision, of which He will be the centre and the sun. At the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thought thereof our soul takes wing, and our imagination soars aloft,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; while our faith, with eagle eye, beholds the glory. As we think of that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glad period, when we shall be with our Beloved for ever, we are ready    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to swoon away with delight. It is near, far nearer than we think. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; III. The little time which we can give to this meditation has run out,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; and therefore I hasten to a close. I have bidden you look at our Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as &quot;altogether lovely&quot; with reverent emotions, and with absolute    <br \/>&#160;&#160; certainty. Now, to conclude, think of Him with practical results. &quot;He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is altogether lovely.&quot; What shall we do for this chief among ten    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thousand? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; First, we will tell others of Him. For that cause was our text spoken.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; The daughters of Jerusalem asked the spouse, &quot;What is thy Beloved more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; than another beloved?&quot; Her answer is here: &quot;He is altogether lovely.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; It is a great joy to praise our Lord to enquiring minds. We, who are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; preachers, have a glorious time of it when we extol our Lord. If we had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nothing to do but to preach Christ, and had no discipline to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; administer, no sin to battle with, no doubts to drive away, we should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have a heavenly service. For my part, I wish I could be bound over to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; play only upon this one string. Paul did well when he turned ignoramus,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and determined to know nothing among the Corinthians save Jesus Christ,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and Him crucified. As the harp of Anacreon would resound love alone, so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; would I have but one sole subject for my ministry,&#8211;the love and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; loveliness of my Lord. Then to speak would be its own reward; and to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; study and prepare discourses would be only a phase of rest. Fain would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I make my whole ministry to speak of Christ and His surpassing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; loveliness. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; You who are not preachers cannot do better than speak much of Jesus, as   <br \/>&#160;&#160; opportunity offers. Make Him the theme of conversation. People talk    <br \/>&#160;&#160; about ministers; but we beg you to talk of our Master. Our undecided    <br \/>&#160;&#160; neighbours are always talking of hypocrites and inconsistent    <br \/>&#160;&#160; professors; but we would say to them, &quot;Never mind about His followers:    <br \/>&#160;&#160; talk about the Master Himself.&quot; His followers, by themselves    <br \/>&#160;&#160; considered, never were worth your words; but what a theme is this,&#8211;&quot;He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is altogether lovely&quot;! Our Lord&#8217;s people are far worthier than the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; world thinks them to be; for my part, I rejoice in the many gracious    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and beautiful characters with which I meet, but even if all the ill    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reports we hear were true, this would not detract from the loveliness    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of our Lord, who is infinitely beyond all praise. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The next practical result of viewing the loveliness of our blessed Lord   <br \/>&#160;&#160; is, that we appropriate Him to ourselves, grasping Him with our two    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hands of faith and love, and making the rest of the verse to be our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; own: &quot;This is my Beloved, and this is my Friend, O daughters of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jerusalem!&quot; Since He is so amiable, He must be &quot;my Beloved&quot;; my heart    <br \/>&#160;&#160; clings to Him. Since He is admirable, I rejoice that He is &quot;my Friend&quot;;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; my soul trusts in Him. The heart that most appreciates Jesus is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; most eager to appropriate Him. He who beholds Jesus as &quot;altogether    <br \/>&#160;&#160; lovely&quot; will never rest till he is altogether sure that Jesus is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; altogether his own. I think I may also add that appreciation is in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great measure the seal of appropriation, for the soul that values    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ most is the soul that hath most surely taken possession of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ. Sometimes a heart prizes the Lord very highly, and tremblingly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; longs for Him; but it is my conviction that the very fact of prizing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him argues a measure of possession of Him. Jesus never wins a heart to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which He refuses His love. If thou lovest Him, He loves thee: be sure    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of that. No soul ever cries, &quot;Yea, He is altogether lovely,&quot; without    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sooner or later adding, &quot;This is my Beloved, and this is my Friend.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Rest not, any one of you, till you know of a surety that Jesus is   <br \/>&#160;&#160; yours. Do not be content with a hope, struggle after the full assurance    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of faith. This is to be had, and you ought not to be content without    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it. It may be your lifelong song, &quot;My Beloved is mine, and I am His.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; You need not pine in the shade: the sun is shining, &quot;walk in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; light.&quot; Away with the idea that we cannot know whether we are condemned    <br \/>&#160;&#160; or forgiven, in Christ or out of Him! We may know, we must know; and,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as we appreciate our Lord, we shall know. Either Jesus is ours, or He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is not. If He is, let us rejoice in the priceless possession. If He is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not ours, let us at once lay hold upon Him by faith; for, the moment we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trust Him, He is ours. The enjoyment of religion lies in assurance: a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mere hope is scant diet. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Once more, it is a fair fruit of our delight in our Lord that our   <br \/>&#160;&#160; valuation of Him becomes a bond of union between us and others. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spouse cries, &quot;This is my Beloved, and this is my Friend, O daughters    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Jerusalem!&quot; and they reply, &quot;Whither is thy Beloved gone, O thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fairest among women? Whither is thy Beloved turned aside, that we may    <br \/>&#160;&#160; seek Him with thee?&quot; Thus, you see, they institute a companionship    <br \/>&#160;&#160; through the Well-beloved. Few of us, in this room, would ever have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; known each other, had it not been for our common admiration of the Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus. We should have gone on walking past each other by the sea to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this day, and we should have missed much cheering fellowship. Our Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has become our centre; we meet in Him, and feel that in Him we are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; partakers of one life. We seek our Well-beloved together, and around    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His table we find Him together; and finding Him, we have found one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; another, and the lost jewel of Christian love glitters on every bosom.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; We have differing views on certain parts of divine truth; and I do not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; know that it is wrong for us to differ where the Holy Spirit has left    <br \/>&#160;&#160; truth without rigidly defining it. We are bound each one devoutly to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; use his judgment in the interpretation of the Sacred Word; but we all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; agree in this one clear judgment: &quot;Yea, He is altogether lovely.&quot; This    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is the point of union. Those who enthusiastically love the same person    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are on the way to loving each other. This is growingly our case; and it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is the same with all spiritual people. Professors quarrel, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; possessors are at one. We hear much discourse upon &quot;the Unity of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Church&quot; as a thing to be desired, and we may heartily agree with it;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but it would be well also to remember that in the true Church of Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; real union already exists. Our Lord prayed for those whom the Father    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had given Him, that they might be one, and the Father granted the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; prayer: the Lord&#8217;s own people are one. In this room we have an example    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of how closely we are united in Christ. Some of you are more at home in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this assembly, taken out of all churches, than you are in the churches    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to which you nominally belong. Our union in one body as Episcopalians,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Baptists, Presbyterians, or Independents, is not the thing which our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord prayed for; but our union in Himself. That union we do at this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; moment enjoy; and therefore do we eat of one bread, and drink of one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cup, and are baptized into one Spirit, at His feet who is to each one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of us, and so to all of us, altogether lovely. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;White and ruddy is my Belov&#8217;d, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; All His heavenly beauties shine; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Nature can&#8217;t produce an object, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Nor so glorious, so divine; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; He hath wholly <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Won my soul to realms above. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Farewell, all ye meaner creatures, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; For in Him is every store; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Wealth, or friends, or darling beauty, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Shall not draw me any more; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In my Saviour <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I have found a glorious whole.&quot;   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; THE SPICED WINE OF MY POMEGRANATE; <\/p>\n<p>&#160; OR, THE COMMUNION OF COMMUNICATION. I would cause Thee to drink of spiced wine   <br \/>&#160; of the juice of my pomegranate.&quot;&#8211;Song of Solomon viii. 2.And of His fulness    <br \/>&#160; have all we received, and grace for grace.&quot;&#8211;John i. 16. <\/p>\n<p>THE SPICED WINE OF MY POMEGRANATE. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; THE immovable basis of communion having been laid of old in the eternal   <br \/>&#160;&#160; union which subsisted between Christ and His elect, it only needed a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fitting occasion to manifest itself in active development. The Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus had for ever delighted Himself with the sons of men, and he ever    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stood prepared to reveal and communicate that delight to His people;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but they were incapable of returning His affection or enjoying His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellowship, having fallen into a state so base and degraded, that they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were dead to Him, and careless concerning Him. It was therefore needful    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that something should be done for them, and in them, before they could    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hold converse with Jesus, or feel concord with Him. This preparation    <br \/>&#160;&#160; being a work of grace and a result of previous union, Jesus determined    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that, even in the preparation for communion, there should be communion.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; If they must be washed before they could fully converse with Him, He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; would commune with them in the washing; and if they must be enriched by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gifts before they could have full access to Him, He would commune with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them in the giving. He has therefore established a fellowship in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; imparting His grace, and in partaking of it. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This order of fellowship we have called &quot;The Communion of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Communication,&quot; and we think that a few remarks will prove that we are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not running beyond the warranty of Scripture. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The word , or communion, is frequently employed by inspired   <br \/>&#160;&#160; writers in the sense of communication or contribution. When, in our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; English version, we read, &quot;For it hath pleased them of Macedonia and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Achaia to make a certain contribution for the poor saints which are at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jerusalem&quot; (Romans xv. 26), it is interesting to know that the word    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ? is used, as if to show that the generous gifts of the Church    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in Achaia to its sister Church at Jerusalem was a communion. Calvin    <br \/>&#160;&#160; would have us notice this, because, saith he, &quot;The word here employed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; well expresses the feeling by which it behoves us to succour the wants    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of our brethren, even because there is to be a common and mutual regard    <br \/>&#160;&#160; on account of the union of the body.&quot; He would not have strained the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; text if he had said that there was in the contribution the very essence    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of communion. Gill, in his commentary upon the above verse, most    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pertinently remarks, &quot;Contribution, or communion, as the word    <br \/>&#160;&#160; signifies, it being one part of the communion of churches and of saints    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to relieve their poor by communicating to them.&quot; The same word is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; employed in Hebrews xiii. 16, and is there translated by the word    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;communicate.&quot; &quot;But to do good, and to communicate, forget not: for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with such sacrifices God is well pleased.&quot; It occurs again in 2    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Corinthians ix. 13, &quot;And for your liberal distribution unto them, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unto all men;&quot; and in numerous other passages the careful student will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; observe the word in various forms, representing the ministering of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saints to one another as an act of fellowship. Indeed, at the Lord&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; supper, which is the embodiment of communion, we have ever been wont to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; make a special contribution for the poor of the flock, and we believe    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that in the collection there is as true and real an element of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion as in the partaking of the bread and wine. The giver holds    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellowship with the receiver when he bestows his benefaction for the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord&#8217;s sake, and because of the brotherhood existing between him and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; his needy friends. The teacher holds communion with the young disciple    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when he labours to instruct him in the faith, being moved thereto by a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spirit of Christian love. He who intercedes for a saint because he    <br \/>&#160;&#160; desires his well-being as a member of the one family, enters into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellowship with his brother in the offering of prayer. The loving and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mutual service of church-members is fellowship of a high degree. And    <br \/>&#160;&#160; let us remember that the recipient communes with the benefactor: the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion is not confined to the giver, but the heart overflowing with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; liberality is met by the heart brimming with gratitude, and the love    <br \/>&#160;&#160; manifested in the bestowal is reciprocated in the acceptance. When the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hand feeds the mouth or supports the head, the divers members feel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their union, and sympathize with one another; and so is it with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; various portions of the body of Christ, for they commune in mutual acts    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of love. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now, this meaning of the word communion furnishes us with much   <br \/>&#160;&#160; instruction, since it indicates the manner in which recognized    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellowship with Jesus is commenced and maintained, namely, by giving    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and receiving, by communication and reception. The Lord&#8217;s supper is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; divinely-ordained exhibition of communion, and therefore in it there is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the breaking of bread and the pouring forth of wine, to picture the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; free gift of the Saviour&#8217;s body and blood to us; and there is also the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; eating of the one and the drinking of the other, to represent the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reception of these priceless gifts by us. As without bread and wine    <br \/>&#160;&#160; there could be no Lord&#8217;s supper, so without the gracious bequests of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus to us there would have been no communion between Him and our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; souls: and as participation is necessary before the elements truly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; represent the meaning of the Lord&#8217;s ordinance, so is it needful that we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; should receive His bounties, and feed upon His person, before we can    <br \/>&#160;&#160; commune with Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; It is one branch of this mutual communication which we have selected as   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the subject of this address. &quot;Looking unto Jesus,&quot; who hath delivered    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us from our state of enmity, and brought us into fellowship with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself, we pray for the rich assistance of the Holy Spirit, that we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; may be refreshed in spirit, and encouraged to draw more largely from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the covenant storehouse of Christ Jesus the Lord. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We shall take a text, and proceed at once to our delightful task. &quot;And   <br \/>&#160;&#160; of His fulness have all we received, and grace for grace.&quot; (John i.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; 16.) <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; As the life of grace is first begotten in us by the Lord Jesus, so is   <br \/>&#160;&#160; it constantly sustained by Him. We are always drawing from this sacred    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fountain, always deriving sap from this divine root; and as Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communes with us in the bestowing of mercies, it is our privilege to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hold fellowship with Him in the receiving of them. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; There is this difference between Christ and ourselves, He never gives   <br \/>&#160;&#160; without manifesting fellowship, but we often receive in so ill a manner    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that communion is not reciprocated, and we therefore miss the heavenly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; opportunity of its enjoyment. We frequently receive grace insensibly,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that is to say, the sacred oil runs through the pipe, and maintains our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; lamp, while we are unmindful of the secret influence. We may also be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the partakers of many mercies which, through our dulness, we do not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perceive to be mercies at all; and at other times well-known blessings    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are recognized as such, but we are backward in tracing them to their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; source in the covenant made with Christ Jesus. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Following out the suggestion of our explanatory preface, we can well   <br \/>&#160;&#160; believe that when the poor saints received the contribution of their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; brethren, many of them did in earnest acknowledge the fellowship which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was illustrated in the generous offering, but it is probable that some    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of them merely looked upon the material of the gift, and failed to see    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the spirit moving in it. Sensual thoughts in some of the receivers    <br \/>&#160;&#160; might possibly, at the season when the contribution was distributed,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have mischievously injured the exercise of spirituality; for it is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; possible that, after a period of poverty, they would be apt to give    <br \/>&#160;&#160; greater prominence to the fact that their need was removed than to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sentiment of fellowship with their sympathizing brethren. They would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rather rejoice over famine averted than concerning fellowship    <br \/>&#160;&#160; manifested. We doubt not that, in many instances, the mutual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; benefactions of the Church fail to reveal our fellowship to our poor    <br \/>&#160;&#160; brethren, and produce in them no feelings of communion with the givers. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now this sad fact is an illustration of the yet more lamentable   <br \/>&#160;&#160; statement which we have made. We again assert that, as many of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; partakers of the alms of the Church are not alive to the communion    <br \/>&#160;&#160; contained therein, so the Lord&#8217;s people are never sufficiently    <br \/>&#160;&#160; attentive to fellowship with Jesus in receiving His gifts, but many of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them are entirely forgetful of their privilege, and all of them are too    <br \/>&#160;&#160; little aware of it. Nay, worse than this, how often doth the believer    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pervert the gifts of Jesus into food for his own sin and wantonness! We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are not free from the fickleness of ancient Israel, and well might our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord address us in the same language: <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Now when I passed by thee, and looked upon thee, behold, thy time was   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the time of love; and I spread My skirt over thee, and covered thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nakedness: yea, I sware unto thee, and entered into a covenant with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thee, saith the Lord God, and thou becamest Mine. Then washed I thee    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with water; yea, I throughly washed away thy blood from thee, and I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; anointed thee with oil. I clothed thee also with broidered work, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shod thee with badgers&#8217; skin, and I girded thee about with fine linen,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and I covered thee with silk. I decked thee also with ornaments, and I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; put bracelets upon thy hands, and a chain on thy neck. And I put a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; jewel on thy forehead, and earrings in thine ears, and a beautiful    <br \/>&#160;&#160; crown upon thine head. Thus wast thou decked with gold and silver; and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thy raiment was of fine linen, and silk, and broidered work; thou didst    <br \/>&#160;&#160; eat fine flour, and honey, and oil: and thou wast exceeding beautiful,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and thou didst prosper into a kingdom. And thy renown went forth among    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the heathen for thy beauty: for it was perfect through My comeliness,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which I had put upon thee, saith the Lord God. But thou didst trust in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thine own beauty, and playedst the harlot because of thy renown.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; (Ezek. xvi. 8-16. ) <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Ought not the mass of professors to confess the truth of this   <br \/>&#160;&#160; accusation? Have not the bulk of us most sadly departed from the purity    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of our love? We rejoice, however, to observe a remnant of choice    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spirits, who live near the Lord, and know the sweetness of fellowship.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; These receive the promise and the blessing, and so digest them that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they become good blood in their veins, and so do they feed on their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord that they grow up into Him. Let us imitate those elevated minds,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and obtain their high delights. There is no reason why the meanest of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us should not be as David, and David as the servant of the Lord. We may    <br \/>&#160;&#160; now be dwarfs, but growth is possible; let us therefore aim at a higher    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stature. Let the succeeding advice be followed, and, the Holy Spirit    <br \/>&#160;&#160; helping us, we shall have attained thereto. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Make every time of need a time of embracing thy Lord. Do not leave the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; mercy-seat until thou hast clasped Him in thine arms. In every time of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; need He has promised to give thee grace to help, and what withholdeth    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thee from obtaining sweet fellowship as a precious addition to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; promised assistance? Be not as the beggar who is content with the alms,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; however grudgingly it may be cast to him; but, since thou art a near    <br \/>&#160;&#160; kinsman, seek a smile and a kiss with every benison He gives thee. Is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He not better than His mercies? What are they without Him? Cry aloud    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unto Him, and let thy petition reach His ears, &quot;O my Lord, it is not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; enough to be a partaker of Thy bounties, I must have Thyself also; if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thou dost not give me Thyself with Thy favours, they are but of little    <br \/>&#160;&#160; use to me! O smile on me, when Thou blessest me, for else I am still    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unblest! Thou puttest perfume into all the flowers of Thy garden, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fragrance into Thy spices; if Thou withdrawest Thyself, they are no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; more pleasant to me. Come, then, my Lord, and give me Thy love with Thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grace.&quot; Take good heed, Christian, that thine own heart is in right    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tune, that when the fingers of mercy touch the strings, they may    <br \/>&#160;&#160; resound with full notes of communion. How sad is it to partake of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; favour without rejoicing in it! Yet such is often the believer&#8217;s case.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The Lord casts His lavish bounties at our doors, and we, like churls,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; scarcely look out to thank Him. Our ungrateful hearts and unthankful    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tongues mar our fellowship, by causing us to miss a thousand    <br \/>&#160;&#160; opportunities for exercising it. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; If thou wouldst enjoy communion with the Lord Jesus in the reception of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; His grace, endeavor to be always sensibly drawing supplies from Him.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Make thy needs public in the streets of thine heart, and when the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; supply is granted, let all the powers of thy soul be present at the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reception of it. Let no mercy come into thine house unsung. Note in thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; memory the list of thy Master&#8217;s benefits. Wherefore should the Lord&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bounties be hurried away in the dark, or buried in forgetfulness? Keep    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the gates of thy soul ever open, and sit thou by the wayside to watch    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the treasures of grace which God the Spirit hourly conveys into thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heart from Jehovah&#8211;Jesus, thy Lord. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Never let an hour pass without drawing upon the bank of heaven. If all   <br \/>&#160;&#160; thy wants seem satisfied, look steadfastly until the next moment brings    <br \/>&#160;&#160; another need, and then delay not, but with this warrant of necessity,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hasten to thy treasury again. Thy necessities are so numerous that thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wilt never lack a reason for applying to the fulness of Jesus; but if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ever such an occasion should arise, enlarge thine heart, and then there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will be need of more love to fill the wider space. But do not allow any    <br \/>&#160;&#160; supposititious riches of thine own to suspend thy daily receivings from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord Jesus. You have constant need of Him. You need His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; intercession, His upholding, His sanctification; you need that He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; should work all your works in you, and that He should preserve you unto    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the day of His appearing. There is not one moment of your life in which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you can do without Christ. Therefore be always at His door, and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wants which you bemoan shall be remembrances to turn your heart unto    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your Saviour. Thirst makes the heart pant for the waterbrooks, and pain    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reminds man of the physician. Let your wants conduct you to Jesus, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; may the blessed Spirit reveal Him unto you while He lovingly affords    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you the rich supplies of His love! Go, poor saint, let thy poverty be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the cord to draw thee to thy rich Brother. Rejoice in the infirmity    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which makes room for grace to rest upon thee, and be glad that thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hast constant needs which compel thee perpetually to hold fellowship    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with thine adorable Redeemer. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Study thyself, seek out thy necessities, as the housewife searches for   <br \/>&#160;&#160; chambers where she may bestow her summer fruits. Regard thy wants as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rooms to be filled with more of the grace of Jesus, and suffer no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; corner to be unoccupied. Pant after more of Jesus. Be covetous after    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him. Let all the past incite thee to seek greater things. Sing the song    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the enlarged heart,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;All this is not enough: methinks I grow <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; More greedy by fruition; what I get <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Serves but to set <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; An edge upon my appetite; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And all Thy gifts invite <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; My pray&#8217;rs for more.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Cry out to the Lord Jesus to fill the dry beds of thy rivers until they   <br \/>&#160;&#160; overflow, and then empty thou the channels which have hitherto been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; filled with thine own self-sufficiency, and beseech Him to fill these    <br \/>&#160;&#160; also with His superabundant grace. If thy heavy trials sink thee deeper    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the flood of His consolations, be glad of them; and if thy vessel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall be sunken up to its very bulwarks, be not afraid. I would be glad    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to feel the mast-head of my soul twenty fathoms beneath the surface of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; such an ocean; for, as Rutherford said, &quot;Oh, to be over the ears in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this well! I would not have Christ&#8217;s love entering into me, but I would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; enter into it, and be swallowed up of that love.&quot; Cultivate an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; insatiable hunger and a quenchless thirst for this communion with Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; through His communications. Let thine heart cry for ever, &quot;Give, give,&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; until it is filled in Paradise. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;O&#8217;ercome with Jesu&#8217;s condescending love, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Brought into fellowship with Him and His, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And feasting with Him in His house of wine, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I&#8217;m sick of love,&#8211;and yet I pant for more <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Communications from my loving Lord. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Stay me with flagons full of choicest wine, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Press&#8217;d from His heart upon Mount Calvary, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; To cheer and comfort my love-conquer&#8217;d soul. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thyself I crave! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thy presence is my life, my joy, my heav&#8217;n, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And all, without Thyself, is dead to me. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Stay me with flagons, Saviour, hear my cry, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let promises, like apples, comfort me; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Apply atoning blood, and cov&#8217;nant love, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Until I see Thy face among the guests <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Who in Thy Father&#8217;s kingdom feast.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; (Nymphas, by JOSEPH IRONS.) <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This is the only covetousness which is allowable: but this is not   <br \/>&#160;&#160; merely beyond rebuke, it is worthy of commendation. O saints, be not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; straitened in your own bowels, but enlarge your desires, and so receive    <br \/>&#160;&#160; more of your Saviour&#8217;s measureless fulness! I charge thee, my soul,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thus to hold continual fellowship with thy Lord, since He invites and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; commands thee thus to partake of His riches. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Rejoice thyself in benefits received. Let the satisfaction of thy   <br \/>&#160;&#160; spirit overflow in streams of joy. When the believer reposes all his    <br \/>&#160;&#160; confidence in Christ, and delights himself in Him, there is an exercise    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of communion. If he forgetteth his psalm-book, and instead of singing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is found lamenting, the mercies of the day will bring no communion.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Awake, O music! stir up thyself, O my soul, be glad in the Lord, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; exceedingly rejoice! Behold His favours, rich, free, and continual;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall they be buried in unthankfulness? Shall they be covered with a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; winding-sheet of ingratitude? No! I will praise Him. I must extol Him.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Sweet Lord Jesus, let me kiss the dust of Thy feet, let me lose myself    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in thankfulness, for Thy thoughts unto me are precious, how great is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the sum of them! Lo, I embrace Thee in the arms of joy and gratitude,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and herein I find my soul drawn unto Thee! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This is a blessed method of fellowship. It is kissing the divine lip of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; benediction with the sanctified lip of affection. Oh, for more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rejoicing grace, more of the songs of the heart, more of the melody of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the soul! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Seek to recognize the source of thy mercies as lying alone in Him who   <br \/>&#160;&#160; is our Head. Imitate the chicken, which, every time it drinketh of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; brook, lifts up its head to heaven, as if it would return thanks for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; every drop. If we have anything that is commendable and gracious, it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; must come from the Holy Spirit, and that Spirit is first bestowed on    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus, and then through Him on us. The oil was first poured on the head    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Aaron, and thence it ran down upon his garments. Look on the drops    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of grace, and remember that they distil from the Head, Christ Jesus.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; All thy rays are begotten by this Sun of Righteousness, all thy showers    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are poured from this heaven, all thy fountains spring from this great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and immeasurable depth. Oh, for grace to see the hand of Jesus on every    <br \/>&#160;&#160; favour! So will communion be constantly and firmly in exercise. May the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great Teacher perpetually direct us to Jesus by making the mercies of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the covenant the handposts on the road which leadeth to Him. Happy is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the believer who knows how to find the secret abode of his Beloved by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tracking the footsteps of His loving providence: herein is wisdom which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the casual observer of mere second causes can never reach. Labour, O    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christian, to follow up every clue which thy Master&#8217;s grace affords    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thee! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Labour to maintain a sense of thine entire dependence upon His good   <br \/>&#160;&#160; will and pleasure for the continuance of thy richest enjoyments. Never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; try to live on the old manna, nor seek to find help in Egypt. All must    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come from Jesus, or thou art undone for ever. Old anointings will not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; suffice to impart unction to our spirit; thine head must have fresh oil    <br \/>&#160;&#160; poured upon it from the golden horn of the sanctuary, or it will cease    <br \/>&#160;&#160; from its glory. To-day thou mayest be upon the summit of the mount of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God; but He who has put thee there must keep thee there, or thou wilt    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sink far more speedily than thou dreamest. Thy mountain only stands    <br \/>&#160;&#160; firm when He settles it in its place; if He hide His face, thou wilt    <br \/>&#160;&#160; soon be troubled. If the Saviour should see fit, there is not a window    <br \/>&#160;&#160; through which thou seest the light of heaven which he could not darken    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in an instant. Joshua bade the sun stand still, but Jesus can shroud it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in total darkness. He can withdraw the joy of thine heart, the light of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thine eyes, and the strength of thy life; in His hand thy comforts lie,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and at His will they can depart from thee. Oh! how rich the grace which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; supplies us so continually, and doth not refrain itself because of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ingratitude! O Lord Jesus, we would bow at Thy feet, conscious of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; utter inability to do aught without Thee, and in every favour which we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are privileged to receive, we would adore Thy blessed name, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; acknowledge Thine unexhausted love! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When thou hast received much, admire the all-sufficiency which still   <br \/>&#160;&#160; remaineth undiminished, thus shall you commune with Christ, not only in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; what you obtain from Him, but also in the superabundance which remains    <br \/>&#160;&#160; treasured up in Him. Let us ever remember that giving does not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; impoverish our Lord. When the clouds, those wandering cisterns of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; skies, have poured floods upon the dry ground, there remains an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; abundance in the storehouse of the rain: so in Christ there is ever an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unbounded supply, though the most liberal showers of grace have fallen    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ever since the foundation of the earth. The sun is as bright as ever    <br \/>&#160;&#160; after all his shining, and the sea is quite as full after all the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; clouds have been drawn from it: so is our Lord Jesus ever the same    <br \/>&#160;&#160; overflowing fountain of fulness. All this is ours, and we may make it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the subject of rejoicing fellowship. Come, believer, walk through the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; length and breadth of the land, for as far as the eye can reach, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; land is thine, and far beyond the utmost range of thine observation it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is thine also, the gracious gift of thy gracious Redeemer and Friend.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Is there not ample space for fellowship here? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Regard every spiritual mercy as an assurance of the Lord&#8217;s communion   <br \/>&#160;&#160; with thee. When the young man gives jewels to the virgin to whom he is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; affianced, she regards them as tokens of his delight in her. Believer,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; do the same with the precious presents of thy Lord. The common bounties    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of providence are shared in by all men, for the good Householder    <br \/>&#160;&#160; provides water for His swine as well as for His children: such things,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; therefore, are no proof of divine complacency. But thou hast richer    <br \/>&#160;&#160; food to eat; &quot;the children&#8217;s bread&quot; is in thy wallet, and the heritage    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the righteous is reserved for thee. Look, then, on every motion of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grace in thine heart as a pledge and sign of the moving of thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Saviour&#8217;s heart towards thee. There is His whole heart in the bowels of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; every mercy which He sends thee. He has impressed a kiss of love upon    <br \/>&#160;&#160; each gift, and He would have thee believe that every jewel of mercy is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a token of His boundless love. Look on thine adoption, justification,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and preservation, as sweet enticements to fellowship. Let every note of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the promise sound in thine ears like the ringing of the bells of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; house of thy Lord, inviting thee to come to the banquets of His love.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Joseph sent to his father asses laden with the good things of Egypt,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and good old Jacob doubtless regarded them as pledges of the love of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; his son&#8217;s heart: be sure not to think less of the kindnesses of Jesus. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Study to know the value of His favours. They are no ordinary things, no   <br \/>&#160;&#160; paste jewels, no mosaic gold: they are every one of them so costly,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that, had all heaven been drained of treasure, apart from the precious    <br \/>&#160;&#160; offering of the Redeemer, it could not have purchased so much as the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; least of His benefits. When thou seest thy pardon, consider how great a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; boon is contained in it! Bethink thee that hell had been thine eternal    <br \/>&#160;&#160; portion unless Christ had plucked thee from the burning! When thou art    <br \/>&#160;&#160; enabled to see thyself as clothed in the imputed righteousness of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus, admire the profusion of precious things of which thy robe is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; made. Think how many times the Man of sorrows wearied Himself at that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; loom of obedience in which He wove that matchless garment; and reckon,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; if thou canst, how many worlds of merit were cast into the fabric at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; every throw of the shuttle! Remember that all the angels in heaven    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could not have afforded Him a single thread which would have been rich    <br \/>&#160;&#160; enough to weave into the texture of His perfect righteousness. Consider    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the cost of thy maintenance for an hour; remember that thy wants are so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; large, that all the granaries of grace that all the saints could fill,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could not feed thee for a moment. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What an expensive dependent thou art! King Solomon made marvellous   <br \/>&#160;&#160; provision for his household (1 Kings iv. 22), but all his beeves and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fine flour would be as the drop of the bucket compared with thy daily    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wants. Rivers of oil, and ten thousand rams or fed beasts, would not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; provide enough to supply the necessities of thy hungering soul. Thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; least spiritual want demands infinity to satisfy it, and what must be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the amazing aggregate of thy perpetually repeated draughts upon thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord! Arise, then, and bless thy loving Immanuel for the invaluable    <br \/>&#160;&#160; riches with which He has endowed thee. See what a dowry thy Bridegroom    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has brought to His poor, penniless spouse. He knows the value of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blessings which He brings thee, for He has paid for them out of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heart&#8217;s richest blood; be not thou so ungenerous as to pass them over    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as if they were but of little worth. Poor men know more of the value of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; money than those who have always revelled in abundance of wealth. Ought    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not thy former poverty to teach thee the preciousness of the grace    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which Jesus gives thee? For remember, there was a time when thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wouldst have given a thousand worlds, if they had been thine, in order    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to procure the very least of His abundant mercies. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Remember how impossible it would have been for thee to receive a single   <br \/>&#160;&#160; spiritual blessing unless thou hadst been in Jesus. On none of Adam&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; race can the love of God be fixed, unless they are seen to be in union    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with His Son. No exception has ever been made to the universal curse on    <br \/>&#160;&#160; those of the first Adam&#8217;s seed who have no interest in the second Adam.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ is the only Zoar in which God&#8217;s Lots can find a shelter from the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; destruction of Sodom. Out of Him, the withering blast of the fiery    <br \/>&#160;&#160; furnace of God&#8217;s wrath consumes every green herb, and it is only in Him    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that the soul can live. As when the prairie is on fire, men see the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heavens wrapped in sheets of flame, and in hot haste they fly before    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the devouring element. They have but one hope. There is in the distance    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a lake of water. They reach it, they plunge into it, and are safe.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Although the skies are molten with the heat, the sun darkened with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; smoke, and the earth utterly consumed in the fire, they know that they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are secure while the cooling flood embraces them. Christ Jesus is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; only escape for a sinner pursued by the fiery wrath of God, and we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; would have the believer remember this. Our own works could never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shelter us, for they have proved but refuges of lies. Had they been a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thousand times more and better, they would have been but as the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spider&#8217;s web, too flail to hang eternal interests upon. There was but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; one name, one sacrifice, one blood, by which we could escape. All other    <br \/>&#160;&#160; attempts at salvation were a grievous failure. For, &quot;though a man could    <br \/>&#160;&#160; scourge out of his body rivers of blood, and in neglect of himself    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could outlast Moses or Elias; though he could wear out his knees with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; prayer, and had his eyes nailed on heaven; though he could build    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hospitals for all the poor on earth, and exhaust the mines of India in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; alms; though he could walk like an angel of light, and with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glittering of an outward holiness dazzle the eyes of all beholders; nay    <br \/>&#160;&#160; (if it were possible to be conceived) though he should live for a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thousand years in a perfect and perpetual observation of the whole law    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of God, if the only exception to his perfection were the very least    <br \/>&#160;&#160; deviation from the law, yet such a man as this could no more appear    <br \/>&#160;&#160; before the tribunal of God&#8217;s justice, than stubble before a consuming    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fire.&quot; [2] How, then, with thine innumerable sins, couldst thou escape    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the damnation of hell, much less become the recipient of bounties so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rich and large? Blessed window of heaven, sweet Lord Jesus, let Thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Church for ever adore Thee, as the only channel by which mercies can    <br \/>&#160;&#160; flow to her. My soul, give Him continual praise, for without Him thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hadst been poorer than a beggar. Be thou mindful, O heir of heaven,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that thou couldst not have had one ray of hope, or one word of comfort,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; if thou hadst not been in union with Christ Jesus! The crumbs which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fall from thy table are more than grace itself would have given thee,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hadst thou not been in Jesus beloved and approved. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; All thou hast, thou hast in Him: in Him chosen, in Him redeemed, in Him   <br \/>&#160;&#160; justified, in Him accepted. Thou art risen in Him, but without Him thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hadst died the second death. Thou art in Him raised up to the heavenly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; places, but out of Him thou wouldst have been damned eternally. Bless    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him, then. Ask the angels to bless Him. Rouse all ages to a harmony of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; praise for His condescending love in taking poor guilty nothings into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; oneness with His all-adorable person. This is a blessed means of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; promoting communion, if the sacred Comforter is pleased to take of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; things of Christ, and reveal them to us as ours, but only ours as we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are in Him. Thrice-blessed Jesus, let us never forget that we are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; members of Thy mystical body, and that it is for this reason that we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are blessed and preserved. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Meditate upon thee gracious acts which procured thy blessings. Consider   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the ponderous labours which thy Lord endured for thee, and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stupendous sufferings by which He purchased the mercies which He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bestows. What human tongue can speak forth the unutterable misery of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His heart, or describe so much as one of the agonies which crowded upon    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His soul? How much less shall any finite comprehension arrive at an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; idea of the vast total of His woe! But all His sorrows were necessary    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for thy benefit, and without them not one of thine unnumbered mercies    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could have been bestowed. Be not unmindful that&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;There&#8217;s ne&#8217;er a gift His hand bestows, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But cost His heart a groan.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Look upon the frozen ground of Gethsemane, and behold the bloody sweat   <br \/>&#160;&#160; which stained the soil! Turn to the hall of Gabbatha, and see the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; victim of justice pursued by His clamorous foes! Enter the guard-room    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the Praetorians, and view the spitting, and the plucking of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hair! and then conclude your review upon Golgotha, the mount of doom,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; where death consummated His tortures; and if, by divine assistance thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; art enabled to enter, in some humble measure, into the depths of thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord&#8217;s sufferings, thou wilt be the better prepared to hold fellowship    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with Him when next thou receivest His priceless gifts. In proportion to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thy sense of their costliness will be thy capacity for enjoying the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love which is centred in them. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Above all, and chief of all, never forget that Christ is thine. Amid   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the profusion of His gifts, never forget that the chief gift is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself, and do not forget that, after all, His gifts are but Himself.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He clothes thee, but it is with Himself, with His own spotless    <br \/>&#160;&#160; righteousness and character. He washes thee, but His innermost self,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His own heart&#8217;s blood, is the stream with which the fountain overflows.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He feeds thee with the bread of heaven, but be not unmindful that the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bread is Himself, His own body which He gives to be the food of souls.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Never be satisfied with a less communication than a whole Christ. A    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wife will not be put off with maintenance, jewels, and attire, all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; these will be nothing to her unless she can call her husband&#8217;s heart    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and person her own. It was the Paschal lamb upon which the ancient    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Israelite did feast on that night that was never to be forgotten. So do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thou feast on Jesus, and on nothing less than Jesus, for less than this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will be food too light for thy soul&#8217;s satisfaction. Oh, be careful to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; eat His flesh and drink His blood, and so receive Him into thyself in a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; real and spiritual manner, for nothing short of this will be an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; evidence of eternal life in thy soul! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What more shall we add to the rules which we have here delivered? There   <br \/>&#160;&#160; remains but one great exhortation, which must not be omitted. Seek the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; abundant assistance of the Holy Spirit to enable you to put into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; practice the things which we have said, for without His aid, all that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we have spoken will but be tantalizing the lame with rules to walk, or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the dying with regulations for the preservation of health. O thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Divine Spirit, while we enjoy the grace of Jesus, lead us into the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; secret abode of our Lord, that we may sup with Him, and He with us, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grant unto us hourly grace that we may continue in the company of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord from the rising to the setting of the sun! Amen.    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [2]   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; THE WELL-BELOVED&#8217;S VINEYARD. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; AN ADDRESS TO A LITTLE COMPANY OF BELIEVERS, <\/p>\n<p>&#160; IN MR. SPURGEON&#8217;S OWN ROOM AT MENTONE.&quot;My Well-beloved hath a vineyard in a   <br \/>&#160; very fruitful hill.&quot;&#8211;Isaiah v. 1. <\/p>\n<p>THE WELL-BELOVED&#8217;S VINEYARD. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; WE recognize at once that Jesus is here. Who but He can be meant by &quot;My   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Well-beloved&quot;? Here is a word of possession and a word of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; affection,&#8211;He is mine, and my Well-beloved. He is loveliness itself,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the most loving and lovable of beings; and we personally love Him with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all our heart, and mind, and soul, and strength: He is ours, our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Beloved, our Well-beloved, we can say no less. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The delightful relationship of our Lord to us is accompanied by words   <br \/>&#160;&#160; which remind us of our relationship to Him, &quot;My Well-beloved hath a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vineyard,&quot; and what vineyard is that but our heart, our nature, our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; life? We are His: and we are His for the same reason that any other    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vineyard belongs to its owner. He made us a vineyard. Thorns and briars    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were all our growth naturally, but He bought us with a price, He hedged    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us about, and set us apart for Himself, and then He planted and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cultivated us. All within us that can bring forth good fruit is of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; creating, His tending, and His preserving; so that if we be vineyards    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at all we must be His vineyards. We gladly agree that it shall be so. I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pray that I may not have a hair on my head that does not belong to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ, and you all pray that your every pulse and breath may be the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord&#8217;s. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This happy afternoon I want you to note that this vineyard is said to   <br \/>&#160;&#160; be upon &quot;a very fruitful hill.&quot; I have been thinking of the advantages    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of my own position towards the Lord, and lamenting with great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shamefacedness that I am not bringing forth such fruit to Him as my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; position demands. Considering our privileges, advantages, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; opportunities, I fear that many of us have need to feel great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; searchings of heart. Perhaps to such the text may be helpful, and it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will not be without profit to any one of us, if the Lord will bless our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; meditation upon it. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. Our first thought, in considering these words, is that our position   <br \/>&#160;&#160; as the Lord&#8217;s vineyard is a very favourable one: &quot;My Well-beloved hath    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a vineyard in a very fruitful hill.&quot; No people could be better placed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for serving Christ than we are. I hardly think that any man is better    <br \/>&#160;&#160; situated for glorifying God than I am. I do not think that any women    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could be in better positions for serving Christ than some of you, dear    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sisters, now occupy. Our heavenly Father has placed us just where He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; can do the most for us, and where we can do the most for Him. Infinite    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wisdom has occupied itself with carefully selecting the soil, and site,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and aspect of every tree in the vineyard. We differ greatly, and need    <br \/>&#160;&#160; differing situations in order to fruitfulness: the place which would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; suit one might be too trying for another. Friend, the Lord has planted    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you in the right spot: your station may not be the best in itself, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it is the best for you. We are in the best possible position for some    <br \/>&#160;&#160; present service at this moment; the providence of God has put us on a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vantage ground for our immediate duty: &quot;My Well-beloved hath a vineyard    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in a very fruitful hill.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let us think of the times in which we live as calling upon us to be   <br \/>&#160;&#160; very fruitful when we compare them with the years gone by. Time was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when we could not have met thus happily in our own room: if we had been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; taken in the act of breaking bread, or reading God&#8217;s Word, we should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have been haled off to prison, and perhaps put to death. Our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; forefathers scarcely dared to lift up their voices in a psalm of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; praise, lest the enemy should be upon them. Truly, the lines have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fallen unto us in pleasant places; yea, we have a goodly heritage, in a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; very fruitful hill. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We do not even live in times when error is so rampant as to be   <br \/>&#160;&#160; paramount. There is too much of it abroad; but taking a broad view of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; things, I venture to say that there never was a time when the truth had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a wider sway than it has now, or when the gospel was more fully    <br \/>&#160;&#160; preached, or when there was more spiritual activity. Black clouds of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; error hover over us; but at the same time we rejoice that, from John o&#8217;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Groat&#8217;s House to the Land&#8217;s End, Christ is preached by ten thousand    <br \/>&#160;&#160; voices, and even in the dark parts of the earth the name of Jesus is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shining like a candle in the house. If we had the pick of the ages in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which to live, we could not have selected a better time for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fruitbearing than that which is now occurrent: this age is &quot;a very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fruitful hill.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; That this is the case some of us know positively, because we have been   <br \/>&#160;&#160; fruitful. Look back, brothers and sisters, upon times when your hearts    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were warm, and your zeal was fervent, and you served the Lord with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gladness. I join with you in those happy memories. Then we could run    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with the swiftest, we could fight with the bravest, we could work with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the strongest, we could suffer with the most patient. The grace of God    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has been upon certain of us in such an unmistakable manner that we have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; brought forth all the fruits of the Spirit. Perhaps to-day we look back    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with deep regret because we are not so fruitful as we once were: if it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be so, it is well that our regrets should multiply, but we must change    <br \/>&#160;&#160; each one of them into a hopeful prayer. Remember, the vine may have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; changed, but the soil is the same. We have still the same motives for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; being fruitful, and even more than we used to have. Why are we not more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; useful? Has some spiritual phylloxera taken possession of the vines, or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have we become frost-bitten, or sun-burnt? What is it that withholds    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the vintage? Certainly, if we were fruitful once, we ought to be more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fruitful now. The fruitful hill is not exhausted; what aileth us that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our grapes are so few? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We are planted on a fruitful hill, for we are called to work which of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; all others is the most fruitful. Blessed and happy is the man who is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; called to the Christian ministry; for this service has brought more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glory to Christ than any other. You, beloved friends, are not called to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be rulers of nations, nor inventors of engines, nor teachers of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sciences, nor slayers of men; but we are soul-winners, our work is to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; lead men to Jesus. Ours is, of all the employments in the world, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; most fruitful in benefits to men and glory to God. If we are not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; serving God in the gospel of His Son with all our might and ability,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; then we have a heavy responsibility resting upon us. &quot;Our Well-beloved    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hath a vineyard in a very fruitful hill:&quot; there is not a richer bit of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; soil outside Immanuel&#8217;s land than the holy ministry for souls. Certain    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of us are teachers, and gather the young about us while we speak of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus. This also is choice soil. Many teachers have gathered a grand    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vintage from among the little ones, and have not been a whit behind    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pastors and evangelists in the glory of soul-winning. Dear teachers,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your vines are planted in a very fruitful hill. But I do not confine    <br \/>&#160;&#160; myself to preachers and teachers; for all of us, as we have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; opportunities of speaking for the Lord Jesus Christ, and privately    <br \/>&#160;&#160; talking to individuals, have also a fertile soil to grow in. If we do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not glorify God by soul-winning, we shall be greatly blamable, since of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all forms of service it is most prolific in praise of God. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And what is more, the very circumstances with which we are surrounded   <br \/>&#160;&#160; all tend to make our position exceedingly favourable for fruit-bearing.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; In this little company we have not one friend who is extremely poor;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but if such were among us, I should say the same thing. Christ has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gathered some of His choicest clusters from the valley of poverty. Many    <br \/>&#160;&#160; eminent saints have never owned a foot of land, but lived upon their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; weekly wage, and found scant fare at that. Yes, by the grace of God,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the vale of poverty has blossomed as the rose. It so happens, however,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that the most of us here have a competence, we have all that we need,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and something over to give to the poor and to the cause of God. Surely    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we ought to be fruitful in almsgiving, in caring for the sick, and in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all manner of sweet and flagrant influences. &quot;Give me neither poverty    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nor riches,&quot; is a prayer that has been answered for most of us; and if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we do not now give honour unto God, what excuse can we make for our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; barrenness? I am speaking to some who are singularly healthy, who are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; never hindered by aches and pains; and to others who have been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; prospered in business for twenty years at a stretch: yours is great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; indebtedness to your Lord: in your case, &quot;My Well-beloved hath a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vineyard in a very fruitful hill.&quot; Give God your strength and your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wealth, my brother, while they last: see that all His care of thee is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not thrown away. Others of us seldom know many months together of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; health, but have often had to suffer sorely in body; this ought to make    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us fruitful, for there is much increase from the tillage of affliction.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Has not the Master obtained the richest of all fruit from bleeding    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vines? Do not His heaviest bunches come from vines which have been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sharply cut and pruned down to the ground? Choice flavours, dainty    <br \/>&#160;&#160; juices, and delicious aromas come mostly from the use of the keen-edged    <br \/>&#160;&#160; knife of trial. Some of us are at our best for fruitbearing when in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; other respects we are at our worst. Thus I might truly say that,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whatever our circumstances may be, whether we are poor or rich, in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; health or in affliction, each one of our cases has its advantages, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we are planted &quot;in a very fruitful hill.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Furthermore, when I look at our spiritual condition, I must say for   <br \/>&#160;&#160; myself, and I think for you also, &quot;My Well-beloved hath a vineyard in a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; very fruitful hill.&quot; For what has God done for us? To change the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; question,&#8211;what has God not done for us? What more could He say than to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us He hath said? What more could He do than to us He hath done? He hath    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dealt with us like a God. He has loved us up from the pit, He has loved    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us up to the cross, and up to the gates of heaven; He has quickened us,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; forgiven us, and renewed us; He dwells in us, comforts us, instructs    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us, upholds us, preserves us, guides us, leads us, and He will surely    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perfect us. If we are not fruitful, to His praise, how shall we excuse    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ourselves? Where shall we hide our guilty heads? Shall yonder sea    <br \/>&#160;&#160; suffice to lend us briny tears wherewith to weep over our ingratitude? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. I go a step further, by your leave, and say that our position, as   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord&#8217;s vineyard, is favourable to the production of the fruit which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He loves best. I believe that my own position is the most favourable    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for the production of the fruit that the Lord loves best in me, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that your position is the same. What is this fruit? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; First, it is faith. Our Lord is very delighted to see faith in His   <br \/>&#160;&#160; people. The trust which clings to Him with childlike confidence is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pleasant to His loving heart. Our position is such that faith ought to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be the easiest thing in the world to us. Look at the promises He has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; given us in His Word: can we not believe them? Look at what the Father    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has done for us in the gift of His dear Son: can we not trust Him after    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that? Our daily experience all goes to strengthen our confidence in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God. Every mercy asks, &quot;Will you not trust Him?&quot; Every want that is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; supplied cries, &quot;Can you not trust Him?&quot; Every sorrow sent by the great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Father tests our faith, and drives us to Him on whom we repose, and so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; strengthens and confirms our confidence in God. Mercies and miseries    <br \/>&#160;&#160; alike operate for the growth of faith. Some of us have been called upon    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to trust God on a large scale, and that necessity has been a great help    <br \/>&#160;&#160; towards fruit-bearing. The more troubles we have, the more is our vine    <br \/>&#160;&#160; digged about, and the more nourishment is laid to its roots. If faith    <br \/>&#160;&#160; does not ripen under trial, when will it ripen? Our afflictions    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fertilize the soil wherein faith may grow. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Another choice fruit is love. Jesus delights in love. His tender heart   <br \/>&#160;&#160; delights to see its love returned. Am I not of all men most bound to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love the Lord? I speak for each brother and sister here, is not that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your language? Do you not all say, &quot;Lives there a person beneath yon    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blue sky who ought to love Jesus more than I should do?&quot; Each sister    <br \/>&#160;&#160; soliloquizes, &quot;Sat there ever a woman in her chamber who had more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reason for loving God than I have?&quot; No, the sin which has been forgiven    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us should make us love our Saviour exceeding much. The sin which has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been prevented in other cases should make us love our Preserver much.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The help which God has sent us in hours of need, the guidance which He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has given in times of difficulty, the joy which He has poured into us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in days of fellowship, and the quiet He has breathed upon us in seasons    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of trial,&#8211;all ought to make us love Him. Along our life-road, reasons    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for loving God are more numerous than the leaves upon the olives. He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has hedged us about with His goodness, even as the mountains and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sea are round our present resting-place. Look backward as far as time    <br \/>&#160;&#160; endures, and then look far beyond that, into the eternity which has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been, and you will see the Lord&#8217;s great love set upon us: all through    <br \/>&#160;&#160; time and eternity reasons have been accumulating which constrain us to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love our Lord. Now turn sharply round, and gaze before you, and all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; along the future faith can see reasons for loving God, golden    <br \/>&#160;&#160; milestones on the way that is yet to be traversed, all calling for our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; loving delight in God. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Christ is also very pleased with the fruit of hope, and we are so   <br \/>&#160;&#160; circumstanced that we ought to produce much of it. The aged ought to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; look forward, for they cannot expect to see much more on earth. Time is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; short, and eternity is near; how precious is a good hope through grace!    <br \/>&#160;&#160; We who are not yet old ought to be exceedingly hopeful; and the younger    <br \/>&#160;&#160; folk, who are just beginning the spiritual life, should abound in hope    <br \/>&#160;&#160; most fresh and bright. If any man has expectations greater than I have,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I should like to see him. We have the greatest of expectations. Have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you never felt like Mercy in her dream, when she laughed and when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christiana asked her what made her laugh, she said that she had had a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vision of things yet to be revealed? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Select any fruit of the Spirit you choose, and I maintain that we are   <br \/>&#160;&#160; favourably circumstanced for producing it; we are planted upon a very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fruitful hill. What a fruitful hill we are living in as regards labour    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for Christ! Each one of us may find work for the Master; there are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; capital opportunities around us. There never was an age in which a man,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; consecrated to God, might do so much as he can at this time. There is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nothing to restrain the most ardent zeal. We live in such happy times    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that, if we plunge into a sea of work, we may swim, and none can hinder    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us. Then, too, our labour is made, by God&#8217;s grace, to be so pleasant to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us. No true servant of Christ is weary of the work, though he may be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; weary in the work: it is not the work that he ever wearies of, for he    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wishes that he could do ten times more. Then our Lord makes our work to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be successful. We bring one soul to Jesus, and that one brings a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hundred. Sometimes, when we are fishing for Jesus, there may be few    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fish, but, blessed be His name, most of them enter the net; and we have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to live praising and blessing God for all the favour with which He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; regards our labour of love. I do think I am right in saying that, for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the bearing of the fruit which Jesus loves best, our position is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; exceedingly favourable. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; III. And now, this afternoon, at this table, our position here is   <br \/>&#160;&#160; favourable even now to our producing immediately, and upon the spot,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the richest, ripest, rarest fruit for our Well-beloved. Here, at the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion-table, we are at the centre of the truth, and at the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; well-head of consolation. Now we enter the holy of holies, and come to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the most sacred meeting-place between our souls and God. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Viewed from this table, the vineyard slopes to the south, for   <br \/>&#160;&#160; everything looks towards Christ, our Sun. This bread, this wine, all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; set our souls aslope towards Jesus Christ, and He shines full upon our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hearts, and minds, and souls, to make us bring forth much fruit. Are we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not planted on a very fruitful hill? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; As we think of His passion for our sake, we feel that a wall is set   <br \/>&#160;&#160; about us to the north, to keep back every sharp blast that might    <br \/>&#160;&#160; destroy the tender grapes. No wrath is dreaded now, for Jesus has borne    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it for us; behold the tokens of His all-sufficient sacrifice! No anger    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the Lord shall come to our restful spirits, for the Lord saith, &quot;I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have sworn that I will not be wroth with thee, nor rebuke thee.&quot; Here,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; on this table, are the pledges of His love unspeakable, and these, like    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a high wall, keep out the rough winds. Surely, we are planted on a very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fruitful hill. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Moreover, the Well-beloved Himself is among us. He has not let us out   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to husbandmen, but He Himself doth undertake to care for us; and that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He is here we are sure, for here is His flesh, and here is His blood.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; You see the outward tokens, may you feel the unseen reality; for we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; believe in His real presence, though not in the gross corporeal sense    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with which worldly spirits blind themselves. The King has come into His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; garden: let us entertain Him with our fruits. He who for this vineyard    <br \/>&#160;&#160; poured out a bloody sweat, is now surveying the vines; shall they not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at this instant give forth a goodly smell? The presence of our Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; makes this assembly a very fruitful hill: where He sets His feet, all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; good things flourish. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Around this table, we are in a place where others have fruited well.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Our literature contains no words more precious than those which have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been spoken at the time of communion. Perhaps you know and appreciate    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the discourses of Willison, delivered on sacramental occasions.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Rutherford&#8217;s communion sermons have a sacred unction upon them. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; poems of George Herbert, I should think, were most of them inspired by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the sight of Christ in this ordinance. Think of the canticles of holy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Bernard, how they flame with devotion. Saints and martyrs have been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nourished at this table of blessing. This hollowed ordinance, I am    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sure, is a spot where hopes grow bright, and hearts grow warm, resolves    <br \/>&#160;&#160; become firm, and lives become fruitful, and all the clusters of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; soul&#8217;s fruit ripen for the Lord. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Blessed be God, we are where we have ourselves often grown. We have   <br \/>&#160;&#160; enjoyed our best times when celebrating this sacred Eucharist. God    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grant it may be so again! Let us, in calm meditation and inward    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thought, now produce from our hearts sweet fruits of love, and zeal,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and hope, and patience; let us yield great clusters like those of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Eshcol, all for Jesus, and for Jesus only. Even now, let us give    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ourselves up to meditation, gratitude, adoration, communion, rapture;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and let us spend the rest of our lives in glorifying and magnifying the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ever-blessed name of our Well-beloved whose vineyard we are. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;While such a scene of sacred joys <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Our raptured eyes and souls employs, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Here we could sit, and gaze away <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; A long, an everlasting day. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Well, we shall quickly pass the night, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; To the fair coasts of perfect light; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Then shall our joyful senses rove <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; O&#8217;er the dear object of our love. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;There shall we drink full draughts of bliss, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And pluck new life from heavenly trees. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Yet now and then, dear Lord, bestow <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; A drop of heaven on worms below.&quot;   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; REDEEMED SOULS FREED FROM FEAR. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; A TALK WITH A FEW FRIENDS AT MENTONE. &quot;Fear not: for I have redeemed   <br \/>&#160; thee.&quot;&#8211;Isaiah xliii. 1. <\/p>\n<p>REDEEMED SOULS FREED FROM FEAR. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I WAS lamenting this morning my unfitness for my work, and especially   <br \/>&#160;&#160; for the warfare to which I am called. A sense of heaviness came over    <br \/>&#160;&#160; me, but relief came very speedily, for which I thank the Lord. Indeed,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I was greatly burdened, but the Lord succoured me. The first verse read    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at the Sabbath morning service exactly met my case. It is in Isaiah    <br \/>&#160;&#160; xliii. 1: &quot;But now thus saith the Lord that created thee, O Jacob, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He that formed thee, O Israel, Fear not.&quot; I said to myself, &quot;I am what    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God created me, and I am what He formed me, and therefore I must, after    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all, be the right man for the place wherein He has put me.&quot; We may not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blame our Creator, nor suspect that He has missed His mark in forming    <br \/>&#160;&#160; an instrument for His work. Thus new comfort comes to us. Not only do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the operations of grace in the spiritual world yield us consolation,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but we are even comforted by what the Lord has done in creation. We are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; told to cease from our fears; and we do so, since we perceive that it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is the Lord that made us, and not we ourselves, and He will justify His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; own creating skill by accomplishing through us the purposes of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love. Pray, I beseech you, for me, the weakest of my Lord&#8217;s servants,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that I may be equal to the overwhelming task imposed upon me. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The next sentence of the chapter is usually most comforting to my soul,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; although on this one occasion the first sentence was a specially    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reviving cordial to me. The verse goes on to say,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Fear not: for I have redeemed thee.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let us think for a few minutes of the wonderful depth of consolation   <br \/>&#160;&#160; which lies in this fact. We have been redeemed by the Lord Himself, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this is a grand reason why we should never again be subject to fear.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Oh, that the logic of this fact could be turned into practice, so that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we henceforth rejoiced, or at least felt the peace of God! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; These words may be spoken, first of all, of those frequent occasions in   <br \/>&#160;&#160; which the Lord has redeemed His people out of trouble. Many a time and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; oft might our Lord say to each one of us, &quot;I have redeemed thee.&quot; Out    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of six, yea, six thousand trials He has brought us forth by the right    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hand of His power. He has released us from our afflictions, and brought    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us forth into a wealthy place. In the remembrance of all these    <br \/>&#160;&#160; redemptions the Lord seems to say to us, &quot;What I have done before, I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will do again. I have redeemed thee, and I will still redeem thee. I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have brought thee from under the hand of the oppressor; I have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; delivered thee from the tongue of the slanderer; I have borne thee up    <br \/>&#160;&#160; under the load of poverty, and sustained thee under the pains of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sickness; and I am able still to do the same: wherefore, then, dost    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thou fear? Why shouldst thou be afraid, since already I have again and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; again redeemed thee? Take heart, and be confident; for even to old age    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and to death itself I will continue to be thy strong Redeemer.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I suppose there would be a reference here to the great redemption out   <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Egypt. This word is addressed to the people of God under captivity    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in Babylon, and we know that the Lord referred to the Egyptian    <br \/>&#160;&#160; redemption; for He says in the third verse, &quot;I gave Egypt for thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ransom.&quot; Egypt was a great country, and a rich country, for we read of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;all the treasures of Egypt&quot;, but God gave them for His chosen: He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; would give all the nations of the earth for His Israel. This was a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wonderful stay to the people of God: they constantly referred to Egypt    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and the Red Sea, and made their national song out of it. In all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Israel&#8217;s times of disaster, and calamity, and trial, they joyfully    <br \/>&#160;&#160; remembered that the Lord had redeemed them when they were a company of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; slaves, helpless and hopeless, under a tyrant who cast their firstborn    <br \/>&#160;&#160; children into the Nile, a tyrant whose power was so tremendous that all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the armies of the world could not have wrought their deliverance from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; his iron hand. The very nod of Pharaoh seemed to the inhabitants of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Egypt to be omnipotent; he was a builder of pyramids, a master of all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the sciences of peace and the arts of war. What could the Israelites    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have done against him? Jehovah came to their relief in their dire    <br \/>&#160;&#160; extremity. His plagues followed each other in quick succession. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dread volleys of the Lord&#8217;s artillery confounded His foes. At last He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; smote all the firstborn of Egypt, the chief of all their strength. Then    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was Egypt glad that Israel departed, and the Lord brought forth His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people with silver and gold. All the chivalry of Egypt was overthrown    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and destroyed at the Red Sea, and the timbrels of the daughters of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Israel sounded joyously upon its shores. This redemption out of Egypt    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is so remarkable that it is remembered even in heaven. The Old    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Testament song is woven into that of the New Covenant; for there they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;sing the song of Moses the servant of God, and the song of the Lamb.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The first redeemption was so wonderful a type and prophecy of the other    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that it is no alloy to the golden hymn of eternal glory, but readily    <br \/>&#160;&#160; melts into the same celestial chant. Other types may cease to be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; remembered, but this was so much a fact as well as a type that it shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be had in memory for ever and ever. Every Israelite ought to have had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; confidence in God after what He had done for the people in redeeming    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them out of Egypt. To every one of the seed of Jacob it was a grand    <br \/>&#160;&#160; argument to enforce the precept, &quot;Fear not.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But I take it that the chief reference of these words are to that   <br \/>&#160;&#160; redemption which has been wrought out for us by Him who loved us, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; washed us from our sins by His own blood. Let us think of it for a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; minute or two before we break the bread and drink of the cup of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The remembrance of this transcendent redemption ought to comfort us in   <br \/>&#160;&#160; all times of perplexity. When we cannot see our way, or cannot make out    <br \/>&#160;&#160; what to do, we need not be at all troubled concerning it; for the Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jehovah can see a way out of every intricacy. There never was a problem    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so hard to solve as that which is answered in redemption. Herein was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the tremendous difficulty&#8211;How can God be just, and yet the Saviour of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sinners? How can He fulfil His threatenings, and yet forgive sin? If    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that problem been left to angels and men, they could never worked it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; out throughout eternity; but God has solved it through freely    <br \/>&#160;&#160; delivering up His own Son. In the glorious sacrifice of Jesus we see    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the justice of God magnified; for He laid sin on the blessed Lord, who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had become one with His chosen. Jesus identified Himself with His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people, and therefore their sin was laid upon Him, and the sword of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord awoke against Him. He was not taken arbitrarily to be a victim,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but He was a voluntary Sufferer. His relationship amounted to covenant    <br \/>&#160;&#160; oneness with His people, and &quot;it behoved Christ to suffer.&quot; Herein is a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wisdom which must be more than equal to all minor perplexities. Hear    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this, then, O poor soul in suspense! The Lord says, &quot;I have redeemed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thee. I have already brought thee out of the labyrinth in which thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wast lost by sin, and therefore I will take thee out of the meshes of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the net of temptation, and lead thee through the maze of trial; I will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bring the blind by a way that they know not, and lead them in paths    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which they have not known. I will bring again from Bashan, I will bring    <br \/>&#160;&#160; up My people from the depths of the sea.&quot; Let us commit our way unto    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord. Mine is a peculiarly difficult one, but I know that my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Redeemer liveth, and He will lead me by a right way. He will be our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Guide even unto death; and after death He will guide us through those    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tracks unknown of the mysterious region, and cause us to rest with Him    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for ever. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; So also, if at any time we are in great poverty, or in great straitness   <br \/>&#160;&#160; of means for the Lord&#8217;s work, and we are, therefore, afraid that we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall never get our needs supplied, let us cast off such fears as we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; listen to the music of these words: &quot;Fear not: for I have redeemed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thee.&quot; God Himself looked down from heaven, and saw that there was no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; man who could give to Him a ransom for his brother, and each man on his    <br \/>&#160;&#160; own part was hopelessly bankrupt; and then, despite our spiritual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beggary, He found the means of our redemption. What then? Let us hear    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the use which the Holy Spirit makes of this fact: &quot;He that spared not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not with Him    <br \/>&#160;&#160; also freely give us all things?&quot; We cannot have a want which the Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will not supply. Since God has given us Jesus, He will give us, not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; some things, but &quot;all things.&quot; Indeed, all things are ours in Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus. No necessity of his life can for a single moment be compared to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that dread necessity which the Lord has already supplied. The infinite    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gift of God&#8217;s own Son is a far greater one than all that can be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; included in the term &quot;all things&quot;: wherefore, it is a grand argument to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the poor and needy, &quot;Fear not: for I have redeemed thee.&quot; Perplexity    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and poverty are thus effectually met. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We are at times troubled by a sense of our personal insignificance. It   <br \/>&#160;&#160; seems too much to hope that God&#8217;s infinite mind should enter into our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mean affairs. Though David said, &quot;I am poor and needy, yet the Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thinketh upon me,&quot; we are not always quite prepared to say the same. We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; make our sorrows great under the vain idea that they are too small for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord to notice. I believe that our greatest miseries spring from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; those little worries which we hesitate to bring to our heavenly Father.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Our gracious God puts an end to all such thoughts as these by saying    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Fear not for I have redeemed thee.&quot; You are not of such small account    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as you suppose. The Lord would never be wasteful of His sacred    <br \/>&#160;&#160; expenditure. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; He bought you with a price, and therefore He sets great store by you.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Listen to what the Lord says: &quot;Since thou wast precious in My sight,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thou hast been honourable, and I have loved thee: therefore will I give    <br \/>&#160;&#160; men for thee, and people for thy life.&quot; It is amazing that the Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; should think so much of us as to give Jesus for us. &quot;What is man that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thou art mindful of him?&quot; Yet God&#8217;s mind is filled with thoughts of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love towards man. Know ye not that His only-begotten Son entered this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; world, and became a man? The man Christ Jesus has a name at which every    <br \/>&#160;&#160; knee shall bow, and He is so dear to the Father that, for His sake, His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; chosen ones are accepted, and are made to enjoy the freest access to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him. We sing truly,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;So near, so very near to God, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Nearer we cannot be, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; For in the person of His Son <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We are as near as He.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And now the very hairs of our head are all numbered, and the least   <br \/>&#160;&#160; burden we may roll upon the Lord. Those cares which we ought not to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have may well cease, for &quot;He careth for us.&quot; He that redeemed us never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; forgets us: His wounds have graven us upon the palms of His hands, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; written our names deep in His side. Jesus stoops to our level, for He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stooped to bear the cross to redeem us. Do not, therefore, be again    <br \/>&#160;&#160; afraid because of your insignificance. &quot;Why sayest thou, O Jacob, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; speakest, O Israel, My way is hid from the Lord, and my judgment is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; passed over from my God? Hast thou not known? Hast thou not heard, that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fainteth not, neither is weary? There is no searching of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; understanding. He giveth power to the faint; and to them that have no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; might He increaseth strength.&quot; The Lord&#8217;s memory is toward the little    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in Israel. He carrieth the lambs in His bosom. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We are liable to fret a little when we think of our changeableness. If   <br \/>&#160;&#160; you are at all like me, you are very far from being always alike; I am    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sometimes lifted up to the very heavens, and then I go down to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; deeps; I am at one time bright with joy and confidence, and at another    <br \/>&#160;&#160; time dark as midnight with doubts and fears. Even Elijah, who was so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; brave, had his fainting fits. We are to be blamed for this, and yet the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fact remains: our experience is as an April day, when shower and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sunshine take their turns. Amid our mournful changes we rejoice to hear    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord&#8217;s own voice, saying, &quot;Fear not: for I have redeemed thee.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Everything is not changeful wave; there is rock somewhere. Redemption    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is a fact accomplished. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;The Cross, it standeth fast. Hallelujah!&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The price is paid, the ransom accepted. This is done, and can never be   <br \/>&#160;&#160; undone. Jesus says, &quot;I have redeemed thee.&quot; Change of feeling within    <br \/>&#160;&#160; does not alter the fact that the believer has been bought with a price,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and made the Lord&#8217;s own by the precious blood of Jesus. The Lord God    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has already done so much for us that our salvation is sure in Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus. Will He begin to build, and fail to finish? Will He lay the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; foundation in the everlasting covenant? Will He dedicate the walls with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the infinite sacrifice of the Lamb of God? Will He give up the choicest    <br \/>&#160;&#160; treasure He ever had, the chosen of God and precious, to be the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; corner-stone, and then not finish the work He has begun? It is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; impossible. If He has redeemed us, He has, in that act, given us the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pledge of all things. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; See how the gifts of God are bound to this redemption. &quot;I have redeemed   <br \/>&#160;&#160; thee. I have called thee.&quot; &quot;For whom He did foreknow, He also did    <br \/>&#160;&#160; predestinate to be conformed to the image of His Son, that He might be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the firstborn among many brethren. Moreover whom He did predestinate,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them He also called: and whom He called, them He also justified: and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whom He justified, them He also glorified.&quot; Here is a chain in which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; each link is joined to all the rest, so that it cannot be separated. If    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God had only gone so far as to make a promise, He would not have drawn    <br \/>&#160;&#160; back from it; if God had gone as far as to swear an oath by Himself, He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; would not have failed to keep it; but when He went beyond promise and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; oath, and in very deed the sacrifice was slain, and the covenant was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ratified: why, then it would be blasphemous to imagine that He would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; afterwards disannul it, and turn from His solemn pledge. There is no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; going back on the part of God, and consequently His redemption will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; redeem, and in redeeming it will secure us all things. &quot;Who shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; separate us from the love of Christ?&quot; With the blood-mark upon us we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; may well cease to fear. How can we perish? How can we be deserted in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the hour of need? We have been bought with too great a price for our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Redeemer to let us slip. Therefore, let us march on with confidence,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hearing our Redeemer say to us, &quot;When thou passest through the waters,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I will be with thee; and through the rivers, they shall not overflow    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thee: when thou walkest through the fire, thou shalt not be burned;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; neither shall the flame kindle upon thee.&quot; Concerning His redeemed, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord will say to the enemy, &quot;Touch not Mine anointed, and do My    <br \/>&#160;&#160; prophets no harm.&quot; The stars in their courses fight for the ransomed of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord. If their eyes were opened, they would see the mountain full    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of horses of fire and chariots of fire round about them. Oh, how my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; weary heart prizes redeeming love! If it were not for this, I would lay    <br \/>&#160;&#160; me down, and die. Friends forsake me, foes surround me, I am filled    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with contempt, and tortured with the subtlety which I cannot baffle;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but as the Lord of all brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great Shepherd of the sheep, by the blood of the everlasting covenant,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so by the blood of His covenant doth He loose His prisoners, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sustain the hearts of those who tremble at His Word. &quot;O my soul, thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hast trodden down strength,&quot; for the Lord hath said unto thee, &quot;Fear    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not: for I have redeemed thee.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; JESUS, THE GREAT OBJECT OF ASTONISHMENT. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; A COMMUNION ADDRESS AT MENTONE. &quot;Behold, My Servant shall deal prudently, He   <br \/>&#160; shall be exalted and extolled, and be very high. As many were astonied at    <br \/>&#160; Thee; His visage was so marred more than any man, and His form more than the    <br \/>&#160; sons of men; so shall He sprinkle many nations; the kings shall shut their    <br \/>&#160; mouths at Him: for that which had not been told them shall they see; and that    <br \/>&#160; which they had not heard shall they consider.&quot;&#8211;Isaiah lii. 13-15. <\/p>\n<p>JESUS, THE GREAT OBJECT ASTONISHMENT. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; OUR Lord Jesus Christ bore from of old the name of &quot;Wonderful&quot;, and the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; word seems all too poor to set forth His marvellous person and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; character. He says of Himself, in the language of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; prophet,&#8211;&quot;Behold, I and the children whom the Lord hath given Me are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for signs and for wonders.&quot; He is a fountain of astonishment to all who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; know Him, and the more they know of Him, the more are they &quot;astonied&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at Him. It is an astonishing thing that there should have been a Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at all: the Incarnation is the miracle of miracles; that He who is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Infinite should become an infant, that He who made the worlds should be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wrapt in swaddling-bands, remains a fact out of which, as from a hive,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; new wonders continually fly forth. In His complex nature He is so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mysterious, and yet so manifest, that doubtless all the angels of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heaven were and are astonished at Him. O Son of God, and Son of man,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when Thou, the Word, wast made flesh, and dwelt among us, and Thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saints beheld Thy glory, it was but natural that many should be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; astonished at Thee! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Our text seems to say that our Lord was, first, a great wonder in His   <br \/>&#160;&#160; griefs; and, secondly, that He was a great wonder in His glory. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. He was a great wonder in his griefs: &quot;As many were astonied at Thee;   <br \/>&#160;&#160; His visage was so marred more than any man, and His form more than the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sons of men.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; His visage was marred: no doubt His countenance bore the signs of a   <br \/>&#160;&#160; matchless grief. There were ploughings on His brow as well as upon His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; back; suffering, and brokenness of spirit, and agony of heart, had told    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon that lovely face, till its beauty, though never to be destroyed,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was &quot;so&quot; marred that never was any other so spoiled with sorrow. But it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was not His face only, His whole form was marred more than the sons of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; men. The contour of His bodily manhood showed marks of singular    <br \/>&#160;&#160; assaults of sorrow, such as had never bowed another form so low. I do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not know whether His gait was stooping, or whether His knees tottered,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and His walk was feeble; but there was evidently a something about Him    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which gave Him the appearance of premature age, since to the Jews He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; looked older than He was, for when He was little more than thirty they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; said unto Him, &quot;Thou art not yet fifty years old.&quot; I cannot conceive    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that He was deformed or ungainly; but despite His natural dignity, His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; worn and emaciated appearance marked Him out as &quot;the Man of sorrows&quot;,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and to the carnal eye His whole natural and spiritual form had in it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nothing which evoked admiration; even as the prophet said, &quot;When we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall see Him, there is no beauty that we should desire Him.&quot; The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; marring was not of that lovely face alone, but of the whole fabric of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His wondrous manhood, so that many were astonied at Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Our astonishment, when in contemplation we behold our suffering Lord,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; will arise from the consideration of what His natural beauty must have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been, enshrined as He was from the first within a perfect body.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Conceived without sin, and so born of a pure virgin without taint of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hereditary sin, I doubt not that He was the flower and glow of manhood    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as to His form, and from His early youth He must have been a joy to His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mother&#8217;s eye. Great masters of the olden time expended all their skill    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon the holy child Jesus, but it is not for the colours of earth to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; depict the Lord from heaven. That &quot;holy thing&quot; which was born of Mary    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was &quot;seen of angels,&quot; and it charmed their eyes. Must such loveliness    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be marred? His every look was pure, His every thought was holy, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; therefore the expression of His face must have been heavenly, and yet    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it must be marred. Poverty must mark it; hunger, and thirst, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; weariness, must plough it; heart-griefs must seam and scar it; spittle    <br \/>&#160;&#160; must distain it; tears must scald it; smiting must bruise it; death    <br \/>&#160;&#160; must make it pale and bloodless. Well does Bernard sing&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;O sacred Head, once wounded, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; With grief and pain weigh&#8217;d down, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; How scornfully surrounded <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; With thorns, Thine only crown; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; How pale art Thou with anguish, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; With sore abuse and scorn! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; How does that visage languish, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Which once was bright as morn!&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The second astonishment to us must be that he could be so marred who   <br \/>&#160;&#160; had nothing in His character to mar His countenance. Sin is a sad    <br \/>&#160;&#160; disfigurement to faces which in early childhood were surpassingly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; attractive. Passion, if it be indulged in, soon sets a seal of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; deformity upon the countenance. Men that plunge into vice bear upon    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their features the traces of their hearts&#8217; volcanic fires. We most of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us know some withered beings, whose beauty has been burned up by the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fierce fires of excess, till they are a horror to look upon, as if the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mark of Cain were set upon them. Every sin makes its line on a fair    <br \/>&#160;&#160; face. But there was no sin in the blessed Jesus, no evil thought to mar    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His natural perfectness. No redness of eyes ever came to Him by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tarrying long at the wine; no unhallowed anger ever flushed His cheek;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; no covetousness gave to His eye a wolfish glance; no selfish care lent    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to His features a sharp and anxious cast. Such an unselfish, holy life    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as His ought to have rendered Him, if it had been possible, more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beautiful every day. Indulging such benevolence, abiding in such    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion with God, surely the face of Christ must, in the natural    <br \/>&#160;&#160; order of things, have more and more astonished all sympathetic    <br \/>&#160;&#160; observers with its transcendent charms. But sorrow came to engrave her    <br \/>&#160;&#160; name where sin had never made a stroke, and she did her work so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; effectually that His visage was more marred than that of any man,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; although the God of mercy knows there have been other visages that have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been worn with pain and anguish past all recognition. I need not repeat    <br \/>&#160;&#160; even one of the many stories of human woe: that of our Lord surpasses    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Remember that the face of our Well-beloved, as well as all His form,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; must have been an accurate index of His soul. Physiognomy is a science    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with much truth in it when it deals with men of truth. Men weaned from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; simplicity know how to control their countenances; the crafty will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; appear to be honest, the hardened will seem to sympathize with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; distressed, the revengeful will mimic good-will. There are some who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; continually use their countenance as they do their speech, to conceal    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their feelings; and it is almost a point of politeness with them never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to show themselves, but always to go masked among their fellows. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But the Christ had learned no such arts. He was so sincere, so   <br \/>&#160;&#160; transparent, so child-like and true, that whatever stirred within Him    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was apparent to those about Him, so far as they were capable of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; understanding His great soul. We read of Him that He was &quot;moved with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; compassion.&quot; The Greek word means that He experienced a wonderful    <br \/>&#160;&#160; emotion of His whole nature, He was thrilled with it, and His disciples    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saw how deeply He felt for the people, who were as sheep without a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shepherd. Though He did not commit Himself to men, He did not conceal    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself, but wore His heart upon His sleeve, and all could see what He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was, and knew that He was full of grace and truth. We are, therefore,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not surprised, when we devoutly consider our Lord&#8217;s character, that His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; visage and form should indicate the inward agonies of His tender    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spirit; it could not be that His face should be untrue to His heart.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The ploughers made deep furrows upon His soul as well as upon His back,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and His heart was rent with inward convulsions, which could not but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; affect His whole appearance. Those eyes saw what those around Him could    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not see; those shoulders bore a constant burden which others could not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; know; and, therefore, His countenance and form betrayed the fact. O    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dear, dear Saviour, when we think of Thee, and of Thy majesty and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; purity, we are again astonished that woes should come upon Thee so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grievously as to mar Thy visage and Thy form! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now think, dear friends, what were the causes of this marring. It was   <br \/>&#160;&#160; not old age that had wrinkled His brow, for He was still in the prime    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of life, neither was it a personal sickness which had caused decay;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; much less was it any congenital weakness and disease, which at length    <br \/>&#160;&#160; betrayed itself, for in His flesh there was no possibility of impurity,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which would, in death, have led to corruption. It was occasioned,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; first, by His constant sympathy with the suffering. There was a heavy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wear and tear occasioned by the extraordinary compassion of His soul.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; In three years it had told upon Him most manifestly, till His visage    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was marred more than that of any other man. To Him there was a kind of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sucking up into Himself of all the suffering of those whom He blessed.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He always bore upon Him the burden of mortal woe. We read of Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; healing all that were sick, &quot;that it might be fulfilled which was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spoken by Esaias the prophet, saying, Himself took our infirmities, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bare our sicknesses.&quot; Yes, He took those infirmities and sicknesses in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; some mystical way to Himself, just as I have heard of certain trees,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which scatter health, because they themselves imbibe the miasma, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; draw up into themselves those noxious vapours which otherwise would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; poison mankind. Thus, without being themselves polluted, they disinfect    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the atmosphere around them. This, our Saviour did, but the cost was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great to Him. You can imagine, living as He did in the midst of one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vast hospital, how constantly He must have seen sights that grieved and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pained Him. Moreover, with a nature so pure and loving, He must have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been daily tortured with the sin, and hypocrisy, and oppression which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so abounded in His day. In a certain sense, He was always laying down    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His life for men, for He was spent in their service, tortured by their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sin, and oppressed with their sorrow. The more we look into that marred    <br \/>&#160;&#160; visage, the more shall we be astonished at the anguish which it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; indicated. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Do not wonder that He was more marred than any man, for He was more   <br \/>&#160;&#160; sensitive than other men. No part of Him was callous, He had no seared    <br \/>&#160;&#160; conscience, no blunted sensibility, no drugged and deadened nerve. His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; manhood was in its glory, in the perfection in which Adam was when God    <br \/>&#160;&#160; made him in His own image, and therefore He was ill-housed in such a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fallen world. We read of Christ that He was &quot;grieved for the hardness    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of their hearts,&quot; &quot;He marvelled because of their unbelief,&quot; &quot;He sighed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; deeply in His spirit,&quot; &quot;He groaned in the spirit, and was troubled.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; This, however, was only the beginning of the marring. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; His deepest griefs and most grievous marring came of His   <br \/>&#160;&#160; substitutionary work, while bearing the penalty of our sin. One word    <br \/>&#160;&#160; recalls much of His woe: it is, &quot;Gethsemane.&quot; Betrayed by Judas, His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trusted friend, that the Scripture might be fulfilled, &quot;He that eateth    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bread with Me hath lifted up his heel against Me;&quot; deserted even by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; John, for all the disciples forsook Him and fled; not one of all the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; loved ones with Him: He was left alone. He had washed their feet, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they could not watch with Him one hour; and in that garden He wrestled    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with our deadly foe, till His sweat was as it were great drops of blood    <br \/>&#160;&#160; falling down to the ground, and as Hart puts it, He&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Bore all Incarnate God could bear, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; With strength enough, but none to spare.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I do verily believe that verse to be true. Herein you see what marred   <br \/>&#160;&#160; His countenance, and His form, even while in life. The whole of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; manhood felt that dreadful shock, when He and the prince of darkness,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in awful duel, fought it out amidst the gloom of the olives on that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cold midnight when our redemption began to be fully accomplished. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The whole of His passion marred His countenance and His form with its   <br \/>&#160;&#160; unknown sufferings. I restrain myself, lest this meditation should grow    <br \/>&#160;&#160; too painful. They bound Him, they scourged Him, they mocked Him, they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; plucked off the hair from His face, they spat upon Him, and at last    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they nailed Him to the tree, and there He hung. His physical pain alone    <br \/>&#160;&#160; must have been very great, but all the while there was within His soul    <br \/>&#160;&#160; an inward torment which added immeasurably to His sufferings. His God    <br \/>&#160;&#160; forsook Him. &quot;Eloi, Eloi, lama, sabachthani?&quot; is a voice enough to rend    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the rocks, and assuredly it makes us all astonished when, in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; returning light, we look upon His visage, and are sure that never face    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of any man was so marred before, and never form of any son of man so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grievously disfigured. Weeping and wondering, astonied and adoring, we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; leave the griefs of our own dear Lord, and with loving interest turn to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the brighter portion of His unrivalled story. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Behold your King! Though the moonlight steals <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Through the silvery sprays of the olive tree, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; No star-gemmed sceptre or crown it reveals, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In the solemn shade of Gethsemane. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Only a form of prostrate grief, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Fallen, crushed, like a broken leaf! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Oh, think of His sorrow, that we may know <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The depth of love in the depth of woe! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Behold your King, with His sorrow crowned, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Alone, alone in the valley is He! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The shadows of death are gathering round, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And the cross must follow Gethsemane. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Darker and darker the gloom must fall, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Filled is the cup, He must drink it all! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Oh, think of His sorrow, that we may know <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; His wondrous love in His wondrous woe!&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. There is an equal astonishment at His glories. I doubt not, if we   <br \/>&#160;&#160; could see Him now, as He appeared to John in Patmos, we should feel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that we must do exactly as the beloved disciple did, for He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; deliberately wrote, &quot;When I saw Him, I fell at His feet as dead.&quot; His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; astonishment was so great that he could not endure the sight. He had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; doubtless longed often to behold that glorified face and form, but the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; privilege was too much for him. While we are encumbered with these    <br \/>&#160;&#160; frail bodies, it is not fit for us to behold our Lord, for we should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; die with excess of delight if we were suddenly to behold that vision of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; splendour. Oh, for those glorious days when we shall lie for ever at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His feet, and see our exalted Lord! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Behold, My servant shall deal prudently, He shall be exalted and   <br \/>&#160;&#160; extolled, and be very high.&quot; Observe the three words, &quot;exalted and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; extolled, and be very high;&quot; language pants for expression. Our Lord is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; now exalted in being lifted up from the grave, lifted up above all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; angels, and principalities, and powers. The Man Christ Jesus is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nearest to the eternal throne, ay, the Lamb is before the throne. &quot;And    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I beheld, and, lo, in the midst of the throne and of the four beasts,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and in the midst of the elders, stood a Lamb as it had been slain.&quot; He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is in His own state and person exalted, and then by the praise rendered    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him he is extolled, for he is worshipped and adored by the whole    <br \/>&#160;&#160; universe. All praise goes up before Him now, so that men extol Him,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; while &quot;God also hath highly exalted Him, and given Him a name, which is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; above every name; that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth; and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glory of God the Father.&quot; Deep were His sorrows, but as high are His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; joys. It is said that, around many of the lochs in Scotland, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mountains are as high as the water is deep; and so our Lord&#8217;s glories    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are as immeasurable as were His woes. What a meditation is furnished by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; these two-fold and incalculable heights and depths! Our text says that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He shall &quot;be very high.&quot; It cannot tell us how high. It is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; inconceivable how great and glorious in all respects the Lord Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ is at this moment. Oh, that He may be very high in our esteem!    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He is not yet exalted and extolled in any of our hearts as He deserves    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be. I would we loved Him a thousand times as much as we do, but our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whole heart goeth after Him, does it not? Would we not die for Him?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Would we not set Him on a throne as high as seven heavens, and then    <br \/>&#160;&#160; think that we had not done enough for Him, who is now our all in all,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and more than all? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; You notice what is said, concerning the Christ, as the most astonishing   <br \/>&#160;&#160; thing of all: &quot;So shall He sprinkle many nations.&quot; Now is it the glory    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of our risen Lord, at this moment, that His precious blood is to save    <br \/>&#160;&#160; many nations. Before the throne, men of all nations shall sing, &quot;Thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wast slain, and hast redeemed us unto God by Thy blood.&quot; Not the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; English nation alone shall be purified by His atoning blood, but many    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nations shall He sprinkle with His reconciling blood, even as Israel of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; old was sprinkled with the blood of sacrifice. We read in the tenth    <br \/>&#160;&#160; chapter of the Epistle to the Hebrews, at the twenty-second verse, of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience,&quot; and this is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; effected by that precious blood by which we have been once purged so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; effectually that we have no more consciousness of sins, but enter into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perfect peace. The blood of bulls and of goats, and the ashes of an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heifer, sprinkling the unclean, sanctified to the purifying of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; flesh, and much more doth the blood of Christ purge our conscience from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dead works, to serve the living God. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The sprinkling of the blood was meant also to confirm the covenant:   <br \/>&#160;&#160; thus Moses &quot;sprinkled both the book and all the people, saying, This is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the blood of the testament which God hath enjoined unto you.&quot; Our Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself said, &quot;This is My blood of the new covenant, which is shed for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; many for the remission of sins.&quot; But is it not a wonderful thing that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He should die as a malefactor on the tree, amid scorn and ridicule, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; yet that He is this day bringing nations into covenant with God? Once    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so despised, and now: so mighty! God has given Him &quot;for a covenant of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the people, for a light of the Gentiles.&quot; Many nations shall by Him be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; joined in covenant with the God of the whole earth. Do not fall into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the erroneous idea that this world is like a great ship-wrecked vessel,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; soon to go to pieces on an iron-bound coast; but rather let us expect    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the conversion of the world to the Lord Jesus. As a reward for the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; travail of His soul, He shall cause many nations to &quot;exult with joy&quot;,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for so some read the passage; the peoples of the earth shall not only    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be astonished at His griefs, but they shall admire His glories, adore    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His perfections, and be filled with an amazement of joy at His coming    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and kingdom. I can conceive nothing in the future too great and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glorious to result from the passion and death of our Divine Lord. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Listen to this, &quot;Kings shall shut their mouths at Him.&quot; They shall see   <br \/>&#160;&#160; such a King as they themselves have never been; they speak freely to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their brother-kings, but they shall not dare to speak to Him, and as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for speaking against Him, that will be altogether out of the question. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Kings shall fall down before Him, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And gold and incense bring.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;For that which had not been told them shall they see.&quot; Kings are often   <br \/>&#160;&#160; out of the reach of the gospel, they do not hear it, it is not told to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them. They would despise the lowly preacher, and little gatherings of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; believers meeting together for worship; they would only listen to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stately discourses, which do not touch the heart and conscience. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great ones of the earth are usually the least likely to know the things    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of God, for while the poor have the gospel preached unto them, princes    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are more likely to hear soft flatteries and fair speeches. The time    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall come, however, when Caesar shall bow before a real Imperator, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; monarchs shall behold the Prince of the kings of the earth. &quot;For the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord Himself shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the archangel, and with the trump of God.&quot; They shall see His majesty,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of which they had not even been told. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;That which they had not heard shall they consider.&quot; They shall be   <br \/>&#160;&#160; obliged, even on their thrones, to think about the kingdom of the King    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of kings, and they shall retire to their closets to confess their sins,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and to put on sackcloth and ashes, and to give heed to the words of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wisdom. &quot;Be wise now, therefore, O ye kings: be instructed, ye judges    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the earth.&quot; To-day, the humble listen to Christ, but by-and-by the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mightiest of the mighty shall turn all their thoughts towards Him. He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall gather sheaves of sceptres beneath His arm, and crowns shall be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; strewn at His feet; and &quot;He shall reign for ever and ever,&quot; and &quot;of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; increase of His government and peace there shall be no end.&quot; If we were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; astonished at the marring of His face, we shall be much more astonished    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at the magnificence of His glory. Upon His throne none shall question    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His supremacy, none shall doubt His loveliness; but His enemies shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; weep and wail because of Him whom they pierced; while He shall be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; admired in all them that believe. Adorable Lord, we long for Thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glorious appearing! We beseech Thee tarry not! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Come, and begin Thy reign <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Of everlasting peace; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Come, take the kingdom to Thyself, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Great King of Righteousness!&quot;   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>BANDS OF LOVE; OR, UNION TO CHRIST. &quot;I drew them with cords of a man, with bands   <br \/> of love: and I was to them as they that take off the yoke on their jaws, and I    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; laid meat unto them.&quot;&#8211;Hosea xi. 4. <\/p>\n<p>BANDS OF LOVE; OR, UNION TO CHRIST. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; SYSTEMATIC theologians have usually regarded union to Christ under   <br \/>&#160;&#160; three aspects, natural, mystical and federal, and it may be that these    <br \/>&#160;&#160; three terms are comprehensive enough to embrace the whole subject, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as our aim is simplicity, let us be pardoned if we appear diffuse when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we follow a less concise method. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; 1. The saints were from the beginning joined to Christ by bands of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; everlasting love. Before He took on Him their nature, or brought them    <br \/>&#160;&#160; into a conscious enjoyment of Himself, His heart was set upon their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; persons, and His soul delighted in them. Long ere the worlds were made,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His prescient eye beheld His chosen, and viewed them with delight.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Strong were the indissoluble bands of love which then united Jesus to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the souls whom He determined to redeem. Not bars of brass, or triple    <br \/>&#160;&#160; steel, could have been more real and effectual bonds. True love, of all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; things in the universe, has the greatest cementing force, and will bear    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the greatest strain, and endure the heaviest pressure: who shall tell    <br \/>&#160;&#160; what trials the Saviour&#8217;s love has borne; and how well it has sustained    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them? Never union was more true than this. As the soul of Jonathan was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; knit to the soul of David so that he loved David as his own soul, so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was our glorious Lord united and joined to us by the ties of fervent,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; faithful love. Love has a most potent power in effecting and sustaining    <br \/>&#160;&#160; union, but never does it display its force so well as when we see it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bringing the Creator into oneness with the creature, the divine into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; alliance with the human. This, then, is to be regarded as the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; day-spring of union&#8211;the love of Christ embracing in its folds the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whole of the elected family. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; 2. There is, moreover, a union of purpose as well as of love. By the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; first, we have seen that the elect are made one with Jesus by the act    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and will of the Son; by the second, they are joined to Him by the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ordination and decree of the Father. These divine acts are co-eternal.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The Son loved and chose His people to be His own bride, the Father made    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the same choice, and decreed the chosen ones for ever one with His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all-glorious Son. The Son loved them, and the Father decreed them His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; portion and inheritance; the Father ordained them to be what the Son    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself did make them. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In God&#8217;s purpose they have been eternally associated as parts of one   <br \/>&#160;&#160; design. Salvation was the fore-ordained scheme whereby God would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; magnify Himself, and a Saviour was in that scheme from necessity    <br \/>&#160;&#160; associated with the persons chosen to be saved. The scope of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dispensation of grace included both; the circle of wisdom comprehended    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Redeemer and redeemed in its one circumference. They could not be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dissociated in the mind and will of the all-planning Jehovah. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Christ be My first elect,&#8217; He said, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Then chose our souls in Christ, our Head.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The same Book which contains the names of the heirs of life contains   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the name of their Redeemer. He could not be a Redeemer unless souls had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been given Him to redeem, nor could they have been called the ransomed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the Lord, if He had not engaged to purchase them. Redemption, when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; determined upon by the God of heaven, included in it both Christ and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His people; and hence, in the decree which fixed it, they were brought    <br \/>&#160;&#160; into a near and intimate alliance. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The foresight of the Fall led the divine mind to provide for the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; catastrophe in which the elect would have perished, had not their ruin    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been prevented by gracious interposition. Hence followed as part of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; divine arrangement other forms of union, which, besides their immediate    <br \/>&#160;&#160; object in salvation, had doubtless a further design of illustrating the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; condescending alliance which Jesus had formed with His chosen. The next    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and following points are of this character. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; 3. Jesus is one with His elect federally. As every heir of flesh and   <br \/>&#160;&#160; blood has a personal interest in Adam, because he is the covenant head    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and representative of the race as considered under the law of works;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so, under the law of grace, every redeemed soul is one with the Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; from heaven, since He is the Second Adam, the Sponsor and Substitute of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the elect in the new covenant of love. The apostle Paul declares that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Levi was in the loins of Abraham when Melchizedek met him: it is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; equally true that the believer was in the loins of Jesus Christ, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Mediator, when in old eternity the covenant settlements of grace were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; decreed, ratified, and made sure for ever. Thus, whatever Christ hath    <br \/>&#160;&#160; done, He hath wrought for the whole body of His Church. We were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; crucified in Him, and buried with Him (read Col. ii. 10-13), and to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; make it still more wonderful, we are risen with Him, and have even    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ascended with Him to the seats on high (Eph. ii. 6). It is thus that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Church has fulfilled the law, and is &quot;accepted in the Beloved.&quot; It    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is thus that she is regarded with complacency by the just Jehovah, for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He views her in Jesus, and does not look upon her as separate from her    <br \/>&#160;&#160; covenant Head. As the anointed Redeemer of Israel, Christ Jesus has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nothing distinct from His Church, but all that He has He holds for her.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Adam&#8217;s righteousness was ours as long as he maintained it, and his sin    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was ours the moment that he committed it; and, in the same manner, all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that the Second Adam is, or does, is ours as well as His, seeing that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He is our Representative. Here is the foundation of the covenant of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grace. This gracious system of representation and substitution, which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; moved Justin Martyr to cry out, &quot;O blessed change! O sweet    <br \/>&#160;&#160; permutation!&quot; this, I say, is the very groundwork of the gospel of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; salvation, and is to be received with strong faith and rapturous joy.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; In every place the saints are perfectly one with Jesus. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;One in the tomb, one when He rose, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; One when He triumph&#8217;d o&#8217;er His foes, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; One when in heaven He took His seat, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; While seraphs sang all hell&#8217;s defeat. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;This sacred tie forbids their fears, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; For all He is or has is theirs; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; With Him, their Head, they stand or fall, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Their life, their Surety, and their all.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; 4. For the accomplishment of the great works of atonement and perfect   <br \/>&#160;&#160; obedience, it was needful that the Lord Jesus should take upon Him &quot;the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; likeness of sinful flesh.&quot; Thus, He became one with us in our nature,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for in Holy Scripture all partakers of flesh and blood are regarded as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of one family. By the fact of common descent from Adam, all men are of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; one race, seeing that &quot;God hath made of one blood all nations that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dwell upon the face of the earth.&quot; Hence, in the Bible, man is spoken    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of universally as &quot;thy brother&quot; (Lev. xix. 17; Job xxii. 6; Matt. v.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; 23, 24; Luke xvii. 3; Rom. xiv. 10, &amp;c., &amp;c.); and &quot;thy neighbour&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; (Exod. xx. 16; Lev. xix. 13-18; Matt. v. 43; Rom. xiii. 9; James ii.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; 8); to whom, on account of nature and descent, we are required to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; render kindness and goodwill. Now, although our great Melchizedek in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His divinity is without father, without mother, without descent, having    <br \/>&#160;&#160; neither beginning of days nor end of life, and is both in essence and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rank at an infinite remove from fallen manhood; yet as to His manhood    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He is to be reckoned as one of ourselves. He was born of a woman, He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hung upon her breasts, and was dandled upon her knee; He grew from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; infancy to youth and thence to manhood, and in every stage He was a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; true and real partaker of our humanity. He is as certainly of the race    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Adam as He is divine. He is God without fiction or metaphor, and He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is man beyond doubt or dispute. The Godhead was not humanized, and so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; diluted; and the manhood was not transformed into divinity, and so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rendered more than human. Never was any man more a portion of His kind    <br \/>&#160;&#160; than was the Son of man, the Man of sorrows and the Acquaintance of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grief. He is man&#8217;s Brother, for He bore the whole nature of man. &quot;The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us.&quot; He who was very God of very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God made Himself a little lower than the angels, and took upon Him the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This was done with the most excellent design with regard to our   <br \/>&#160;&#160; redemption, inasmuch as it was necessary that, as man had sinned, man    <br \/>&#160;&#160; should suffer; but doubtless it had a further motive, the honouring of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Church, and the enabling of her Lord to sympathize with her. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; apostle most sweetly remarks, &quot;Forasmuch then as the children are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; partakers of flesh and blood, He also Himself likewise took part of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; same; that through death He might destroy him that had the power of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; death, that is, the devil; and deliver them who through fear of death    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were all their lifetime subject to bondage&quot; (Heb. ii. 14, 15); and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; again, &quot;For we have not an high priest which cannot be touched with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; feeling of our infirmities; but was in all points tempted like as we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are, yet without sin&quot; (Heb. iv. 15). Thus, in ties of blood, Jesus, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Son of man, is one with all the heirs of heaven: &quot;For which cause He is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not ashamed to call them brethren&quot; (Heb. ii. 11). What reason we have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; here for the strongest consolation and delight, seeing that, &quot;Both He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one.&quot; We can    <br \/>&#160;&#160; say of our Lord as poor Naomi said of bounteous Boaz, &quot;The man is near    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of kin unto us, one of our next kinsmen.&quot; Overwhelmed by the liberality    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of our blessed Lord, we are often led to cry with Ruth, &quot;Why have I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; found grace in thine eyes, that thou shouldest take knowledge of me,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; seeing I am a stranger?&quot; and are we not ready to die with wonder when,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in answer to such a question, He tells us that He is our Brother, bone    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of our bone, and flesh of our flesh? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; If, in all our straits and distresses, we would always treasure in our   <br \/>&#160;&#160; minds the remembrance of our Redeemer&#8217;s manhood, we should never bemoan    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the absence of a sympathizing heart, since we should always have His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; abundant compassion for our consolation. He is no stranger, He is able    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to enter into the heart&#8217;s bitterness, for He has Himself tasted the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wormwood and the gall. Let us never doubt His power to sympathize with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us in our infirmities and sorrows. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; There is one aspect of this subject of our natural union to Christ   <br \/>&#160;&#160; which it were improper to pass over in silence, for it is very precious    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to the believer. While the Lord Jesus takes upon Himself our nature (2    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Peter i. 4), He restores in us that image of God (Gen. i. 27) which was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blotted and defaced by the fall of Adam. He raises us from the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; degradation of sin to the dignity of perfection. So that, in a two-fold    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sense, the Head and members are of one nature, and not like that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; monstrous image which Nebuchadnezzar saw in his dream. The head was of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fine gold, but the belly and the thighs were of brass, the legs of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; iron, and the feet, part of iron and part of clay. Christ&#8217;s mystical    <br \/>&#160;&#160; body is no absurd combination of opposites; the Head is immortal, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the body is immortal, too, for thus the record stands, &quot;Because I live,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ye shall live also.&quot; &quot;As is the heavenly, such are they also that are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heavenly.&quot; &quot;As we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall also    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bear the image of the heavenly:&quot; and this shall in a few more years be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; more fully manifest to us, for &quot;this corruptible must put on    <br \/>&#160;&#160; incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality.&quot; Such as is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Head, such is the body, and every member in particular;&#8211;a chosen Head,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and chosen members; an accepted Head, and accepted members; a living    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Head, and living members. If the Head be of pure gold, all the parts of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the body are of pure gold also. Thus is there a double union of nature    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as a basis for the closest communion. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Pause here, and see if thou canst, without ecstatic amazement,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; contemplate the infinite condescension of the Son of God in exalting    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thy wretchedness into blessed union with His glory. Thou art so mean    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that, in remembrance of thy mortality, thou mayest say to corruption,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Thou art my father,&quot; and to the worm, &quot;Thou art my sister;&quot; and yet,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in Christ, thou art so honoured that thou canst say to the Almighty,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Abba, Father,&quot; and to the Incarnate God, &quot;Thou art my Brother and my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Husband.&quot; Surely, if relationships to ancient and noble families make    <br \/>&#160;&#160; men think highly of themselves, we have whereof to glory over the heads    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of them all. Lay hold upon this privilege; let not a senseless    <br \/>&#160;&#160; indolence make thee negligent to trace this pedigree, and suffer no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; foolish attachment to present vanities to occupy thy thoughts to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; exclusion of this glorious privilege, this heavenly honour of union    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with Christ. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We must now retrace our steps to the ancient mountains, and contemplate   <br \/>&#160;&#160; this union in one of its earliest forms. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; 5. Christ Jesus is also joined unto His people in a mystical union.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Borrowing once more from the story of Ruth, we remark that Boaz,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; although one with Ruth by kinship, did not rest until he had entered    <br \/>&#160;&#160; into a nearer union still, namely, that of marriage; and in the same    <br \/>&#160;&#160; manner there is, superadded to the natural union of Christ with His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people, a mystical union by which He assumes the position of Husband,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; while the Church is owned as His bride. In love He espoused her to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself, as a chaste virgin, long before she fell under the yoke of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bondage. Full of burning affection, He toiled like Jacob for Rachel,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; until the whole of her purchase-money had been paid, and now, having    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sought her by His Spirit, and brought her to know and love Him, He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; awaits the glorious hour when their mutual bliss shall be consummated    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at the marriage-supper of the Lamb. Not yet hath the glorious    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Bridegroom presented His betrothed, perfected and complete, before the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Majesty of heaven; not yet hath she actually entered upon the enjoyment    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of her dignities as His wife and queen; she is as yet a wanderer in a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; world of woe, a dweller in the tents of Kedar; but she is even now the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bride, the spouse of Jesus, dear to His heart, precious in His sight,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and united with His person. In love and tenderness, He says to her,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Forget thee I will not, I cannot, thy name <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Engraved on My heart doth for ever remain: <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The palms of My hands whilst I look on I see <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The wounds I received when suffering for thee.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; He exercises towards her all the affectionate offices of Husband. He   <br \/>&#160;&#160; makes rich provision for her wants, pays all her debts, allows her to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; assume His name, and to share in all His wealth. Nor will He ever act    <br \/>&#160;&#160; otherwise to her. The word divorce He will never mention, for &quot;He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hateth putting away.&quot; Death must sever the conjugal tie between the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; most loving mortals, but it cannot divide the links of this immortal    <br \/>&#160;&#160; marriage. In heaven they marry not, but are as the angels of God; yet    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is there this one marvellous exception to the rule, for in heaven    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ and His Church shall celebrate their joyous nuptials. And this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; affinity, as it is more lasting, so is it more near than earthly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wedlock. Let the love of husband be never so pure and fervent, it is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but a faint picture of the flame that burns in the heart of Jesus.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Passing all human union is that mystical cleaving unto the Church, for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which Christ did leave His Father, and become one flesh with her. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; If this be the union which subsists between our souls and the person of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; our Lord, how deep and broad is the channel of our communion! This is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; no narrow pipe through which a thread-like stream may wind its way, it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is a channel of amazing depth and breadth, along whose breadth and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; length a ponderous volume of living water may roll its strength.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Behold, He hath set before us an open door; let us not be slow to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; enter. This city of communion hath many pearly gates, every several    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gate is of one pearl, and each gate is thrown open to the uttermost    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that we may enter, assured of welcome. If there were but one small    <br \/>&#160;&#160; loophole through which to talk with Jesus, it would be a high privilege    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to thrust a word of fellowship through the narrow door; how much we are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blessed in having so large an entrance! Had the Lord Jesus been far    <br \/>&#160;&#160; away from us, with many a stormy sea between, we should have longed to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; send a messenger to Him to carry Him our love, and bring us tidings    <br \/>&#160;&#160; from His Father&#8217;s house; but see His kindness, He has built His house    <br \/>&#160;&#160; next door to ours, nay, more, He takes lodgings with us, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tabernacles in poor humble hearts, that so He may have perpetual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; intercourse with us. Oh, how foolish must we be, if we do not live in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; habitual communion with Him! When the road is long, and dangerous, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; difficult, we need not wonder that friends seldom meet each other; but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when they live together, shall Jonathan forget his David? A wife may,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when her husband is upon a journey, abide many days without holding    <br \/>&#160;&#160; converse with him; but she could never endure to be separated from him    <br \/>&#160;&#160; if she knew him to be in one of the chambers of their own house. Seek    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thy Lord, for He is near; embrace Him, for He is thy Brother; hold Him    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fast, for He is thine Husband; press Him to thine heart, for He is of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thine own flesh. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; 6. As yet we have only considered the acts of Christ for us, whereby He   <br \/>&#160;&#160; effects and proves His union to us; we must now come to more personal    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and sensible forms of this great truth. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Those who are set apart for the Lord are in due time severed from the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; impure mass of fallen humanity, and are by sovereign grace engrafted    <br \/>&#160;&#160; into the person of the Lord Jesus. This, which we call vital union, is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rather a matter of experience than of doctrine; it must be learned in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the heart, and not by the head. Like every other work of the Spirit,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the actual implantation of the soul into Christ Jesus is a mysterious    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and secret operation, and is no more to be understood by carnal reason    <br \/>&#160;&#160; than is the new birth of which it is an attendant. Nevertheless, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spiritual man discerns it as a most essential thing in the salvation of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the soul, and he clearly sees how a living union to Christ is the sure    <br \/>&#160;&#160; consequence of the quickening influence of the Holy Spirit, and is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; indeed, in some respects, identical with it. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When the Lord in mercy passed by and saw us in our blood, He first of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; all said, &quot;Live&quot;; and this He did first, because, without life, there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; can be no spiritual knowledge, feeling, or motion. Life is one of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; absolutely essential things in spiritual matters; and until it be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bestowed, we are incapable of partaking in the things of the kingdom.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Now, the life which grace confers upon the saints at the moment of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their quickening is none other than the life of Christ, which, like the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sap from the stem, runs into us, the branches, and establishes a living    <br \/>&#160;&#160; connection between our souls and Jesus. Faith is the grace which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perceives this union, and proceeds from it as its firstfruit. It is, to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; use a metaphor from the Canticles, the neck which joins the body of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Church to its all-glorious Head. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;O Faith! thou bond of union with the Lord, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Is not this office thine? and thy fit name, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In the economy of gospel types, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And symbols apposite&#8211;the Church&#8217;s neck; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Identifying her in will and work <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; With Him ascended?&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Faith lays hold upon the Lord Jesus with a firm and determined grasp.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; She knows His excellence and worth, and no temptation can induce her to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; repose her trust elsewhere; and Christ Jesus is so delighted with this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heavenly grace, that He never ceases to strengthen and sustain her by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the loving embrace and all-sufficient support of His eternal arms.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Here, then, is established a living, sensible, and delightful union,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which casts forth streams of love, confidence, sympathy, complacency,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and joy, whereof both the bride and Bridegroom love to drink. When the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; eye is clear, and the soul can evidently perceive this oneness between    <br \/>&#160;&#160; itself and Christ, the pulse may be felt as beating for both, and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; one blood may be known as flowing through the veins of each. Then is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the heart made exceedingly glad, it is as near heaven as it ever can be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; on earth, and is prepared for the enjoyment of the most sublime and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spiritual kind of fellowship. This union may be quite as true when we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are troubled with doubts concerning it, but it cannot afford    <br \/>&#160;&#160; consolation to the soul unless it be indisputably proven and assuredly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; felt; then is it indeed a honeycomb dropping with sweetness, a precious    <br \/>&#160;&#160; jewel sparkling with light. Look well to this matter, ye saints of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Most High!    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; &quot;I WILL GIVE YOU REST.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160; A COMMUNION ADDRESS AT MENTONE. &quot;I will give you rest.&quot;&#8211;Matthew xi. 28. <\/p>\n<p>&quot;I WILL GIVE YOU REST.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; WE have a thousand times considered these words as an encouragement to   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the labouring and the laden; and we may, therefore, have failed to read    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them as a promise to ourselves. But, beloved friends, we have come to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus, and therefore He stands engaged to fufil this priceless pledge    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to us. We may now enjoy the promise; for we have obeyed the precept.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The faithful and true Witness, whose word is truth, promised us rest if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we would come to Him; and, therefore, since we have come to Him, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are always coming to Him, we may boldly say, &quot;O Thou, who art our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Peace, make good Thy word to us wherein Thou hast said, I will give you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rest.&#8217;&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; By faith, I see our Lord standing in our midst, and I hear Him say,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; with voice of sweetest music, first to all of us together, and then to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; each one individually, &quot;I will give you rest.&quot; May the Holy Spirit    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bring to each of us the fulness of the rest and peace of God! For a few    <br \/>&#160;&#160; minutes only shall I need your attention; and we will begin by asking    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the question,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. What must these words mean? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; A dear friend prayed this morning that, while studying the Scriptures,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; we might be enabled to read between the lines, and beneath the letter    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the Word. May we have holy insight thus to read our Lord&#8217;s most    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gracious language! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This promise must mean rest to all parts of our spiritual nature. Our   <br \/>&#160;&#160; bodies cannot rest if the head is aching, or the feet are full of pain;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; if one member is disturbed, the whole frame is unable to rest; and so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the higher nature is one, and such intimate sympathies bind together    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all its faculties and powers, that every one of them must rest, or none    <br \/>&#160;&#160; can be at ease, Jesus gives real, and, consequently, universal rest to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; every part of our spiritual being. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The heart is by nature restless as old ocean&#8217;s waves; it seeks an   <br \/>&#160;&#160; object for its affection; and when it finds one beneath the stars, it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is doomed to sorrow. Either the beloved changes, and there is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; disappointment; or death comes in, and there is bereavement. The more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tender the heart, the greater its unrest. Those in whom the heart is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; simply one of the largest valves are undisturbed, because they are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; callous; but the sensitive, the generous, the unselfish, are often    <br \/>&#160;&#160; found seeking rest and finding none. To such, the Lord Jesus says,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Come unto Me, and I will give you rest.&quot; Look hither, ye loving ones,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for here is a refuge for your wounded love! You may delight yourselves    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the Well-beloved, and never fear that He will fail or forget you.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Love will not be wasted, however much it may be lavished upon Jesus. He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; deserves it all, and he requites it all. In loving Him, the heart finds    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a delicious content. When the head lies in His bosom, it enjoys an ease    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which no pillow of down could bestow. How Madame Guyon rested amid    <br \/>&#160;&#160; severe persecutions, because her great love to Jesus filled her soul to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the brim! O aching heart, O breaking heart, come hither, for Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saith, &quot;I will give you rest.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The conscience, when it is at all alive and awake, is much disturbed   <br \/>&#160;&#160; because the holy law of God has been broken by sin. Now, conscience    <br \/>&#160;&#160; once aroused is not easily quieted. Neither unbelief nor superstition    <br \/>&#160;&#160; can avail to lull it to sleep; it defies these opiates of falsehood,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and frets the soul with perpetual annoyance. Like the troubled sea, it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot rest; but constantly casts up upon the shore of memory the mire    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and dirt of past transgressions and iniquities. Is this your case? Then    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus says, &quot;I will give you rest.&quot; If, at any time, fears and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; apprehensions arise from an awakened conscience, they can only be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; safely and surely quieted by our flying to the Crucified. In the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blessed truth of a substitution, accepted of God, and fully made by the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord Jesus, our mind finds peace. Justice is honoured, and law is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vindicated, in the sacrifice of Christ. Since God is satisfied, I may    <br \/>&#160;&#160; well be so. Since the Father has raised Jesus from the dead, and set    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him at His own right hand, there can be no question as to His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; acceptance; and, consequently, all who are in Him are accepted also. We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are under no apprehension now as to our being condemned; Jesus gives us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rest, by enabling us to utter the challenge, &quot;Who is he that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; condemneth?&quot; and to give the reassuring answer, &quot;Christ hath died.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The intellect is another source of unrest; and in these times it   <br \/>&#160;&#160; operates with special energy towards labour and travail of mind.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Doubts, stinging like mosquitoes, are suggested by almost every page of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the literature of the day. Most men are drifting, like vessels which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have no anchors, and these come into collision with us. How can we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rest? This scheme of philosophy eats up the other; this new fashion of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heresy devours the last. Is there any foundation? Is anything true? Or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is it all romance, and are we doomed to be the victims of an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ever-changing lie? O soul, seek not a settlement by learning of men;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but come and learn of Jesus, and thou shalt find rest! Believe Jesus,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and let all the Rabbis contradict. The Son of God was made flesh, He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; lived, He died, He rose again, He lives, He loves; this is true, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all that He teaches in His Word is assured verity; the rest may blow    <br \/>&#160;&#160; away, like chaff before the wind. A mind in pursuit of truth is a dove    <br \/>&#160;&#160; without a proper resting-place for the sole of its foot, till it finds    <br \/>&#160;&#160; its rest in Jesus, the true Noah. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Next, these words mean rest about all things. He who is uneasy about   <br \/>&#160;&#160; anything has not found rest. A thousand thorns and briars grow on the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; soil of this earth, and no man can happily tread life&#8217;s ways unless his    <br \/>&#160;&#160; feet are shod with that preparation of the gospel of peace which Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gives. In Christ, we are at rest as to our duties; for He instructs and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; helps us in them. In Him, we are at rest about our trials; for He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sympathizes with us in them. With His love, we are restful as to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; movements of Providence; for His Father loves us, and will not suffer    <br \/>&#160;&#160; anything to harm us. Concerning the past, we rest in His forgiving    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love; as to the present, it is bright with His loving fellowship; as to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the future, it is brilliant with His expected Advent. This is true of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the little as well as of the great. He who saves us from the battle-axe    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Satanic temptation, also extracts the thorn of a domestic trial. We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; may rest in Jesus as to our sick child, as to our business trouble, or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as to grief of any kind. He is our Comforter in all things, our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Sympathizer in every form of temptation. Have you such all-covering    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rest? If not, why not? Jesus gives it; why do you not partake of it?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Have you something which you could not bring to Him? Then, fly from it;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for it is no fit thing for a believer to possess. A disciple should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; know neither grief nor joy which he could not reveal to his Lord. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This rest, we may conclude, must be a very wonderful one, since Jesus   <br \/>&#160;&#160; gives it. His hands give not by pennyworths and ounces; he gives golden    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gifts, in quantity immeasurable. It is Jesus who gives the peace of God    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which passeth all understanding. It is written, &quot;Great peace have they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which love Thy law;&quot; what peace must they have who love God&#8217;s Son!    <br \/>&#160;&#160; There are periods when Jesus gives us a heavenly Elysium of rest; we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot describe the divine repose of our hearts at such times. We read,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the Gospels, that when Jesus hushed the storm, &quot;there was a great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; calm,&quot; not simply &quot;a calm&quot;, but a great calm, unusual, absolute,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perfect, memorable. It reminds us of the stillness which John describes    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the Revelation: &quot;I saw four angels standing on the four corners of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the earth, holding the four winds of the earth, that the wind should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not blow on the earth, nor on the sea, nor on any tree;&quot; not a ripple    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stirred the waters, not a leaf moved on the trees. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Assuredly, our Lord has given a blessed rest to those who trust Him,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; and follow Him. They are often unable to inform others as to their deep    <br \/>&#160;&#160; peace, and the reasons upon which it is founded; but they know it, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it brings them an inward wealth compared with which the fortune of an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ungodly millionaire is poverty itself. May we all know to the full, by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; happy, personal experience, the meaning of our Saviour&#8217;s promise, &quot;I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will give you rest&quot;! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. But now, in the second: place, let us ask,&#8211;Why should we have this   <br \/>&#160;&#160; rest? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The first answer is in our text. We should enjoy this rest because   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus gives it. As He gives it, we ought to take it. Because He gives    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it, we may take it. I have known some Christians who have thought that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it would be presumption on their part to take this rest; so they have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; kept fluttering about, like frightened birds, weary with their long    <br \/>&#160;&#160; flights, but not daring to fold their tired wings, and rest. If there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is any presumption in the case, let us not be so presumptuous as to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; think that we know better than our Lord. He gives us rest: for that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reason, if for no other, let us take it, promptly and gratefully. &quot;Rest    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the Lord, and wait patiently for Him.&quot; Say with David, &quot;My heart is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fixed, O God, my heart is fixed: I will sing and give praise.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Now rest, my long-divided heart, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Fix&#8217;d on this blissful centre, rest.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Next, we should take the rest that Jesus gives, because it will refresh   <br \/>&#160;&#160; us. We are often weary; sometimes we are weary in God&#8217;s work, though I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trust we are never weary of it. There are many things to cause us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; weariness: sin, sorrow, the worldliness of professors, the prevalence    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of error in the Church, and so on. Often, we are like a tired child,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; who can hold up his little head no longer. What does he do? Why, he    <br \/>&#160;&#160; just goes to sleep in his mother&#8217;s arms! Let us be as wise as the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; little one; and let us rest in our loving Saviour&#8217;s embrace. The poet    <br \/>&#160;&#160; speaks of&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Tired nature&#8217;s sweet restorer, balmy sleep;&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; and so it is. Sometimes, the very best thing a Christian man can do is,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; literally, to go to sleep. When he wakes, he will be so refreshed, that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; he will seem to be in a new world. But spiritually, there is no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; refreshing like that which comes from the rest which Christ gives. As    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Isaiah said, &quot;This is the rest wherewith ye may cause the weary to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rest: and this is the refreshing.&quot; Dr. Bonar&#8217;s sweet hymn, which is so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; suitable for a sinner coming to Christ for the first time, is just as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; appropriate for a weary saint returning to his Saviour&#8217;s arms; for he,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; too, can sing,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;I heard the voice of Jesus say, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Come unto Me, and rest; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Lay down, thou weary one, lay down <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thy head upon My breast.&#8217; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I came to Jesus as I was, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Weary, and worn, and sad: <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I found in Him a resting-place, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And He has made me glad.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Another reason why we should have this rest is, that it will enable us   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to concentrate all our faculties. Many, who might be strong servants of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord, are very weak, because their energies are not concentrated    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon one object. They do not say with Paul, &quot;This one thing I do.&quot; We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are such poor creatures that we cannot occupy our minds with more than    <br \/>&#160;&#160; one subject, at a time. Why, even the buzzing of a fly, or the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trumpeting of a mosquito, would be quite sufficient to take our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thoughts away from our present holy service! As long as we have any    <br \/>&#160;&#160; burden resting on our shoulders, we cannot enjoy perfect rest; and as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; long as there is any burden on our conscience or heart, we cannot have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rest of soul. How are we to be freed from these burdens? Only by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; yielding ourselves wholly to the Great Burden-Bearer, who says, &quot;Come    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unto Me, and, I will give you rest.&quot; Possessing this rest, all our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; faculties will be centred and focussed upon one object, and with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; undivided hearts we shall seek God&#8217;s glory. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Having obtained this rest, we shall be able to testify for our Lord. I   <br \/>&#160;&#160; remember, when I first began to teach in a Sunday-school, that I was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; speaking one day to my class upon the words, &quot;He that believeth on Me    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hath everlasting life.&quot; I was rather taken by surprise when one of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; boys said to me, &quot;Teacher, have you got everlasting life?&quot; I replied,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;I hope so.&quot; The scholar was not satisfied with my answer, so he asked    <br \/>&#160;&#160; another question, &quot;But, teacher, don&#8217;t you know?&quot; The boy was right;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; there can be no true testimony except that which springs from assured    <br \/>&#160;&#160; conviction of our own safety and joy in the Lord. We speak that we do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; know; we believe, and therefore speak. Rest of heart, through coming to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ, enables us to invite others to Him with great confidence, for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we can tell them what heavenly peace He has given to us. This will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; enable us to put the gospel very attractively, for the evidence of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; own experience will help others to trust the Lord for themselves. With    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the beloved apostle John, we shall be able to say to our hearers, &quot;That    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the Word of life; (for the life was manifested, and we have seen it,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and bear witness, and shew unto you that eternal life, which was with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Father, and was manifested unto us;) that which we have seen and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heard declare we unto you, that ye also may have fellowship with us:    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and truly our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Once more, this rest is necessary to our growth. The lily in the garden   <br \/>&#160;&#160; is not taken up and transplanted two or three times a day; that would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be the way to prevent all growth. But it is kept in one place, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tenderly nurtured. It is by keeping it quite still that the gardener    <br \/>&#160;&#160; helps it to attain to perfection. A child of God would grow much more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rapidly if he would but rest in one place instead of being always on    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the move. &quot;In returning and rest shall ye be saved; in quietness and in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; confidence shall be your strength.&quot; Martha was cumbered about much    <br \/>&#160;&#160; serving; but Mary sat at Jesus&#8217; feet. It is not difficult to tell which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of them would be the more likely to grow in the grace and knowledge of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our Lord Jesus Christ. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This is a tempting theme, but I must not linger over it, as we must   <br \/>&#160;&#160; come to the communion. I will give only one more answer to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; question, &quot;Why should we have this rest?&quot; It will prepare us for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heaven. I was reading a book, the other day, in which I met with this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; expression,&#8211;&quot;The streets of heaven begin on earth.&quot; That is true;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heaven is not so far away as some people think. Heaven is the place of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perfect holiness, the place of sinless service, the place of eternal    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glory; and there is nothing that will prepare us for heaven like this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rest that Jesus gives. Heaven must be in us before we are in heaven;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and he who has this rest has heaven begun below. Enoch was virtually in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heaven while he walked with God on the earth, and he had only to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; continue that holy walk to find himself actually in heaven. This world    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is part of our Lord&#8217;s great house, of which heaven is the upper story.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Some of us may hear the Master&#8217;s call, &quot;Come up higher,&quot; sooner than we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; think; and then, with we rest in Christ, there we shall rest with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ, The more we have of this blessed rest now, the better shall we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be prepared for the rest that remaineth to the people of God, that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; eternal &quot;keeping of a Sabbath&quot; in the Paradise above. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; III. I have left myself only a minute for the answers to my third   <br \/>&#160;&#160; question,&#8211;How can we obtain this rest? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; First, by coming to Christ. He says, &quot;Come unto Me, . . . and I will   <br \/>&#160;&#160; give you rest.&quot; I trust that all in this little company have come to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ by faith; now let us come to Him in blessed fellowship and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion at His table. Let us keep on coming to Him, as the apostle    <br \/>&#160;&#160; says, &quot;to whom coming,&quot; continually coming, and never going away. When    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we wake in the morning, let us come to Christ in the act of renewed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion with Him; all the day long, let us keep on coming to Him even    <br \/>&#160;&#160; while we are occupied with the affairs of this life; and at night, let    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our last waking moments be spent in coming to Jesus. Let us come to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ by searching the Scriptures, for we shall find Him there on    <br \/>&#160;&#160; almost every page. Let us come to Christ in our thoughts, desires,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; aspirations wishes; so shall the promise of the text be fulfilled to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us, &quot;I will give you rest.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Next, we obtain rest by yielding to Christ. &quot;Take My yoke upon you, . .   <br \/>&#160;&#160; . and ye shall find rest unto your souls.&quot; Christ bids us wear His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; yoke; not make one for ourselves. He wants us to share the yoke with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him, to be His true yoke-fellow. It is wonderful that He should be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; willing to be yoked with us; the only greater wonder is that we should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be so unwilling to be yoked with Him. In taking His yoke upon us what    <br \/>&#160;&#160; joy we shall enter upon our eternal rest! Here we find rest unto our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; souls; a further rest beyond that which He gives us when we come to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him. We first rest in Jesus by faith, and then we rest in Him by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; obedience. The first rest He gives through His death; the further rest    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we find through copying His life. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Lastly, we secure this rest by learning of Christ. &quot;Learn of Me, for I   <br \/>&#160;&#160; am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls.&quot; We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are to be workers with Christ, taking His yoke upon us; and, at the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; same time, we are to be scholars in Christ&#8217;s school, learning of Him.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; We are to learn of Christ, and to learn Christ; He is both Teacher and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; lesson. His gentleness of heart fits Him to teach, and makes Him the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; best illustration of His own teaching. If we can become as He is, we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall rest as He does. The lowly in heart will be restful of heart.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Now, as we come to the table of communion, may we find to the full that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rest of which we have been speaking, for the Great Rest-Giver&#8217;s sake!    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Amen.    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160; THE MEMORABLE HYMN. &quot;And when they had sung an hymn, they went out into the   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; mount of Olives.&quot;&#8211;Matthew xxvi. 30. <\/p>\n<p>THE MEMORABLE HYMN. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; THE occasion on which these words were spoken was the last meal of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; which Jesus partook in company with His disciples before He went from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them to His shameful trial and His ignominious death. It was His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; farewell supper before a bitter parting, and yet they needs must sing.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He was on the brink of that great depth of misery into which He was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; about to plunge, and yet He would have them sing &quot;an hymn.&quot; It is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wonderful that He sang, and in a second degree it is remarkable that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they sang. We will consider both singular facts. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. Let us dwell a while on the fact that Jesus sang at such a time as   <br \/>&#160;&#160; this. What does He teach us by it? Does He not say to each of us, His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; followers &quot;My religion is one of happiness and joy; I, your Master, by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; My example would instruct you to sing even when the last solemn hour is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come, and all the glooms of death are gathering around you? Here, at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the table, I am your Singing-master, and set you lessons in music, in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which My dying voice shall lead you: notwithstanding all the griefs    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which overwhelm My heart, I will be to you the Chief Musician, and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Sweet Singer of Israel&quot;? If ever there was a time when it would have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been natural and consistent with the solemnities of the occasion for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Saviour to have bowed His head upon the table, bursting into a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; flood of tears; or, if ever there was a season when He might have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fittingly retired from all company, and have bewailed His coming    <br \/>&#160;&#160; conflict in sighs and groans, it was just then. But no; that brave    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heart will sing &quot;an hymn.&quot; Our glorious Jesus plays the man beyond all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; other men. Boldest of the sons of men, He quails not in the hour of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; battle, but tunes His voice to loftiest psalmody. The genius of that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christianity of which Jesus is the Head and Founder, its object,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spirit, and design, are happiness and joy, and they who receive it are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; able to sing in the very jaws of death. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This remark, however, is quite a secondary one to the next: our Lord&#8217;s   <br \/>&#160;&#160; complete fulfilment of the law is even more worthy of our attention. It    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was customary, when the Passover was held, to sing, and this is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; main reason why the Saviour did so. During the Passover, it was usual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to sing the hundred and thirteenth, and five following Psalms, which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were called the &quot;Hallel.&quot; The first commences, you will observe, in our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; version, with &quot;Praise ye the Lord!&quot; or, &quot;Hallelujah!&quot; The hundred and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fifteenth, and the three following, were usually sung as the closing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; song of the Passover. Now, our Saviour would not diminish the splendour    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the great Jewish rite, although it was the last time that He would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; celebrate it. No; there shall be the holy beauty and delight of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; psalmody; none of it shall be stinted; the &quot;Hallel&quot; shall be full and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; complete. We may safely believe that the Saviour sang through, or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; probably chanted, the whole of these six Psalms; and my heart tells me    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that there was no one at the table who sang more devoutly or more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cheerfully than did our blessed Lord. There are some parts of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hundred and eighteenth Psalm, especially, which strike us as having    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sounded singularly grand, as they flowed from His blessed lips. Note    <br \/>&#160;&#160; verses 22, 23, 24. Particularly observe those words, near the end of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Psalm, and think you hear the Lord Himself singing them, &quot;God is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord, which hath shewed us light: bind the sacrifice with cords,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; even unto the horns of the altar. Thou art my God, and I will praise    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thee: Thou art my God, I will exalt Thee. O give thanks unto the Lord;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for He is good: for His mercy endureth for ever.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Because, then, it was the settled custom of Israel to recite or sing   <br \/>&#160;&#160; these Psalms, our Lord Jesus Christ did the same; for He would leave    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nothing unfinished. Just as, when He went down into the waters of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; baptism, He said, &quot;Thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness,&quot; so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He seemed to say, when sitting at the table, &quot;Thus it becometh us to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fulfil all righteousness; therefore let us sing unto the Lord, as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God&#8217;s, people in past ages have done.&quot; Beloved, let us view with holy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wonder the strictness of the Saviour&#8217;s obedience to His Father&#8217;s will,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and let us endeavour to follow in His steps, in all things, seeking to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be obedient to the Lord&#8217;s Word in the little matters as well as in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great ones. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; May we not venture to suggest another and deeper reason? Did not the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; singing of &quot;an hymn&quot; at the supper show the holy absorption of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Saviour&#8217;s soul in His Father&#8217;s will? If, beloved, you knew that at&#8211;say    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ten o&#8217;clock to-night&#8211;you would be led away to be mocked, and despised,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and scourged, and that tomorrow&#8217;s sun would see you falsely accused,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hanging, a convicted criminal, to die upon a cross, do you think that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you could sing tonight, after your last meal? I am sure you could not,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unless with more than earth born courage and resignation your soul    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could say, &quot;Bind the sacrifice with cords, even unto the horns of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; altar.&quot; You would sing if your spirit were like the Saviour&#8217;s spirit;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; if, like Him, you could exclaim, &quot;Not as I will, but as Thou wilt;&quot; but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; if there should remain in you any selfishness, any desire to be spared    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the bitterness of death, you would not be able to chant the &quot;Hallel&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with the Master. Blessed Jesus, how wholly wert Thou given up! how    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perfectly consecrated! so that, whereas other men sing when they are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; marching to their joys, Thou didst sing on the way to death; whereas    <br \/>&#160;&#160; other men lift up their cheerful voices when honour awaits them, Thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hadst a brave and holy sonnet on Thy lips when shame, and spitting, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; death were to be Thy portion. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This singing of the Saviour also teaches us the whole-heartedness of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Master in the work which He was about to do. The patriot-warrior    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sings as he hastens to battle; to the strains of martial music he    <br \/>&#160;&#160; advances to meet the foeman; and even thus the heart of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all-glorious Champion supplies Him with song even in the dreadful hour    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of His solitary agony. He views the battle, but He dreads it not;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; though in the contest His soul will be &quot;exceeding sorrowful even unto    <br \/>&#160;&#160; death,&quot; yet before it, He is like Job&#8217;s war-horse, &quot;he saith among the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trumpets, Ha, ha; and he smelleth the battle afar off.&quot; He has a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; baptism to be baptized with, and He is straitened until it be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; accomplished. The Master does not go forth to the agony in the garden    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with a cowed and trembling spirit, all bowed and crushed in the dust;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but He advances to the conflict like a man who has his full strength    <br \/>&#160;&#160; about him&#8211;taken out to be a victim (if I may use such a figure), not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as a worn-out ox that has long borne the yoke, but as the firstling of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the bullock, in the fulness of His strength. He goes forth to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; slaughter, with His glorious undaunted spirit fast and firm within Him,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glad to suffer for His people&#8217;s sake and for His Father&#8217;s glory. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;For as at first Thine all-pervading look <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Saw from Thy Father&#8217;s bosom to th&#8217; abyss, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Measuring in calm presage <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The infinite descent; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; So to the end, though now of mortal pangs <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Made heir, and emptied of Thy glory a while, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; With unaverted eye <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thou meetest all the storm.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let us, O fellow-heirs of salvation, learn to sing when our suffering   <br \/>&#160;&#160; time comes, when our season for stern labour approaches; ay, let us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pour forth a canticle of deep, mysterious, melody of bliss, when our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dying hour is near at hand! Courage, brother! The waters are chilly;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but fear will not by any means diminish the terrors of the river.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Courage, brother! Death is solemn work; but playing the coward will not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; make it less so. Bring out the silver trumpet; let thy lips remember    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the long-loved music, and let the notes be clear and shrill as thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dippest thy feet in the Jordan: &quot;Yea, though I walk through the valley    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil: for Thou art with me; Thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rod and Thy staff they comfort me.&quot; Dear friends, let the remembrance    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the melodies of that upper room go with you tomorrow into business;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and if you expect a great trial, and are afraid you will not be able to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sing after it, then sing before it comes. Get your holy praise-work    <br \/>&#160;&#160; done before affliction mars the tune. Fill the air with music while you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; can. While yet there is bread upon the table, sing, though famine may    <br \/>&#160;&#160; threaten; while yet the child runs laughing about the house, while yet    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the flush of health is in your own cheek, while yet your goods are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spared, while yet your heart is whole and sound, lift up your song of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; praise to the Most High God; and let your Master, the singing Saviour,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be in this your goodly and comfortable example. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; There is much more that might be said concerning our Lord&#8217;s sweet   <br \/>&#160;&#160; swan-song, but there is no need to crowd one thought out with another;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your leisure will be well spent in meditation upon so fruitful a theme. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. We will now consider the singing of the disciples. They united in   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the &quot;Hallel&quot;&#8211;like true Jews, they joined in the national song. Israel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had good cause to sing at the Passover, for God had wrought for His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people what He had done for no other nation on the face of the earth.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Every Hebrew must have felt his soul elevated and rejoiced on the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Paschal night. He was &quot;a citizen of no mean city&quot;, and the pedigree    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which he could look back upon was one, compared with which kings and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; princes were but of yesterday. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Remembering the fact commemorated by the Paschal supper, Israel might   <br \/>&#160;&#160; well rejoice. They sang of their nation in bondage, trodden beneath the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tyrannical foot of Pharaoh; they began the Psalm right sorrowfully, as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they thought of the bricks made without straw, and of the iron furnace;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but the strain soon mounted from the deep bass, and began to climb the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; scale, as they sang of Moses the servant of God, and of the Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; appearing to him in the burning bush. They remembered the mystic rod,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which became a serpent, and which swallowed up the rods of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; magicians; their music told of the plagues and wonders which God had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wrought upon Zoan; and of that dread night when the first-born of Egypt    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fell before the avenging sword of the angel of death, while they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; themselves, feeding on the lamb which had been slain for them, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whose blood was sprinkled upon the lintel and upon the side-posts of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the door, had been graciously preserved. Then the song went up    <br \/>&#160;&#160; concerning the hour in which all Egypt was humbled at the feet of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jehovah, whilst as for His people, He led them forth like sheep, by the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hand of Moses and Aaron, and they went by the way of the sea, even of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Red Sea. The strain rose higher still as they tuned the song of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Moses, the servant of God, and of the Lamb. Jubilantly they sang of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Red Sea, and of the chariots of Pharaoh which went down into the midst    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thereof, and the depths covered them till there was not one of them    <br \/>&#160;&#160; left. It was a glorious chant indeed when they sang of Rahab cut in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pieces, and of the dragon wounded at the sea, by the right hand of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Most High, for the deliverance of the chosen people. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But, beloved, if I have said that Israel could so properly sing, what   <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall I say of those of us who are the Lord&#8217;s spiritually redeemed? We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have been emancipated from a slavery worse than that of Egypt: &quot;with a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; high hand and with an outstretched arm,&quot; hath God delivered us. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blood of Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God&#8217;s Passover, has been sprinkled    <br \/>&#160;&#160; on our hearts and consciences. By faith we keep the Passover, for we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have been spared; we have been brought out of Egypt; and though our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sins did once oppose us, they have all been drowned in the Red Sea of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the atoning blood of Jesus: &quot;the depths have covered them, there is not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; one of them left.&quot; If the Jew could sing a &quot;great Hallel&quot;, our &quot;Hallel&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ought to be more glowing still; and if every house in &quot;Judea&#8217;s happy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; land&quot; was full of music when the people ate the Paschal feast, much    <br \/>&#160;&#160; more reason have we for filling every heart with sacred harmony    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tonight, while we feast upon Jesus Christ, who was slain, and has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; redeemed us to God by His blood. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; III. The time has now come for me to say how earnestly I desire you to   <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;sing an hymn.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I do not mean to ask you to use your voices, but let your hearts be   <br \/>&#160;&#160; brimming with the essence of praise. Whenever we repair to the Lord&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; table, which represents to us the Passover, we ought not to come to it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as to a funeral. Let us select solemn hymns, but not dirges. Let us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sing softly, but none the less joyfully. These are no burial feasts;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; those are not funeral cakes which lie upon this table, and yonder fair    <br \/>&#160;&#160; white linen cloth is no winding-sheet. &quot;This is My body,&quot; said Jesus,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but the body so represented was no corpse, we feed upon a living    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ. The blood set forth by yonder wine is the fresh life-blood of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our immortal King. We view not our Lord&#8217;s body as clay-cold flesh,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pierced with wounds, but as glorified at the right hand of the Father.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; We hold a happy festival when we break bread on the first day of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; week. We come not hither trembling like bondsmen, cringing on our knees    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as wretched serfs condemned to eat on their knees; we approach as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; freemen to our Lord&#8217;s banquet, like His apostles, to recline at length    <br \/>&#160;&#160; or sit at ease; not merely to eat bread which may belong to the most    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sorrowful, but to drink wine which belongs to men whose souls are glad.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Let us recognize the rightness, yea, the duty of cheerfulness at this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; commemorative supper; and, therefore, let us &quot;sing an hymn.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Being satisfied on this point, perhaps you ask, &quot;What hymn shall we   <br \/>&#160;&#160; sing?&quot; Many sorts of hymns were sung in the olden time: look down the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; list, and you will scarcely find one which may not suit us now. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; One of the earliest of earthly songs was the war-song. They sang of old   <br \/>&#160;&#160; a song to the conqueror, when he returned from the battle. &quot;Saul has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; slain his thousands, and David his ten thousands.&quot; Women took their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; timbrels, and rejoiced in the dance when the hero returned from the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; war. Even thus of old did the people of God extol Him for His mighty    <br \/>&#160;&#160; acts, singing aloud with the high-sounding cymbals: &quot;Sing unto the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord, for He hath triumphed gloriously . . . The Lord is a man of war:    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord is His name.&quot; My brethren, let us lift up a war-song to-night!    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Why not? &quot;Who is this that cometh from Edom, with dyed garments from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Bozrah? this that is glorious in His apparel, travelling in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; greatness of His strength? I that speak in righteousness, mighty to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; save.&quot; Come, let us praise our Emmanuel, as we see the head of our foe    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in His right hand; as we behold Him leading captivity captive,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ascending up on high, with trumpets&#8217; joyful sound, let us chant the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; paean; let us shout the war-song, &quot;Io Triumphe!&quot; Behold, He comes, all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glorious from the war: as we gather at this festive table, which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reminds us both of His conflict and of His victory, let us salute Him    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with a psalm of gladsome triumph, which shall be but the prelude of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; song we expect to sing when we get up&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Where all the singers meet.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Another early, form of song was the pastoral. When he shepherds sat   <br \/>&#160;&#160; down amongst the sheep, they tuned their pipes, and warbled forth soft    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and sweet airs in harmony with rustic quietude. All around was calm and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; still; the sun was brightly shining, and the birds were making melody    <br \/>&#160;&#160; among the leafy branches. Shall I seem fanciful if I say, let us unite    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in a pastoral to-night? Sitting round the table, why should we not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sing, &quot;The Lord is my Shepherd; I shall not want. He maketh me to lie    <br \/>&#160;&#160; down in green pastures: He leadeth me beside the still waters&quot;? If    <br \/>&#160;&#160; there be a place beneath the stars where one might feel perfectly at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rest and ease, surely it is at the table of the Lord. Here, then, let    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us sing to our great Shepherd a pastoral of delight. Let the bleating    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of sheep be in our ears as we remember the Good Shepherd who laid down    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His life for His flock. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; You need not to be reminded that the ancients were very fond of festive   <br \/>&#160;&#160; songs. When they assembled at their great festivals, led by their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; chosen minstrels, they sang right joyously, with boisterous mirth. Let    <br \/>&#160;&#160; those who will speak to the praise of wine, my soul shall extol the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; precious blood of Jesus; let who will laud corn and oil, the rich    <br \/>&#160;&#160; produce of the harvest, my heart shall sing of the Bread which came    <br \/>&#160;&#160; down from heaven, whereof, if a man eateth, he shall never hunger.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Speak ye of royal banquets, and minstrelsy fit for a monarch&#8217;s ear?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Ours is a nobler festival, and our song is sweeter far. Here is room at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this table tonight for all earth&#8217;s poesy and music, for the place    <br \/>&#160;&#160; deserves songs more lustrous with delight, more sparkling with gems of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; holy mirth, than any of which the ancients could conceive. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Now for a tune of lofty praise <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; To great Jehovah&#8217;s equal Son! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Awake, my voice, in heavenly lays <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Tell the loud wonders He hath done!&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The love-song we must not forget, for that is peculiarly the song of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; this evening. &quot;Now will I sing unto my Well-beloved a song.&quot; His love    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to us is an immortal theme; and as our love, fanned by the breath of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heaven, bursts into a vehement flame, we may sing, yea, and we will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sing among the lilies, a song of loves. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In the Old Testament, we find many Psalms called by the title, &quot;A Song   <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Degrees.&quot; This &quot;Song of Degrees&quot; is supposed by some to have been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sung as the people ascended the temple steps, or made pilgrimages to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the holy place. The strain often changes, sometimes it is dolorous, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; anon it is gladsome; at one season, the notes are long drawn out and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heavy, at another, they are cheerful and jubilant. We will sing a &quot;Song    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Degrees&quot; to-night. We will mourn that we pierced the Lord, and we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wilt rejoice in pardon bought with blood. Our strain must vary as we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; talk of sin, feeling its bitterness, and lamenting it, and then of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pardon, rejoicing in its glorious fulness. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; David wrote a considerable number of Psalms which he entitled,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Maschil,&quot; which may be called in English, &quot;instructive Psalms.&quot; Where,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beloved, can we find richer instruction than at the table of our Lord?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He who understands the mystery of incarnation and of substitution, is a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; master in Scriptural theology. There is more teaching in the Saviour&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; body and in the Saviour&#8217;s blood than in all the world besides. O ye who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wish to learn the way to comfort, and how to tread the royal road to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heavenly wisdom, come ye to the cross, and see the Saviour suffer, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pour out His heart&#8217;s blood for human sin! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Some of David&#8217;s Psalms are called, &quot;Michtam&quot;, which means &quot;golden   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Psalm.&quot; Surely we must sing one of these. Our psalms must be golden    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when we sing of the Head of the Church, who is as much fine gold. More    <br \/>&#160;&#160; precious than silver or gold is the inestimable price which He has paid    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for our ransom. Yes, ye sons of harmony, bring your most melodious    <br \/>&#160;&#160; anthems here, and let your Saviour have your golden psalms! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Certain Psalms in the Old Testament are entitled, &quot;Upon Shoshannim,&quot;   <br \/>&#160;&#160; that is, &quot;Upon the lilies.&quot; O ye virgin souls, whose hearts have been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; washed in blood, and have been made white and pure, bring forth your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; instruments of song:- <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Hither, then, your music bring, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Strike aloud each cheerful string!&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let your hearts, when they are in their best state, when they are   <br \/>&#160;&#160; purest, and most cleansed from earthly dross, give to Jesus their glory    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and their excellence. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Then there are other Psalms which are dedicated &quot;To the sons of Korah.&quot;   <br \/>&#160;&#160; If the guess be right, the reason why we get the title, &quot;To the sons of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Korah&quot;&#8211;&quot;a song of loves&quot;&#8211;must be this: that when Korah, Dathan, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Abiram were swallowed up, the sons of Dathan and Abiram were swallowed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; up, too; but the sons of Korah perished not. Why they were not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; destroyed, we cannot tell. Perhaps it was that sovereign grace spared    <br \/>&#160;&#160; those whom justice might have doomed; and &quot;the sons of Korah&quot; were ever    <br \/>&#160;&#160; after made the sweet singers of the sanctuary; and whenever there was a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; special &quot;song of loves&quot;, it was always dedicated to them. Ah! we will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have one of those songs of love to-night, around the table, for we,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; too, are saved by distinguishing grace. We will sing of the heavenly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lover, and the many waters which could not quench His love. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Love, so vast that nought can bound; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Love, too deep for thought to sound <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Love, which made the Lord of all <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Drink the wormwood and the gall. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Love, which led Him to the cross, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Bearing there unutter&#8217;d loss; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Love, which brought Him to the gloom <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Of the cold and darksome tomb. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Love, which made Him hence arise <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Far above the starry skies, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; There with tender, loving care, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; All His people&#8217;s griefs to share. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Love, which will not let Him rest <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Till His chosen all are blest; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Till they all for whom He died <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Live rejoicing by His side.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We have not half exhausted the list, but it is clear that, sitting at   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord&#8217;s table, we shall have no lack of suitable psalmody. Perhaps    <br \/>&#160;&#160; no one hymn will quite meet the sentiments of all; and while we would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not write a hymn for you, we would pray the Holy Spirit to write now    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the spirit of praise upon your hearts, that, sitting here, you may    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;after supper&quot; sing &quot;an hymn.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; IV. For one or two minutes let us ask&#8211;&quot;what shall the tune be?&quot; It   <br \/>&#160;&#160; must be a strange one, for if we are to sing &quot;an hymn&quot; to-night, around    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the table, the tune must have all the parts of music. Yonder believer    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is heavy of heart through manifold sorrows, bereavements, and watchings    <br \/>&#160;&#160; by the sick. He loves his Lord, and would fain praise Him, but his soul    <br \/>&#160;&#160; refuses to use her wings. Brother, we will have a tune in which you can    <br \/>&#160;&#160; join, and you shall lead the bass. You shall sing of your fellowship    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with your Beloved in His sufferings; how He, too, lost a friend; how He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spent whole nights in sleeplessness; how His soul was exceeding    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sorrowful. But the tune must not be all bass, or it would not suit some    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of us to-night, for we can reach the highest note. We have seen the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord, and our spirit has rejoiced in God our Saviour. We want to lift    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the chorus high; yea, there are some true hearts here who are at times    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so full of joy that they will want special music written for them.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Whether in the body, I cannot tell; or whether out of the body, I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot tell:&quot; said Paul, and so have said others since, when Christ has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been with them. Ah! then they have been obliged to mount to the highest    <br \/>&#160;&#160; notes, to the very loftiest range of song. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Remember, beloved, that the same Saviour who will accept the joyful   <br \/>&#160;&#160; shoutings of the strong, will also receive the plaintive notes of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; weak and weeping. You little ones, you babes in grace, may cry,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Hosanna,&quot; and the King will not silence you; and you strong men, with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all your power of faith, may shout, &quot;Hallelujah!&quot; and your notes shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be accepted, too. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Come, then, let us have a tune in which we can all unite; but ah! we   <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot make one which will suit the dead&#8211;the dead, I mean, &quot;in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trespasses and sins&quot;&#8211;and there are some such here. Oh, may God open    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their mouths, and unloose their tongues; but as for those of us who are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; alive unto God, let us, as we come to the table, all contribute our own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; share of the music, and so make up a song of blended harmony, with many    <br \/>&#160;&#160; parts, one great united song of praise to Jesus our Lord! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We should not choose a tune for the communion table which is not very   <br \/>&#160;&#160; soft. These are no boisterous themes with which we have to deal when we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tarry here. A bleeding Saviour, robed in a vesture dyed with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blood&#8211;this is a theme which you must treat with loving gentleness, for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; everything that is coarse is out of place. While the tune is soft, it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; must also be sweet. Silence, ye doubts; be dumb, ye fears; be hushed,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ye cares! Why come ye here? My music must be sweet and soft when I sing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Him. But oh! it must also be strong; there must be a full swell in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; my praise. Draw out the stops, and let the organ swell the diapason! In    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fulness let its roll of thundering harmony go up to heaven; let every    <br \/>&#160;&#160; note be sounded at its loudest. &quot;Praise ye Him upon the cymbals, upon    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the high-sounding cymbals; upon the harp with a solemn sound.&quot; Soft,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sweet, and strong, let the music be. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Alas! you complain that your soul is out of tune. Then ask the Master   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to tune the heart-strings. Those &quot;Selahs&quot; which we find so often in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Psalms, are supposed by many scholars to mean, &quot;Put the harpstrings in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tune:&quot; truly we require many &quot;Selahs&quot;, for our hearts are constantly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unstrung. Oh, that to-night the Master would enable each one of us to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; offer that tuneful prayer which we so often sing,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Teach me some melodious sonnet, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Sung by flaming tongues above: <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Praise the mount&#8211;oh, fix me on it, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Mount of God&#8217;s unchanging love!&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; V. We close by enquiring,&#8211;who shall sing this hymn? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Sitting around the Father&#8217;s board, we will raise a joyful song, but who   <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall do it? &quot;I will,&quot; saith one; &quot;and we will,&quot; say others. What is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the reason why so many are willing to join? The reason is to be found    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the verse we were singing just now,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;When He&#8217;s the subject of the song, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Who can refuse to sing?&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What! a Christian silent when others are praising his Master? No; he   <br \/>&#160;&#160; must join in the song. Satan tries to make God&#8217;s people dumb, but he    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot, for the Lord has not a tongue-tied child in all His family.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; They can all speak, and they can all cry, even if they cannot all sing,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and I think there are times when they can all sing; yea, they must, for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you know the promise, &quot;Then shall the tongue of the dumb sing.&quot; Surely,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when Jesus leads the tune, if there should be any silent ones in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord&#8217;s family, they must begin to praise the name of the Lord. After    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Giant Despair&#8217;s head had been cut off, Christiana and Mr. Greatheart,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and all the rest of them, brought out the best of their provisions, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; made a feast, and Mr. Bunyan says that, after they had feasted, they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; danced. In the dance there was one remarkable dancer, namely, Mr.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Ready-to-Halt. Now, Mr. Ready-to-Halt usually went upon crutches, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for once he laid them aside. &quot;And,&quot; says Bunyan, &quot;I warrant you he    <br \/>&#160;&#160; footed it well!&quot; This is quaintly showing us that, sometimes, the very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sorrowful ones, the Ready-to-Halts, when they see Giant Despair&#8217;s head    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cut off, when they see death, hell, and sin led in triumphant captivity    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at the wheels of Christ&#8217;s victorious chariot, feel that even they must    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for once indulge in a song of gladness. So, when I put the question    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to-night, &quot;Who will sing?&quot; I trust that Ready-to-Halt will promise, &quot;I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; You have not much comfort at home, perhaps; by very hard work you earn   <br \/>&#160;&#160; that little. Sunday is to you a day of true rest, for you are worked    <br \/>&#160;&#160; very cruelly all the week. Those cheeks of yours, poor girl, are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; getting very pale, and who knows but what Hood&#8217;s pathetic lines may be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; true of you?&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Stitch, stitch, stitch, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In poverty, hunger, and dirt, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Sewing at once, with a double thread, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; A shroud as well as a shirt.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But, my sister, you may surely rejoice to-night in spite of all this.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; There may be little on earth, but there is much in heaven. There may be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but small comfort for you here apart from Christ; but oh! when, by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; faith, you mount into His glory, your soul is glad. You shall be as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rich as the richest to-night if the Holy Spirit shall but bring you to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the table, and enable you to feed upon your Lord and Master. Perhaps    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you have come here to-night when you ought not to have done so. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; physician would have told you to keep to your bed, but you persisted in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; coming up to the house where the Lord has so often met with you. I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trust that we shall hear your voice in the song. There appear to have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been in David&#8217;s day many things to silence the praise of God, but David    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was one who would sing. I like that expression of his, where the devil    <br \/>&#160;&#160; seems to come up, and put his hand on his mouth, and say, &quot;Be quiet.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;No,&quot; says David, &quot;I will sing.&quot; Again the devil tries to quiet him,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but David is not to be silenced, for three times he puts it, &quot;I will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sing, yea, I will sing praises unto the Lord.&quot; May the Lord make you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; resolve this night that you will praise the Lord Jesus with all your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heart! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Alas! there are many of you here to-night whom I could not invite to   <br \/>&#160;&#160; this feast of song, and who could not truly come if you were invited.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Your sins are not forgiven; your souls are not saved; you have not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trusted Christ; you are still in nature&#8217;s darkness, still in the gall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of bitterness, and in the bonds of iniquity. Must it always be so? Will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you destroy yourselves? Have you made a league with death, and a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; covenant with hell? Mercy lingers! Longsuffering continues! Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; waits! Remember that He hung upon the cross for sinners such as you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are, and that if you believe in Him now, you shall be saved. One act of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; faith, and all the sin you have committed is blotted out. A single    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glance of faith&#8217;s eye to the wounds of the Messiah, and your load of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; iniquity is rolled into the depths of the sea, and you are forgiven in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a moment! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Oh!&quot; says one, &quot;would God I could believe!&quot; Poor soul, may God help   <br \/>&#160;&#160; thee to believe now! God took upon Himself our flesh; Christ was born    <br \/>&#160;&#160; among men, and suffered on account of human guilt, being made to suffer    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;the Just for the unjust, that He might bring us to God.&quot; Christ was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; punished in the room, place, and stead of every man and woman who will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; believe on Him. If you believe on Him, He was punished for you; and you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will never be punished. Your debts are paid, your sins are forgiven.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God cannot punish you, for He has punished Christ instead of you, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He will never punish twice for one offence. To believe is to trust. If    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you will now trust your soul entirely with Him, you are saved, for He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; loved you, and gave Himself for you. When you know this, and feel it to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be true, then come to the Lord&#8217;s table, and join with us, when, after    <br \/>&#160;&#160; supper we sing our hymn,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;It is finished!&#8217;&#8211;Oh, what pleasure <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Do these charming words afford! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Heavenly blessings without measure <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Flow to us from Christ the Lord: <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; It is finished!&#8217; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Saints, the dying words record. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Tune your harps anew, ye seraphs, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Join to sing the pleasing theme; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; All on earth, and all in heaven, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Join to praise Immanuel&#8217;s name! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Hallelujah! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Glory to the bleeding Lamb!&quot;   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>JESUS ASLEEP ON A PILLOW&quot;And He was in the hinder part of the ship, asleep on a   <br \/> pillow: and they awake Him, and say unto Him, Master, carest Thou not that we    <br \/>&#160; perish? And He arose, and rebuked the wind, and said unto the sea, Peace, be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; still. And the wind ceased, and there was a great calm.&quot;&#8211;Mark iv. 38, 39. <\/p>\n<p>JESUS ASLEEP ON A PILLOW <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; OUR Lord took His disciples with Him into the ship to teach them a   <br \/>&#160;&#160; practical lesson. It is one thing to talk to people about our oneness    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with them, and about how they should exercise faith in time of danger,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and about their real safety in apparent peril; but it is another, and a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; far better thing, to go into the ship with them, to let them feel all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the terror of the storm, and then to arise, and rebuke the wind, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; say unto the sea, &quot;Peace, be still.&quot; Our Lord gave His disciples a kind    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Kindergarten lesson, an acted sermon, in which the truth was set    <br \/>&#160;&#160; forth visibly before them. Such teaching produced a wonderful effect    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon their lives. May we also be instructed by it! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In our text there are two great calms; the first is, the calm in the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Saviour&#8217;s heart, and the second is, the calm which He created with a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; word upon the storm-tossed sea. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. Within the Lord where was a great calm, and that is why there was   <br \/>&#160;&#160; soon a great calm around Him; for what is in God comes out of God.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Since there was a calm in Christ for Himself, there was afterwards a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; calm outside for others. What a wonderful inner calm it was! &quot;He was in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the hinder part of the ship, asleep on a pillow.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; He had perfect confidence in God that all was well. The waves might   <br \/>&#160;&#160; roar, the winds might rage, but He was not at all disquieted by their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fury. He knew that the waters were in the hollow of His Father&#8217;s hand,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and that every wind was but the breath of His Father&#8217;s mouth; and so He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was not troubled; nay, He had not even a careful thought, He was as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; much at ease as on a sunny day. His mind and heart were free from every    <br \/>&#160;&#160; kind of care, for amid the gathering tempest He deliberately laid    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself down, and slept like a weary child. He went to the hinder part    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the ship, most out of the gash of the spray; He took a pillow, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; put it under His head, and with fixed intent disposed Himself to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; slumber. It was His own act and deed to go to sleep in the storm; He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had nothing for which to keep awake, so pure and perfect was His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; confidence in the great Father. What an example this is to us! We have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not half the confidence in God that we ought to have, not even the best    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of us. The Lord deserves our unbounded belief, our unquestioning    <br \/>&#160;&#160; confidence, our undisturbed reliance. Oh, that we rendered it to Him as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Saviour did! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; There was also mixed with His faith in the Father a sweet confidence in   <br \/>&#160;&#160; His own Sonship. He did not doubt that He was the Son of the Highest. I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; may not question God&#8217;s power to deliver, but I may sometimes question    <br \/>&#160;&#160; my right to expect deliverance; and if so, my comfort vanishes. Our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord had no doubts of this kind. He had long before heard that word,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased;&quot; He had so lived    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and walked with God that the witness within Him was continuous, so He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had no question about the Father&#8217;s love to Him as His own Son. &quot;Rocked    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the cradle of the deep,&quot; His Father keeping watch over Him,&#8211;what    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could a child do better than go to sleep in such a happy position? And    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so He does. You and I, too, want a fuller assurance of our sonship if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we would have greater peace with God. The devil knows that, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; therefore he will come to us with his insinuating suggestion, &quot;If thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be the son of God.&quot; If we have the Spirit of adoption in us, we shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; put the accuser to rout at once, by opposing the Witness within to his    <br \/>&#160;&#160; question from without. Then shall we be filled with a great calm,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; because we have confidence in our Father, and assurance of our sonship. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Then He had a sweet way&#8211;this blessed Lord of ours&#8211;of leaving all with   <br \/>&#160;&#160; God. He takes no watch, He makes no fret; but He goes to sleep.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Whatever comes, He has left all in the hands of the great Caretaker;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and what more is needful? If a watchman were set to guard my house, I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; should be foolish if I also sat up for fear of thieves. Why have a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; watchman if I cannot trust him to watch? &quot;Cast thy burden upon the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord;&quot; but when thou hast done so, leave it with the Lord, and do not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; try to carry it thyself. That is to make a mock of God, to have the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; name of God, but not the reality, of God. Lay down every care, even as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus did when He went calmly to the hinder part of the ship, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; quietly took a pillow, and went to sleep. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But I think I hear someone say, &quot;I could do that if mine were solely   <br \/>&#160;&#160; care about myself.&quot; Yes, perhaps you could; and yet you cannot cast    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon God your burden of care about your children. But your Lord trusted    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Father with those dear to Him. Do you not think that Christ&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; disciples were as precious to Him as our children are to us? If that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ship had been wrecked, what would have become of Peter? What would have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; become of &quot;that disciple whom Jesus loved&quot;? Our Lord regarded with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; intense affection those whom He had chosen and called, and who had been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with Him in His temptation, yet He was quite content to leave them all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the care of His Father, and go to sleep. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; You answer, &quot;Yes, but there is a still wider circle of people watching   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to see what will happen to me, and to the cause of Christ with which I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; am connected. I am obliged to care, whether I will or no.&quot; Is your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; case, then, more trying than your Lord&#8217;s? Do you forget that &quot;there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were also with Him many other little ships&quot;? When the storm was tossing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His barque, their little ships were even more in jeopardy; and He cared    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for them all. He was the Lord High Admiral of the Lake of Gennesaret    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that night. The other ships were a fleet under His convoy, and His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great heart went out to them all. Yet He went to sleep, because He had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; left in His Father&#8217;s care even the solicitudes of His charity and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sympathy. We, my brethren, who are much weaker than He, shall find    <br \/>&#160;&#160; strength in doing the same. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Having left everything with His Father, our Lord did the very wisest   <br \/>&#160;&#160; thing possible. He did just what the hour demanded. &quot;Why,&quot; say you, &quot;He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; went to sleep!&quot; That was the best thing Jesus could do; and sometimes    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it is the best thing we can do. Christ was weary and worn; and when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; anyone is exhausted, it is his duty to go to sleep if he can. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Saviour must be up again in the morning, preaching and working    <br \/>&#160;&#160; miracles, and if He does not sleep, He will not be fit for His holy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; duty; it is incumbent upon Him to keep Himself in trim for His service.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Knowing that the time to sleep has come, the Lord sleeps, and does well    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in sleeping. Often, when we have been fretting and worrying, we should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have glorified God far more had we literally gone to sleep. To glorify    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God by sleep is not so difficult as some might think; at least, to our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord it was natural. Here you are worried, sad, wearied; the doctor    <br \/>&#160;&#160; prescribes for you; his medicine does you no good; but oh! if you enter    <br \/>&#160;&#160; into full peace with God, and go to sleep, you will wake up infinitely    <br \/>&#160;&#160; more refreshed than by any drug. The sleep which the Lord giveth to His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beloved is balmy indeed. Seek it as Jesus sought it. Go to bed,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; brother, and you will better imitate your Lord than by putting yourself    <br \/>&#160;&#160; into ill humour, and worrying other people. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; There is a spiritual sleep in which we ought to imitate Jesus. How   <br \/>&#160;&#160; often I have worried my poor brain about my great church, until I have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come to my senses, and then I have said to myself, &quot;How foolish you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are! Can you not depend upon God? Is it not far more His cause than    <br \/>&#160;&#160; yours?&quot; Then I have taken my load in prayer, and left it with the Lord.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I have said, &quot;In God&#8217;s name, this matter shall never worry me again,&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and I have left my urgent care with Him, and ended it for ever. I have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so deliberately given up many a trying case into the Lord&#8217;s care that,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when any of my friends have said to me, &quot;What about so and so?&quot; I have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; simply answered, &quot;I do not know, and I am no longer careful to know.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The Lord will interpose in some way or other, but I will trouble no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; more about it.&quot; No mischief has ever come through any matter which I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have left in the divine keeping. The staying of my hand has been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wisdom. &quot;Stand still, and see the salvation of God,&quot; is God&#8217;s own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; precept. Here let us follow Jesus. Having a child&#8217;s confidence in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great Father, He retires to the stern of the ship, selects a pillow,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; deliberately lies down upon it, and goes to sleep; and though the ship    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is filling with water, and rolls and pitches, He sleeps on. Nothing can    <br \/>&#160;&#160; break the peace of His tranquil soul. Every sailor on board reels to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and fro, and staggers like a drunken man, and is at his wits&#8217; end; but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus is neither at his wits&#8217; end, nor does He stagger, for He rests in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perfect innocence, and undisturbed confidence. His heart is happy in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God, and therefore doth He remain in repose. Oh, for grace to copy Him! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. But here notice, dear friends, The difference between the Master   <br \/>&#160;&#160; and His disciples; for while He was in a great calm, they were in a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great storm. Here see their failure. They were just as we are, and we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are often just as they were. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; They gave way to fear. They were sorely afraid that the ship would   <br \/>&#160;&#160; sink, and that they would all perish. In thus yielding to fear, they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; forgot the solid reasons for courage which lay near at hand; for, in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; truth, they were safe enough. Christ is on board that vessel, and if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the ship goes down, He will sink with them. The heathen mariner took    <br \/>&#160;&#160; courage during a storm from the fact that Caesar was on board the ship    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that was tossed by stormy winds; and should not the disciples feel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; secure with Jesus on board? Fear not, ye carry Jesus and His cause!    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus had come to do a work, and His disciples might have known that He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could not perish with that work unaccomplished. Could they not trust    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him? They had seen Him multiply the loaves and fishes, and cast out    <br \/>&#160;&#160; devils, and heal all manner of sicknesses; could they not trust Him to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; still the storm? Unreasonable unbelief! Faith in God is true prudence,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but to doubt God is irrational. It is the height of absurdity and folly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to question omnipotent love. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And the disciples were so unwise as to do the Master a very ill turn.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; He was sadly weary, and sorely needed sleep; but they hastened to Him,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and aroused Him in a somewhat rough and irreverent manner. They were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; slow to do so, but their fear urged them; and therefore they awoke Him,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; uttering ungenerous and unloving words: &quot;Master, carest Thou not that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we perish?&quot; Shame on the lips that asked so harsh a question! Did they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not upon reflection greatly blame themselves? He had given them no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cause for such hard speeches; and, moreover, it was unseemly in them to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; call Him &quot;Master,&quot; and then to ask Him, &quot;Carest Thou not that we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perish?&quot; Is He to be accused of such hard-heartednesses to let His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; faithful disciples perish when He has power to deliver them? Alas, we,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; too, have been guilty of like offences! I think I have known some of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ&#8217;s disciples who have appeared to doubt the wisdom or the love of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their Lord. They did not quite say that He was mistaken, but they said    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that He moved in a mysterious way; they did not quite complain that He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was unkind to them, but they whispered that they could not reconcile    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His dealings with His infinite love. Alas, Jesus has endured much from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our unbelief! May this picture help us to see our spots, and may the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love of our dear Lord remove them! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; III. I have spoken to you of the Master&#8217;s calm and of the disciples&#8217;   <br \/>&#160;&#160; failure; now let us think of the great calm which Jesus created. &quot;There    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was a great calm.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; His voice produced it. They say that if oil be poured upon the waters   <br \/>&#160;&#160; they will become smooth, and I suppose there is some truth in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; statement; but there is all truth in this, that if God speaks, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; storm subsides into a calm, so that the waves of the sea are still. It    <br \/>&#160;&#160; only needs our Lord Jesus to speak in the heart of any one of us, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; immediately the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; possess us. No matter how drear your despondency, nor how dread your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; despair, the Lord can at once create a great calm of confidence. What a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; door of hope this opens to any who are in trouble! If I could speak a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; poor man rich, and a sick one well, I am sure I would do so at once;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but Jesus is infinitely better than I am, and therefore I know that He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will speak peace to the tried and troubled heart. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Note, too, that this calm came at once. &quot;Jesus arose, and rebuked the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; wind, and said unto the sea, Peace, be still. And the wind ceased, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; there was a great calm.&quot; As soon as Jesus spoke, all was quiet. I have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; met with a very large number of persons in trouble of mind, and I have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; seen a few who have slowly come out into light and liberty; but more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; frequently deliverance has come suddenly. The iron gate has opened of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; its own accord, and the prisoner has stepped into immediate freedom.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;The snare is broken, and we are escaped.&quot; What a joy it is to know    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that rest is so near even when the tempest rages most furiously! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Note, also, that the Saviour coupled this repose with faith, for He   <br \/>&#160;&#160; said to the disciples as soon as the calm came, &quot;Why are ye so fearful?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; How is it that ye have no faith?&quot; Faith and the calm go together. If    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thou believest, thou shalt rest; if thou wilt but cast thyself upon thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God, surrendering absolutely to His will, thou shalt have mercy, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; joy, and light. Even if we have no faith, the Lord will sometimes give    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us the blessing that we need, for He delights to do more for us than we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have any right to expect of Him; but usually the rule of His kingdom    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is, &quot;According to your faith be it unto you.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This great calm is very delightful, and concerning this I desire to   <br \/>&#160;&#160; bear my personal testimony. I speak from my own knowledge when I say    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that it passeth all understanding. I was sitting, the other night,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; meditating on God&#8217;s mercy and love, when suddenly I found in my own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heart a most delightful sense of perfect peace. I had come to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Beulah-land, where the sun shines without a cloud. &quot;There was a great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; calm.&quot; I felt as mariners might do who have been tossed about in broken    <br \/>&#160;&#160; water, and all on a sudden, they cannot tell why, the ocean becomes as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unruffled as a mirror, and the sea-birds come and sit in happy circles    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon the water. I felt perfectly content, yea, undividedly happy. Not a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wave of trouble broke upon the shore of my heart, and even far out to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sea in the deeps of my being all was still. I knew no ungratified wish,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; no unsatisfied desire. I could not discover a reason for uneasiness, or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a motive for fear. There was nothing approaching to fanaticism in my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; feelings, nothing even of excitement: my soul was waiting upon God, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; delighting herself alone in Him. Oh, the blessedness of this rest in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord! What an Elysium it is! I must be allowed to say a little upon    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this purple island in the sea of my life: it was none other than a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fragment of heaven. We often talk about our great spiritual storms, why    <br \/>&#160;&#160; should we not speak of our great calms? If ever we get into trouble,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; what a noise we make of it! Why should we not sing of our deliverances? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let us survey our mercies. Every sin that we have ever committed is   <br \/>&#160;&#160; forgiven. &quot;The blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, cleanseth us from all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sin.&quot; The power of sin within us is broken; it &quot;shall not have dominion    <br \/>&#160;&#160; over you, for ye are not under the law but under grace.&quot; Satan is a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vanquished enemy; the world is overcome by our Lord Jesus, and death is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; abolished by Him. All providence works for our good. Eternity has no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; threat for us, it bears within its mysteries nothing but immortality    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and glory. Nothing can harm us. The Lord is our shield, and our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; exceeding great reward. Wherefore, then, should we fear? The Lord of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hosts is with us, the God of Jacob is our refuge. To the believer,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; peace is no presumption: he is warranted in enjoying &quot;perfect peace&quot;&#8211;a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; quiet which is deep, and founded on truth, which encompasses all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; things, and is not broken by any of the ten thousand disturbing causes    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which otherwise might prevent our rest. &quot;Thou wilt keep him in perfect    <br \/>&#160;&#160; peace whose mind is stayed on Thee; because he trusteth in Thee.&quot; Oh,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to get into that calm, and remain in it till we come to that world    <br \/>&#160;&#160; where there is no more sea! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; A calm like that which ruled within our Saviour should we be happy   <br \/>&#160;&#160; enough to attain to it, will give us in our measure the power to make    <br \/>&#160;&#160; outside matters calm. He that hath peace can make peace. We cannot work    <br \/>&#160;&#160; miracles, and yet the works which Jesus did shall we do also. Sleeping    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His sleep, we shall awake in His rested energy, and treat the winds and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; waves as things subject to the power of faith, and therefore to be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; commanded into quiet. We shall speak so as to console others: our calm    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall work marvels in the little ships whereof others are captains. We,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; too, shall say, &quot;Peace! Be still.&quot; Our confidence shall prove    <br \/>&#160;&#160; contagious, and the timid shall grow brave: our tender love shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spread itself, and the contentious shall cool down to patience. Only    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the matter must begin within ourselves. We cannot create a calm till we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are in a calm. It is easier to rule the elements than to govern the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unruliness of our wayward nature. When grace has made us masters of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fears, so that we can take a pillow and fall asleep amid the hurricane,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the fury of the tempest is over. He giveth peace and safety when He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; giveth His beloved sleep.    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; REAL CONTACT WITH JESUS. &quot;And Jesus said, Somebody hath touched Me: for I   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; perceive that virtue is gone out of Me.&quot;&#8211;Luke viii. 46. <\/p>\n<p>REAL CONTACT WITH JESUS. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; OUR Lord was very frequently in the midst of a crowd. His preaching was   <br \/>&#160;&#160; so plain and so forcible that He always attracted a vast company of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hearers; and, moreover, the rumour of the loaves and fishes no doubt    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had something to do with increasing His audiences, while the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; expectation of beholding a miracle would be sure to add to the numbers    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the hangers-on. Our Lord Jesus Christ often found it difficult to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; move through the streets, because of the masses who pressed upon Him.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; This was encouraging to Him as a preacher, and yet how small a residuum    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of real good came of all the excitement which gathered around His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; personal ministry! He might have looked upon the great mass, and have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; said, &quot;What is the chaff to the wheat?&quot; for here it was piled up upon    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the threshing-floor, heap upon heap; and yet, after His decease, His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; disciples might have been counted by a few scores, for those who had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spiritually received Him were but few. Many were called, but few were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; chosen. Yet, wherever one was blessed, our Saviour took note of it; it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; touched a chord in His soul. He never could be unaware when virtue had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gone out of Him to heal a sick one, or when power had gone forth with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His ministry to save a sinful one. Of all the crowd that gathered round    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Saviour upon the day of which our text speaks, I find nothing said    <br \/>&#160;&#160; about one of them except this solitary &quot;somebody&quot; who had touched Him.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The crowd came, and the crowd went; but little is recorded of it all.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Just as the ocean, having advanced to full tide, leaves but little    <br \/>&#160;&#160; behind it when it retires again to its channel, so the vast multitude    <br \/>&#160;&#160; around the Saviour left only this one precious deposit&#8211;one &quot;somebody&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; who had touched Him, and had received virtue from Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Ah, my Master, it may be so again this evening! These Sabbath mornings,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; and these Sabbath evenings, the crowds come pouring in like a mighty    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ocean, filling this house, and then they all retire again; only here    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and there is a &quot;somebody&quot; left weeping for sin, a &quot;somebody&quot; left    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rejoicing in Christ, a &quot;somebody&quot; who can say, &quot;I have touched the hem    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of His garment, and I have been made whole.&quot; The whole of my other    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hearers are not worth the &quot;somebodies.&quot; The many of you are not worth    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the few, for the many are the pebbles, and the few are the diamonds;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the many are the heaps of husks, and the few are the precious grains.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; May God find them out at this hour, and His shall be all the praise! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Jesus said, &quot;Somebody hath touched Me,&quot; from which we observe that, in   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the use of means and ordinances, we should never be satisfied unless we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; get into personal contact with Christ, so that we touch Him, as this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; woman touched His garment. Secondly, if we can get into such personal    <br \/>&#160;&#160; contact, we shall have a blessing: &quot;I perceive that virtue is gone out    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Me;&quot; and, thirdly, if we do get a blessing, Christ will know it;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; however obscure our case may be, He will know it, and He will have us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; let others know it; He will speak, and ask such questions as will draw    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us out, and manifest us to the world. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. First, then, in the use of all means and ordinances, let it be our   <br \/>&#160;&#160; chief aim and object to come into personal contact with the Lord Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Peter said, &quot;The multitude throng Thee, and press Thee,&quot; and that is   <br \/>&#160;&#160; true of the multitude to this very day; but of those who come where    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ is in the assembly of His saints, a large proportion only come    <br \/>&#160;&#160; because it is their custom to do so. Perhaps they hardly know why they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; go to a place of worship. They go because they always did go, and they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; think it wrong not to go. They are just like the doors which swing upon    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their hinges; they take no interest in what is done, at least only in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the exterior parts of the service; into the heart and soul of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; business they do not enter, and cannot enter. They are glad if the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sermon is rather short, there is so much the less tedium for them. They    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are glad if they can look around and gaze at the congregation, they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; find in that something to interest them; but getting near to the Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus is not the business they come upon. They have not looked at it in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that light. They come and they go; they come and they go; and it will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be so till, by-and-by, they will come for the last time, and they will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; find out in the next world that the means of grace were not instituted    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be matters of custom, and that to have heard Jesus Christ preached,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and to have rejected Him, is no trifle, but a solemn thing for which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they will have to answer in the presence of the great Judge of all the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; earth. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Others there are who come to the house of prayer, and try to enter into   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the service, and do so in a certain fashion; but it is only    <br \/>&#160;&#160; self-righteously or professionally. They may come to the Lord&#8217;s table;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perhaps they attend to baptism; they may even join the church. They are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; baptized, yet not by the Holy Spirit; they take the Lord&#8217;s supper, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they take not the Lord Himself; they eat the bread, but they never eat    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His flesh; they drink the wine, but they never drink His blood; they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have been buried in the pool, but they have never been buried with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ in baptism, nor have they risen again with Him into newness of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; life. To them, to read, to sing, to kneel, to hear, and so on, are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; enough. They are content with the shell, but the blessed spiritual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; kernel, the true marrow and fatness, these they know nothing of. These    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are the many, go into what church or meeting-house you please. They are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the press around Jesus, but they do not touch Him. They come, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they come not into contact with Jesus. They are outward, external    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hearers only, but there is no inward touching of the blessed person of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ, no mysterious contact with the ever-blessed Saviour, no stream    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of life and love flowing from Him to them. It is all mechanical    <br \/>&#160;&#160; religion. Of vital godliness, they know nothing. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But, &quot;somebody,&quot; said Christ, &quot;somebody hath touched Me,&quot; and that is   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the soul of the matter. O my hearer, when you are in prayer alone,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; never be satisfied with having prayed; do not give it up till you have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; touched Christ in prayer; or, if you have not got to Him, at any rate    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sigh and cry until you do! Do not think you have prayed, but try again.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; When you come to public worship, I beseech you, rest not satisfied with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; listening to the sermon, and so on, as you all do with sufficient    <br \/>&#160;&#160; attention; to that I bear you witness;&#8211;but do not be content unless    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you get at Christ the Master, and touch Him. At all times when you come    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to the communion table, count it to have been no ordinance of grace to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you unless you have gone right through the veil into Christ&#8217;s own arms,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; or at least have touched His garment, feeling that the first object,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the life and soul of the means of grace, is to touch Jesus Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself; and except &quot;somebody&quot; hath touched Him, the whole has been a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mere dead performance, without life or power. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The woman in our text was not only amongst those who were in the crowd,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; but she touched Jesus; and therefore, beloved, let me hold her up to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your example in some respects, though I would to God that in other    <br \/>&#160;&#160; respects you might excel her. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Note, first, she felt that it was of no use being in the crowd, of no   <br \/>&#160;&#160; use to be in the same street with Christ, or near to the place where    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ was, but she must get at Him; she must touch Him. She touched    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him, you will notice, under many difficulties. There was a great crowd.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; She was a woman. She was also a woman enfeebled by a long disease which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had drained her constitution, and left her more fit to be upon a bed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; than to be struggling in the seething tumult. Yet, notwithstanding    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that, so intense was her desire, that she urged on her way, I doubt not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with many a bruise, and many an uncouth push, and at last, poor    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trembler as she was, she got near to the Lord. Beloved, it is not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; always easy to get at Jesus. It is very easy to kneel down to pray, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not so easy to reach Christ in prayer. There is a child crying, it is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your own, and its noise has often hindered you when you were striving    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to approach Jesus; or a knock will come at the door when you most wish    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be retired. When you are sitting in the house of God, your neighbour    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the seat before you may unconsciously distract your attention. It is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not easy to draw near to Christ, especially coming as some of you do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; right away from the counting-house, and from the workshop, with a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thousand thoughts and cares about you. You cannot always unload your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; burden outside, and come in here with your hearts prepared to receive    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the gospel. Ah! it is a terrible fight sometimes, a real foot-to-foot    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fight with evil, with temptation, and I know not what. But, beloved, do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fight it out, do fight it out; do not let your seasons for prayer be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wasted, nor your times for hearing be thrown away; but, like this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; woman, be resolved, with all your feebleness, that you will lay hold    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon Christ. And oh! if you be resolved about it, if you cannot get to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him, He will come to you, and sometimes, when you are struggling    <br \/>&#160;&#160; against unbelieving thoughts, He will turn and say, &quot;Make room for that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; poor feeble one, that she may come to Me, for My desire is to the work    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of My own hands; let her come to Me, and let her desire be granted to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; her.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Observe, again, that this woman touched Jesus very secretly. Perhaps   <br \/>&#160;&#160; there is a dear sister here who is getting near to Christ at this very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; moment, and yet her face does not betray her. It is so little contact    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that she has gained with Christ that the joyous flush, and the sparkle    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the eye, which we often see in the child of God, have not yet come    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to her. She is sitting in yonder obscure corner, or standing in this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; aisle, but though her touch is secret, it is true. Though she cannot    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tell another of it, yet it is accomplished. She has touched Jesus.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Beloved, that is not always the nearest fellowship with Christ of which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we talk the most. Deep waters are still. Nay, I am not sure but what we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sometimes get nearer to Christ when we think we are at a distance than    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we do when we imagine we are near Him, for we are not always exactly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the best judges of our own spiritual state, and we may be very close to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Master, and yet for all that we may be so anxious to get closer    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that we may feel dissatisfied with the measure of grace which we have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; already received. To be satisfied with self, is no sign of grace; but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to long for more grace, is often a far better evidence of the healthy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; state of the soul. Friend, if thou canst not come to the table to-night    <br \/>&#160;&#160; publicly, come to the Master in secret. If thou darest not tell thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wife, or thy child, or thy father, that thou art trusting in Jesus, it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; need not be told as yet. Thou mayest do it secretly, as he did to whom    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus said, &quot;When thou wast under the fig tree, I saw thee.&quot; Nathanael    <br \/>&#160;&#160; retired to the shade that no one might see him; but Jesus saw him, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; marked his prayer, and He will see thee in the crowd, and in the dark,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and not withhold His blessing. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This woman also came into contact with Christ under a very deep sense   <br \/>&#160;&#160; of unworthiness. I dare say she thought, &quot;If I touch the Great Prophet,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it will be a wonder if He does not strike me with some sudden    <br \/>&#160;&#160; judgment,&quot; for she was a woman ceremonially unclean. She had no right    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be in the throng. Had the Levitical law been strictly carried out, I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; suppose she would have been confined to her house; but there she was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wandering about, and she must needs go and touch the holy Saviour. Ah!    <br \/>&#160;&#160; poor heart, you feel to-night that you are not fit to touch the skirts    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the Master&#8217;s robe, for you are so unworthy. You never felt so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; undeserving before as you do to-night. In the recollection of last week    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and its infirmities, in the remembrance of the present state of your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heart, and all its wanderings from God, you feel as if there never was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so worthless a sinner in the house of God before. &quot;Is grace for me?&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; say you. &quot;Is Christ for me?&quot; Oh! yes, unworthy one. Do not be put off    <br \/>&#160;&#160; without it. Jesus Christ does not save the worthy, but the unworthy.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Your plea must not be righteousness, but guilt. And you, too, child of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God, though you are ashamed of yourself, Jesus is not ashamed of you;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and though you feel unfit to come, let your unfitness only impel you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with the greater earnestness of desire. Let your sense of need make you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the more fervent to approach the Lord, who can supply your need. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thus, you see, the woman came under difficulties, she came secretly,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; she came as an unworthy one, but still she obtained the blessing. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I have known many staggered with that saying of Paul&#8217;s, &quot;He that eateth   <br \/>&#160;&#160; and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to himself.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Now, understand that this passage does not refer to the unworthiness of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; those persons who come to the Lord&#8217;s table; for it does not say, &quot;He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that eateth and drinketh being unworthy.&quot; It is not an adjective; it is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; an adverb: &quot;He that eateth and drinketh unworthily,&quot; that is to say, he    <br \/>&#160;&#160; who shall come to the outward and visible sign of Christ&#8217;s presence,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and shall eat of the bread in order to obtain money being a member of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the church, knowing himself to be a hypocrite, or who shall do it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; jestingly, trifling with the ordinance: such a person would be eating    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and drinking unworthily, and he will be condemned. The sense of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; passage is, not &quot;damnation&quot;, as our version reads it, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;condemnation.&quot; There can be no doubt that members of the church,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; coming to the Lord&#8217;s table in an unworthy manner, do receive    <br \/>&#160;&#160; condemnation. They are condemned for so doing, and the Lord is grieved.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; If they have any conscience at all, they ought to feel their sin; and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; if not, they may expect the chastisements of God to visit them. But, O    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sinner, as to coming to Christ,&#8211;which is a very different thing from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; coming to the Lord&#8217;s table,&#8211;as to coming to Christ, the more unworthy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you feel yourself to be, the better. Come, thou filthy one, for Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; can wash thee. Come, thou loathsome one, for Christ can beautify thee.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Come utterly ruined and undone, for in Jesus Christ there is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; strength and salvation which thy case requires. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Notice, once again, that this woman touched the Master very   <br \/>&#160;&#160; tremblingly, and it was only a hurried touch, but still it was the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; touch of faith. Oh, beloved, to lay hold on Christ! Be thankful if you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; do but get near Him for a few minutes. &quot;Abide with me,&quot; should be your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; prayer; but oh, if He only give you a glimpse, be thankful! Remember    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that a touch healed the woman. She did not embrace Christ by the hour    <br \/>&#160;&#160; together. She had but a touch, and she was healed; and oh, may you have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a sight of Jesus now, my beloved! Though it be but a glimpse, yet it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will gladden and cheer your souls. Perhaps you are waiting on Christ,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; desiring His company, and while you are turning it over in your mind    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you are asking, &quot;Will He ever shine upon me? Will He ever speak loving    <br \/>&#160;&#160; words to me? Will He ever let me sit at His feet? Will He ever permit    <br \/>&#160;&#160; me to lean my head upon His bosom?&quot; Come and try Him. Though you should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shake like an aspen leaf, yet come. They sometimes come best who come    <br \/>&#160;&#160; most tremblingly, for when the creature is lowest then is the Creator    <br \/>&#160;&#160; highest, and when in our own esteem we are less than nothing and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vanity, then is Christ the more fair and lovely in our eyes. One of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; best ways of climbing to heaven is on our hands and knees. At any rate,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; there is no fear of falling when we are in that position, for&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;He that is down need fear no fall.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let your lowliness of heart, your sense of utter nothingness, instead   <br \/>&#160;&#160; of disqualifying you, be a sweet medium for leading you to receive more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Christ. The more empty I am, the more room is there for my Master.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The more I lack, the more He will give me. The more I feel my sickness,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the more shall I adore and bless Him when He makes me whole. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; You see, the woman did really touch Christ, and so I come back to that.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Whatever infirmity there was in the touch, it was a real touch of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; faith. She did reach Christ Himself. She did not touch Peter; that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; would have been of no use to her, any more than it is for the parish    <br \/>&#160;&#160; priest to tell you that you are regenerate when your life soon proves    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that you are not. She did not touch John or James; that would have been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of no more good to her than it is for you to be touched by a bishop&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hands, and to be told that you are confirmed in the faith, when you are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not even a believer, and therefore have no faith to be confirmed in.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; She touched the Master Himself; and, I pray you, do not be content    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unless you can do the same. Put out the hand of faith, and touch    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ. Rest on Him. Rely on His bloody sacrifice, His dying love, His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rising power, His ascended plea; and as you rest in Him, your vital    <br \/>&#160;&#160; touch, however feeble, will certainly give you the blessing your soul    <br \/>&#160;&#160; needs. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This brings us to the second part of our discourse, upon which I will   <br \/>&#160;&#160; say only a little. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. The woman in the crowd did touch Jesus, and, having done so, she   <br \/>&#160;&#160; received virtue from Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The healing energy streamed at once through the finger of faith into   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the woman. In Christ, there is healing for all spiritual diseases.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; There is a speedy healing, a healing which will not take months nor    <br \/>&#160;&#160; years, but which is complete in one second. There is in Christ a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sufficient healing, though your diseases should be multiplied beyond    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all bounds. There is in Christ an all-conquering power to drive out    <br \/>&#160;&#160; every ill. Though, like this woman, you baffle physicians, and your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; case is reckoned desperate beyond all parallel, yet a touch of Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will heal you. What a precious, glorious gospel I have to preach to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sinners! If they touch Jesus, no matter though the devil himself were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in them, that touch of faith would drive the devil out of them. Though    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you were like the man into whom there had entered a legion of devils,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the word of Jesus would cast them all into the deep, and you should sit    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at His feet, clothed, and in your right mind. There is no excess or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; extravagance of sin which the power of Jesus Christ cannot overcome. If    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thou canst believe, whatever thou mayest have been, thou shalt be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saved. If thou canst believe, though thou hast been lying in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; scarlet dye till the warp and woof of thy being are ingrained    <br \/>&#160;&#160; therewith, yet shall the precious blood of Jesus make thee white as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; snow. Though thou art become black as hell itself, and only fit to be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cast into the pit, yet if thou trustest Jesus, that simple faith shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; give to thy soul the healing which shall make thee fit to tread the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; streets of heaven, and to stand before Jehovah-Rophi&#8217;s face, magnifying    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord that healeth thee. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And now, child of God, I want you to learn the same lesson. Very   <br \/>&#160;&#160; likely, when you came in here, you said,&#8211;&quot;Alas! I feel very dull; my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spirituality is at a very low ebb; the place is hot, and I do not feel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; prepared to hear; the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak; I shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have no holy enjoyment to-day!&quot; Why not? Why, the touch of Jesus could    <br \/>&#160;&#160; make you live if you were dead, and surely it will stir the life that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is in you, though it may seem to you to be expiring! Now, struggle    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hard, my beloved, to get at Jesus! May the Eternal Spirit come and help    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you, and may you yet find that your dull, dead times can soon become    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your best times. Oh! what a blessing it is that God takes the beggar up    <br \/>&#160;&#160; from the dunghill! He does not raise us when He sees us already up, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when He finds us lying on the dunghill, then He delights to lift us up,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and set us among princes. Or ever you are aware, your soul may become    <br \/>&#160;&#160; like the chariots of Ammi-nadib. Up from the depths of heaviness to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; very heights of ecstatic worship you may mount as in a single moment if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you can but touch Christ crucified. View Him yonder, with streaming    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wounds, with thorn-crowned head, as in all the majesty of His misery,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He expires for you! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Alas!&quot; say you, &quot;I have a thousand doubts tonight.&quot; Ah! but your   <br \/>&#160;&#160; doubts will soon vanish when you draw nigh to Christ. He never doubts    <br \/>&#160;&#160; who feels the touch of Christ, at least, not while the touch lasts, for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; observe this woman! She felt in her body that she was made whole, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so shall you, if you will only come into contact with the Lord. Do not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wait for evidences, but come to Christ for evidences. If you cannot    <br \/>&#160;&#160; even dream of a good thing in yourselves, come to Jesus Christ as you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; did at the first. Come as if you never had come at all. Come to Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as a sinner, and your doubts shall flee away. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Ay!&quot; saith another, &quot;but my sins come to my remembrance, my sins since   <br \/>&#160;&#160; conversion.&quot; Well, return to Jesus, when your guilt seems to return.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The fountain is still open, and that fountain, you will remember, is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not only open for sinners, but for saints; for what saith the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Scripture&#8211;&quot;There shall be a fountain opened for the house of David and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for the inhabitants of Jerusalem,&quot;&#8211;that is, for you, churchmembers,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for you, believers in Jesus? The fountain is still open. Come, beloved,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come to Jesus anew, and whatever be your sins, or doubts, or heaviness,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they shall all depart as soon as you can touch your Lord. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; III. And now the last point is&#8211;and I will not detain you long upon   <br \/>&#160;&#160; it&#8211;if somebody shall touch Jesus, the Lord will know it. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I do not know your names; a great number of you are perfect strangers   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to me. It matters nothing; your name is &quot;somebody&quot;, and Christ will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; know you. You are a total stranger, perhaps, to everybody in this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; place; but if you get a blessing, there will be two who will know    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it,&#8211;you will, and Christ will. Oh! if you should look to Jesus this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; day, it may not be registered in our church-book, and we may not hear    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of it; but still it will be registered in the courts of heaven, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they will set all the bells of the New Jerusalem a-ringing, and all the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; harps of angels will take a fresh lease of music as soon as they know    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that you are born again. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;With joy the Father doth approve <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The fruit of His eternal love; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The Son with joy looks down and sees <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The purchase of His agonies; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The Spirit takes delight to view <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The holy soul He formed anew; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And saints and angels join to sing <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The growing empire of their King.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Somebody!&quot; I do not know the woman&#8217;s name; I do not know who the man   <br \/>&#160;&#160; is, but&#8211;&quot;Somebody!&quot;&#8211;God&#8217;s electing love rests on thee, Christ&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; redeeming blood was shed for thee, the Spirit has wrought a work in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thee, or thou wouldst not have touched Jesus; and all this Jesus knows. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; It is a consoling thought that Christ not only knows the great children   <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the family, but He also knows the little ones. This stands fast:    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;The Lord knoweth them that are His,&quot; whether they are only brought to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; know Him now, or whether they have known Him for fifty years. &quot;The Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; knoweth them that are His,&quot; and if I am a part of Christ&#8217;s body, I may    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be but the foot, but the Lord knows the foot; and the head and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heart in heaven feel acutely when the foot on earth is bruised. If you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have touched Jesus, I tell you that amidst the glories of angels, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the everlasting hallelujahs of all the blood-bought, He has found time    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to hear your sigh, to receive your faith, and to give you an answer of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; peace. All the way from heaven to earth there has rushed a mighty    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stream of healing virtue, which has come from Christ to you. Since you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have touched Him, the healing virtue has touched you. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now, as Jesus knows of your salvation, He wishes other people to know   <br \/>&#160;&#160; of it, and that is why He has put it into my heart to say,&#8211;Somebody    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has touched the Lord. Where is that somebody? Somebody, where are you?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Somebody, where are you? You have touched Christ, though with a feeble    <br \/>&#160;&#160; finger, and you are saved. Let us know it. It is due to us to let us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; know. You cannot guess what joy it gives us when we hear of sick ones    <br \/>&#160;&#160; being healed by our Master. Some of you, perhaps, have known the Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for months, and you have not yet come forward to make an avowal of it;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we beg you to do so. You may come forward tremblingly, as this woman    <br \/>&#160;&#160; did; you may perhaps say, &quot;I do not know what I should tell you.&quot; Well,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you must tell us what she told the Lord; she told Him all the truth. We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; do not want anything else. We do not desire any sham experience. We do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not want you to manufacture feelings like somebody else&#8217;s that you have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; read of in a book. Come and tell us what you have felt. We shall not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ask you to tell us what you have not felt, or what you do not know.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; But, if you have touched Christ, and you have been healed, I ask it,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and I think I may ask it as your duty, as well as a favour to us, to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come and tell us what the Lord hath done for your soul. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And you, believers, when you come to the Lord&#8217;s table, if you draw near   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to Christ, and have a sweet season, tell it to your brethren. Just as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when Benjamin&#8217;s brethren went down to Egypt to buy corn, they left    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Benjamin at home, but they took a sack for Benjamin, so you ought    <br \/>&#160;&#160; always to take a word home for the sick wife at home, or the child who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot come out. Take home food for those of the family who cannot come    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for it. God grant that you may have always something sweet to tell of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; what you have experimentally known of precious truth, for while the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sermon may have been sweet in itself, it comes with a double power when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you can add, &quot;and there was a savour about it which I enjoyed, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which made my heart leap for joy&quot;! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Whoever you may be, my dear friend, though you may be nothing but a   <br \/>&#160;&#160; poor &quot;somebody&quot;, yet if you have touched Christ, tell others about it,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in order that they may come and touch Him, too; and the Lord bless you,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for Christ&#8217;s sake! Amen.    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p> CHRIST AND HIS TABLE-COMPANIONS &quot;And when the hour was come, He sat down, and   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; the twelve apostles with Him.&quot;&#8211;Luke xxii. 14. <\/p>\n<p>CHRIST AND HIS TABLE-COMPANIONS. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; THE outward ordinances of the Christian religion are but two, and those   <br \/>&#160;&#160; two are exceedingly simple, yet neither of them has escaped human    <br \/>&#160;&#160; alteration; and, alas! much mischief has been wrought, and much of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; precious teaching has been sacrificed, by these miserable perversions.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; For instance, the ordinance of baptism as it was administered by the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; apostles betokened the burial of the believer with Christ, and his    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rising with his Lord into newness of life. Men must needs exchange    <br \/>&#160;&#160; immersion for sprinkling, and the intelligent believer for an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unconscious child, and so the ordinance is slain. The other sacred    <br \/>&#160;&#160; institution, the Lord&#8217;s supper, like believers&#8217; baptism, is simplicity    <br \/>&#160;&#160; itself. It consists of bread broken, and wine poured out, these viands    <br \/>&#160;&#160; being eaten and drunk at a festival&#8211;a delightful picture of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sufferings of Christ for us, and of the fellowship which the saints    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have with one another and with Him. But this ordinance, also, has been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tampered with by men. By some, the wine has been taken away altogether,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; or reserved only for a priestly caste; and the simple bread has been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; changed into a consecrated host. As for the table, the very emblem of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellowship in all nations&#8211;for what expresses fellowship better than    <br \/>&#160;&#160; surrounding a table, and eating and drinking together?&#8211;this, forsooth,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; must be put away, and an altar must be erected, and the bread and wine    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which were to help us to remember the Lord Jesus are changed into an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;unbloody sacrifice&quot;, and so the whole thing becomes an unscriptural    <br \/>&#160;&#160; celebration instead of a holy institution for fellowship. Let us be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; warned by these mistakes of others never either to add to or take from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Word of God so much as a single jot or tittle. Keep upon the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; foundation of the Scriptures, and you stand safely, and have an answer    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for those who question you; yea, and an answer which you may render at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the bar of God; but once allow your own whim, or fancy, or taste, or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your notion of what is proper and right, to rule you, instead of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Word of God, and you have entered upon a dangerous course, and unless    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the grace of God prevent, boundless mischief may ensue. The Bible is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our standard authority; none may turn from it. The wise man says, in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Ecclesiastes, &quot;I counsel thee to keep the King&#8217;s commandment;&quot; we would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; repeat his advice, and add to it the sage precept of the mother of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord, at Cana, when she said, &quot;Whatsoever He saith unto you, do it.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We shall now ask you in contemplation to gaze upon the first   <br \/>&#160;&#160; celebration of the Lord&#8217;s supper. You perceive at once that there was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; no altar in that large upper room. There was a table, a table with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bread and wine upon it, but no altar; and Jesus did not kneel,&#8211;there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is no sign of that,&#8211;but He sat down, I doubt not, after the Oriental    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mode of sitting, that is to say, by a partial reclining, He sat down    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with His apostles. Now, He who ordained this supper knew how it ought    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be observed, and as the first celebration of it was the model for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all others, we may be assured that the right way of coming to this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion is to assemble around a table, and to sit or recline while we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; eat and drink together of bread and wine in remembrance of our Lord. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; While we see the Saviour sitting down with His twelve apostles, let us   <br \/>&#160;&#160; enquire, first, what did this make them? Then, secondly, what did this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; imply? And, thirdly, what further may we legitimately infer from it? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. First, then, we see the Great Master, the Lord, the King in Zion,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; sitting down at the table to eat and drink with His twelve    <br \/>&#160;&#160; apostles,&#8211;what did this make them? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Note what they were at first. By His first calling of them they became   <br \/>&#160;&#160; His followers, for He said unto them, &quot;Follow Me.&quot; That is to say, they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were convinced, by sundry marks and signs, that He was the Messias, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they, therefore, became His followers. Followers may be at a great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; distance from their leader, and enjoy little or no intercourse with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; him, for the leader may be too great to be approached by the common    <br \/>&#160;&#160; members of his band. In the case of the disciples, their following was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unusually close, for their Master was very condescending, but still    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their intercourse was not always of the most intimate kind at first,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and therefore it was not at the first that He called them to such a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; festival as this supper. They began with following, and this is where    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we must begin. If we cannot enter as yet into closer association with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our Lord, we may, at least, know His voice by His Spirit, and follow    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him as the sheep follow the shepherd. The most important way of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; following Him is to trust Him, and then diligently to imitate His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; example. This is a good beginning, and it will end well, for those who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; walk with Him to-day shall rest with Him hereafter; those who tread in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His footsteps shall sit on His throne. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Being His followers, they came next to be His disciples. A man may have   <br \/>&#160;&#160; been a follower for a while, and yet may not have reached discipleship.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; A follower may follow blindly, and hear a great deal which he does not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; understand; but when he becomes a disciple, his Master instructs him,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and leads him into truth. To explain, to expound, to solve    <br \/>&#160;&#160; difficulties, to clear away doubts, and to make truth intelligible, is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the office of a teacher amongst his disciples. Now, it was a very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blessed thing for the followers to become disciples, but still    <br \/>&#160;&#160; disciples are not necessarily so intimate with their Master as to sit    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and eat with him. Socrates and Plato knew many in the Academy whom they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; did not invite to their homes. My brethren, if Jesus had but called us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be His disciples, and no more we should have had cause for great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thankfulness; if we had been allowed to sit at His feet, and had never    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shared in such an entertainment as that before us, we ought to have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been profoundly grateful; but now that He has favoured us with a yet    <br \/>&#160;&#160; higher place, let us never be unfaithful to our discipleship. Let us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; daily learn of Jesus, let us search the Bible to see what it was that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He taught us, and then by the aid of His Holy Spirit let us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; scrupulously obey. Yet is there a something beyond. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Being the Lord&#8217;s disciples, the chosen ones next rose to become His   <br \/>&#160;&#160; servants, which is a step in advance, since the disciple may be but a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; child, but the servant has some strength, has received some measure of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; training, and renders somewhat in return. Their Master gave them power    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to preach the gospel, and to execute commissions of grace, and happy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were they to be called to wait upon such a Master, and aid in setting    <br \/>&#160;&#160; up His kingdom. My dear brethren and sisters, are you all Christ&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; servants consciously? If so, though the service may at times seem heavy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; because your faith is weak, yet be very thankful that you are servants    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at all, for it is better to serve God than to reign over all the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; kingdoms of this world. It is better to be the lowest servant of Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; than to be the greatest of men, and remain slaves to your own lusts, or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be mere men-pleasers. His yoke is easy, and His burden is light. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; servant of such a Master should rejoice in his calling; yet is there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; something beyond. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Towards the close of His life, our Master revealed the yet nearer   <br \/>&#160;&#160; relation of His disciples, and uttered words like these: &quot;Henceforth I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; call you not servants, for the servant knoweth not what his lord doeth,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but I have called you friends, for all things that I have heard of My    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Father I have made known unto you.&quot; This is a great step in advance.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The friend, however humble, enjoys much familiarity with his friend.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The friend is told what the servant need not know. The friend enjoys a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion to which the mere servant, disciple, or follower has not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; attained. May we know this higher association, this dearer bond of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; relationship! May we not be content without the enjoyment of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Master&#8217;s friendship! &quot;He that hath friends must show himself friendly;&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and if we would have Christ&#8217;s friendship, we must befriend His cause,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His truth, and His people. He is a Friend that loveth at all times; if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you would enjoy His friendship, take care to abide in Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now note that, on the night before His Passion, our Lord led His   <br \/>&#160;&#160; friends a step beyond ordinary friendship. The mere follower does not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sit at table with his leader; the disciple does not claim to be a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellow-commoner with his master; the servant is seldom entertained at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the same table with his lord; the befriended one is not always invited    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be a guest; but here the Lord Jesus made His chosen ones to be His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; table-companions; He lifted them up to sit with Him at the same table,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to eat of the same bread, and drink of the same cup with Himself. From    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that position He has never degraded them; they were representative men,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and where the Lord placed them, He has placed all His saints    <br \/>&#160;&#160; permanently. All the Lord&#8217;s believing people are sitting, by sacred    <br \/>&#160;&#160; privilege and calling, at the same table with Jesus, for truly, our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellowship is with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ. He has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come into our hearts, and He sups with us, and we with Him; we are His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; table-companions, and shall eat bread with Him in the kingdom of God. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Table-companions, then, that is the answer to the question, &quot;What did   <br \/>&#160;&#160; this festival make the apostles?&quot; This festival shows all the members    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the Church of Christ to be, through divine grace, table-companions    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with one another, and with Christ Jesus their Lord. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. So now we shall pass on, in the second place, to ask, what did this   <br \/>&#160;&#160; table-companionship imply? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; It implied, first of all, mutual fidelity. This solemn eating and   <br \/>&#160;&#160; drinking together was a pledge of faithfulness to one another. It must    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have been so understood, or otherwise there would have been no force in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the complaint: &quot;He that eateth bread with Me hath lifted up his heel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; against Me.&quot; Did not this mean that, because Judas had eaten bread with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; his Lord, he was bound not to betray Him, and so to lift up his heel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; against Him? This was the seal of an implied covenant; having eaten    <br \/>&#160;&#160; together, they were under bond to be faithful to one another. Now, as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; many of you as are really the servants and friends of Christ may know    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that the Lord Jesus, in eating with you at His table, pledges Himself    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be faithful to you. The Master never plays the Judas,&#8211;the Judas is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; among the disciples. There is nothing traitorous in the Lord; He is not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; only able to keep that which we have committed to Him, but He is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; faithful, and will do it. He will be faithful, not only as to the great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and main matter, but also to every promise He has made. Know ye then,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; assuredly, that your Master would not have asked you to His table to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; eat bread with Him if He intended to desert you. He has received you as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His honoured guests, and fed you upon His choicest meat, and thereby He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; does as good as say to you, &quot;I will never leave you, come what may, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in all times of trial, and depression, and temptation, I will be at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your right hand, and you shall not be moved, and to the very last you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall prove My faithfulness and truth.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But, beloved, you do not understand this supper unless you are also   <br \/>&#160;&#160; reminded of the faithfulness that is due from you to your Lord, for the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; feast is common, and the pledge mutual. In eating with Him, you plight    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your troth to the Crucified, Beloved, how have you kept your pledge    <br \/>&#160;&#160; during the past year? You have eaten bread with Him, and I trust that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in your hearts you have never gone so far aside as to lift up your heel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; against Him, but have you always honoured Him as you should? Have you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; acted as guests should have done? Can you remember His love to you, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; put your love to Him side by side with it, without being ashamed? From    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this time forth, may the Holy Ghost work in our souls a jealous    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fidelity to the Well-beloved which shall not permit our hearts to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wander from Him, or suffer our zeal for His glory to decline! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Again, remember that there is in this solemn eating and drinking   <br \/>&#160;&#160; together a pledge of fidelity between the disciples themselves, as well    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as between the disciples and their Lord. Judas would have been a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; traitor if he had betrayed Peter, or John, or James: so, when ye come    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to the one table, my brethren, ye must henceforth be true to one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; another. All bickerings and jealousies must cease, and a generous and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; affectionate spirit must rule in every bosom. If you hear any speak    <br \/>&#160;&#160; against those you have communed with, reckon that, as you have eaten    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bread with them, you are bound to defend their reputations. If any    <br \/>&#160;&#160; railing accusation be raised against any brother in Christ, reckon that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; his character is as dear to you as your own. Let a sacred Freemasonry    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be maintained among us, if I may liken a far higher and more spiritual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; union to anything which belongs to common life. Ye are members one of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; another, see that ye love each other with a pure heart fervently.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Drinking of the same cup, eating of the same bread, you set forth    <br \/>&#160;&#160; before the world a token which I trust is not meant to be a lie. As it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; truly shows Christ&#8217;s faithfulness to you, so let it as really typify    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your faithfulness to Christ, and to one another. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In the next place, eating and drinking together was a token of mutual   <br \/>&#160;&#160; confidence. They, in sitting there together, voluntarily avowed their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; confidence in each other. Those disciples trusted their Master, they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; knew He would not mislead or deceive them. They trusted each other    <br \/>&#160;&#160; also, for when they were told that one of them would betray their Lord,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they did not suspect each other, but each one said, &quot;Lord, is it I?&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; They had much confidence in one another, and the Lord Jesus, as we have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; seen, had placed great confidence in them by treating them as His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; friends. He had even trusted them with the great secret of His coming    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sufferings, and death. They were a trustful company who sat at that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; supper-table. Now, beloved, when you gather around this table, come in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the spirit of implicit trustfulness in the Lord Jesus. If you are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; suffering, do not doubt His love, but believe that He works all things    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for your good. If you are vexed with cares, prove your confidence by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; leaving them entirely in your Redeemer&#8217;s hands. It will not be a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; festival of communion to you if you come here with suspicions about    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your Master. No, show your confidence as you eat of the bread with Him.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Let there also be a brotherly confidence in each other. Grievous would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it be to see a spirit of suspicion and distrust among you. Suspicion is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the death of fellowship. The moment one Christian imagines that another    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thinks hardly of him, though there may not be the slightest truth in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that thought, yet straightway the root of bitterness is planted. Let us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; believe in one another&#8217;s sincerity, for we may rest assured that each    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of our brethren deserves to be trusted more than we do. Turn your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; suspicions within, and if you must suspect, suspect your own heart; but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when you meet with those who have communed with you at this table, say    <br \/>&#160;&#160; within yourself, &quot;If such can deceive me, and alas I they may, then    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will I be content to be imposed upon rather than entertain perpetual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mistrust of my fellow-Christians.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; A third meaning of the assembling around the table is this, hearty   <br \/>&#160;&#160; fraternity. Our Lord, in sitting down at the table with His disciples,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; showed Himself to be one with them, a Brother indeed. We do not read    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that there was any order of priority by which their seats were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; arranged. Of course, if the Grand Chamberlain at Rome had arranged the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; table, he would have placed Peter at the right hand of Christ, and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; other apostles in graduated positions according to the dignity of their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; future bishoprics, but all that we know about their order is this, that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; John sat next to the Saviour, and leaned upon His bosom, and that Peter    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sat a good way off,&#8211;we feel sure he did, because it is said that he    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;beckoned&quot; unto John; if he had sat next to him, he would have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whispered to him, but he beckoned to him, and so he must have been some    <br \/>&#160;&#160; way down the table, if, indeed, there was any &quot;down&quot; or &quot;up&quot; in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; arrangement of the guests. We believe the fact was, that they sat there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; on a sacred equality, the Lord Jesus, the EIder Brother, among them,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and all else arranged according to those words, &quot;One is your Master,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; even Christ, and all ye are brethren.&quot; Let us feel, then, in coming to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the table again at this time, that we are linked in ties sacred    <br \/>&#160;&#160; relationship with Jesus Christ, who is exalted in heaven, and that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; through Him our relationship with our fellow-Christians is very near    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and intimate. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Oh, that Christian brotherhood were more real! The very word &quot;brother&quot;   <br \/>&#160;&#160; has come to be ridiculed as a piece of hypocrisy, and well it may, for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it is mostly used as a cant phrase, and in many cases means very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; little. But it ought to mean something. You have no right to come to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that table unless you really feel that those who are washed in Jesus&#8217;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blood have a claim upon the love of your heart, and the activity of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your benevolence. What! are ye to live together for ever in heaven, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will ye show no affection for one another here below? It is your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Master&#8217;s new command that ye love one another; will ye disregard it? He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has given this as the badge of Christians: &quot;By this shall all men know    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that ye are My disciples,&quot;&#8211;not if ye wear a gold cross, but&#8211;&quot;if ye    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have love one to another.&quot; That is the Christian&#8217;s badge of his being,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in very truth, a disciple of Jesus Christ. Here, at this table, we find    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fraternity. Whosoever eateth of this sacred supper declares himself to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be one of a brotherhood in Christ, a brotherhood striving for the same    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cause, having sincere sympathy, being members of each other, and all of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them members of the body of Christ. God make this to be a fact    <br \/>&#160;&#160; throughout Christendom even now, and how will the world marvel as it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cries, &quot;See how these Christians love one another!&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But this table means more yet: it signifies common enjoyment. Jesus   <br \/>&#160;&#160; eats, and they eat, the same bread. He drinks, and they drink, of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; same cup. There is no distinction in the viands. What meaneth this?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Doth it not say to us that the joy of Christ is the joy might remain in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you, and that your joy might be full&quot;? The very joy that delights    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ is that which He prepares for His people. You, if you are a true    <br \/>&#160;&#160; believer, have sympathy in Christ&#8217;s joy, you delight to see His kingdom    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come, the truth advanced, sinners saved, grace glorified, holiness    <br \/>&#160;&#160; promoted, God exalted; this also is His delight. But my dear brethren    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and fellow-professors, are you sure that your chief joy is the same as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ&#8217;s? Are you certain that the mainstay of your life is the same as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that which was His meat and His drink, namely, to do the will of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heavenly Father? If not, I am afraid you have no business at this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; table; but if it be so, and you come to the table, then I pray that you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; may share the joy of Christ. May you joy in Him as He joys in you, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so may your fellowship be sweet! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Lastly, on this point, the feast at the one table indicated familiar   <br \/>&#160;&#160; affection. It is the child&#8217;s place to sit at the table with its    <br \/>&#160;&#160; parents, for there affection rules. It is the place of honour to sit at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the table: &quot;Martha served, but Lazarus was one of them that sat at the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; table.&quot; But the honour is such as love and not fear suggests. Men at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the table often reveal their minds more fully than elsewhere. If you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; want to understand a man, you do not go to see him at the Stock    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Exchange, or follow him into the market; for there he keeps himself to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; himself; but you go to his table, and there he unbosoms himself. Now,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord Jesus Christ sat at the table with His disciples. Twas a meal;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; twas a meal of a homely kind; intimate intercourse ruled the hour. Oh,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; brethren and sisters, I am afraid we have come to this table sometimes,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and Christ, and then it has been an empty formality and nothing more. I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thank God that, coming to this table every Sabbath-day, as some of us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; do, and have done for many years, we have yet for the most part enjoyed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the nearest communion with Christ here that we have ever known, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have a thousand times blessed His name for this ordinance. Still, there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is such a thing as only eating the bread and drinking the wine, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; losing all the sacred meaning thereof. Do pray the Lord to reveal    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself to you. Ask that it may not be a dead form to you, but that now    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in very deed you may give to Christ your heart, while He shall show to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you His hands and His side, and make known to you His agonies and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; death, wherewith He redeemed you from the wrath to come. All this, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vastly more, is the teaching of the table at which Jesus sat with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; twelve. I have often wondered why the Church of Rome does not buy up    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all those pictures by one of its most renowned painters, Leonardo da    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Vinci, in which our Lord is represented as sitting at the table with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His disciples, for these are a contradiction of the Popish doctrine on    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this subject. As long as that picture remains on the wall, and as long    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as copies of it are spread everywhere, the Church of Rome stands    <br \/>&#160;&#160; convicted of going against the teaching of the earlier Church by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; setting up an altar when she confesses herself that aforetime it was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not considered to be an altar of sacrifice but a table of fellowship,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at which the Lord did not kneel, nor stand as an officiating priest,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but at which He and His disciples sat. We, at least, have no rebukes to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fear from antiquity, for we follow, and mean to follow, the primitive    <br \/>&#160;&#160; method. Our Lord has given us commandment to do this until He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; comes,&#8211;not to alter it, but just to &quot;do this,&quot; and nothing else, in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the same manner until He shall come. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; III. We will draw to a close by asking&#8211;What further may be inferred   <br \/>&#160;&#160; from this sitting of Christ with his disciples at the table? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I answer: first, there may be inferred from it the equality of all the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; saints. There were here twelve apostles. Their apostleship, however, is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not concerned in the matter. When the Lord&#8217;s supper was celebrated    <br \/>&#160;&#160; after all the apostles had gone to heaven, was there to be any    <br \/>&#160;&#160; alteration because the apostles had gone? Not at all. Believers are to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; do this in remembrance of their Lord until He shall come. There was no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; command for a change when the first apostles were all gone from the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Church: No, it was to be the same still,&#8211;bread and wine and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; surrounding of the table, until the Lord came. I gather, then, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; equality of all saints. There is a difference in office, there was a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; difference in miraculous gift, and there are great differences in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; growth of grace; but still, in the household of God, all saints,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whether apostles, pastors, teachers, deacons, elders, or private    <br \/>&#160;&#160; members, being all equal, eat at one table. There is but one bread,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; there is but one juice of the vine here. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; It is only in the Church of God that those words, so wild politically,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; can ever be any more than a dream, &quot;Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; There you have them, where Jesus is; not in a republic, but in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, where all rule and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dominion are vested in Him, and all of us willingly acknowledge Him as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our glorious Head, and all we are brethren. Never fall into the idea    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that older believers were of a superior nature to ourselves. Do not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; talk of Saint Paul, and Saint Matthew, and Saint Mark, unless you are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; prepared to speak of Saint William and Saint Jane sitting over yonder,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for if they be in Christ they are as truly saints as those first saints    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were, and I ween there may be some who have attained even to higher    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saintship than many whom tradition has canonized. The heights of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saintship are by grace open to us all, and the Lord invites us to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ascend. Do not think that what the Lord wrought in the early saints    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot be wrought in you. It is because you think so that you do not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pray for it, and because you do not pray for it you do not attain it.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The grace of God sustained the apostles; that grace is not less to-day    <br \/>&#160;&#160; than it was then. The Lord&#8217;s arm is not shortened; His power is not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; straitened. If we can but believe, and be as earnest as those first    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saints were, we shall subdue kingdoms yet, and the day shall come when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the gods of Hindooism, and the falsehoods of Mohammed, and the lies of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Rome, shall as certainly be overthrown as were the ancient philosophies    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and the classic idolatries of Greece and Rome by the teaching of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; first ministers of Christ. There is the same table for you, and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; same food is there in emblem, and grace can make you like those holy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; men, for you are bought with the same blood, and quickened by the same    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Spirit. Believe only, for all things are possible to him that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; believeth. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Another inference, only to be hinted at, is this, that the wants of the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Church in all ages will be the same, and the supplies for the Church&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wants will never vary. There will be the table still, and the table    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with the same viands upon it,&#8211;bread still, nothing more than bread for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; food; wine still, nothing less than wine for drink. The Church will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; always want the same food, the same Christ, the same gospel. Out on ye,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; traitors, who tell us that we are to shape our gospel to suit this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; enlightened nineteenth century! Out on ye, false-hearts, who would have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us tone down the everlasting truth that shall outlive the sun, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; moon, and stars, to suit your boasted culture, which is but varnished    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ignorance! No, that truth which of old was mighty through God to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pulling down of strongholds, is mighty still, and we will maintain it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to the death; the Church wants the doctrines of grace to-day as much as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when Paul, or Augustine, or Calvin preached them; the Church wants    <br \/>&#160;&#160; justification by faith, the substitutionary atonement, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; regeneration, and divine sovereignty to be preached from her pulpits as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; much as in days of yore, and by God&#8217;s grace she shall have them, too. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Lastly, there is in this truth, that Christ has brought all His   <br \/>&#160;&#160; disciples into the position of table-companions, a prophecy that this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall be the portion of all His people for ever. In heaven there cannot    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be less of privilege than on earth. It cannot be that in the celestial    <br \/>&#160;&#160; state believers will be degraded from what they have been below. What    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were they, then, below? Table-companions. What shall they be in heaven    <br \/>&#160;&#160; above? Table-companions still, and blessed is he that shall eat bread    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the kingdom of God. &quot;Many shall come from the east and from the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; west, and shall sit down with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; kingdom of God,&quot; and the Lord Jesus shall be at the head of the table.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Now, what will His table of joy be? Set your imagination to work, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; think what will be His festival of soul when His reward shall be all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; before Him, and His triumph all achieved. Have ye imagined it? Can ye    <br \/>&#160;&#160; conceive it? Whatever it is, you shall share in it. I repeat those    <br \/>&#160;&#160; words, whatever it is, the least believer shall share in it. You, poor    <br \/>&#160;&#160; working-woman, oh, what a change for you, to sit among princes, near to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your Lord Jesus, all your toil and want for ever ended! And you, sad    <br \/>&#160;&#160; child of suffering, scarcely able to come up to the assembly of God&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people, and going back, perhaps, to that bed of languishing again, you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall have no pains there, but you shall be for ever with the Lord, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the joy of Christ shall be your joy for ever and ever! Oh, can you not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; realize those words of Dr. Watts,&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Yes, and before we rise <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; To that immortal state, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The thoughts of such amazing bliss <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Should constant joys create&quot;? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In the anticipation of the joy that shall be yours, forget your present   <br \/>&#160;&#160; troubles, rise superior to the difficulties of the hour, and if you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot rejoice in the present, yet rejoice in the future, which shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so soon be your own. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We finish with this word of deep regret,&#8211;regret that many here cannot   <br \/>&#160;&#160; understand what we have been talking about, and have no part in it.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; There are some of you who must not come to the table of communion    <br \/>&#160;&#160; because you do not love Christ. You have not trusted Him; you have no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; part in Him. There is no salvation in sacraments. Believe me, they are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but delusions to those who do not come to Christ with their heart. You    <br \/>&#160;&#160; must not come to the outward sign if you have not the thing signified.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Here is the way of Salvation: believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thou shalt be saved. To believe in Him is to trust Him; to use an old    <br \/>&#160;&#160; word, it is recumbency; it is leaning on Him, resting on Him. Here I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; lean, I rest my whole weight on this support before me; do so with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ in a spiritual sense: lean on Him. You have a load of sin, lean    <br \/>&#160;&#160; on Him, sin and all. You are all unworthy, and weak, and perhaps    <br \/>&#160;&#160; miserable; then cast on Him the weakness, the unworthiness, the misery    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and all. Take Him to be all in all to you, and when you have thus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; trusted Him, you will have become His follower; go on by humility to be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His disciple, by obedience to be His servant, by love to be His friend,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and by communion to be His table-companion. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The Lord so lead you, for Jesus&#8217; sake! Amen.   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160; A WORD FROM THE BELOVED&#8217;S OWN MOUTH. &quot;And ye are clean.&quot;&#8211;John xiii. 10. <\/p>\n<p>A WORD FROM THE BELOVED&#8217;S OWN MOUTH. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; AS Gideon&#8217;s fleece was full of dew so that he could wring out the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; moisture, so will a text sometimes be when the Holy Spirit deigns to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; visit His servants through its words. This utterance of our Saviour to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His disciples has been as a wafer made with honey to our taste, and we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; doubt not it may prove equally as sweet to others. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Observe carefully, dear friends, what the eulogium is which is here   <br \/>&#160;&#160; passed upon the Lord&#8217;s beloved disciples: &quot;Ye are clean.&quot; This is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; primeval blessing, so soon lost by our first parents. This is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; virtue, the loss of which shut man out of Paradise, and continues to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shut men out of heaven. The want of cleanness in heart and hands    <br \/>&#160;&#160; condemns sinners to banishment from God, and defiles all their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; offerings. To be clean before God is the desire of every penitent, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the highest aspiration of the most advanced believer. It is what all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the ceremonies and ablutions of the law can never bestow and what    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Pharisees with all their pretensions cannot attain. To be clean is to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be as the angels are, as glorified saints are, yea, as the Father    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself is. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Acceptance with the Lord, safety, happiness, and every blessing, always   <br \/>&#160;&#160; go with cleanness of heart, and he that hath it cannot miss of heaven.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; It seems too high a condition to be ascribed to mortals, yet, by the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; lips of Him who could not err, the disciples were said, without a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; qualifying word, or adverb of degree, to be &quot;clean&quot;; that is to say,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they were perfectly justified in the sight of eternal equity, and were    <br \/>&#160;&#160; regarded as free from every impurity. Dear friends, is this blessing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; yours? Have you ever believed unto righteousness? Have you taken the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord Jesus to be your complete cleansing, your sanctification, your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; redemption? Has the Holy Spirit ever sealed in your peaceful spirit the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gracious testimony, &quot;ye are clean&quot;? The assurance is not confined to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the apostles, for ye also are &quot;complete in Him,&quot; &quot;perfect in Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus,&quot; if ye have indeed by faith received the righteousness of God.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The psalmist said, &quot;Wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow;&quot; if you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have been washed, you are even to that highest and purest degree clean    <br \/>&#160;&#160; before the Lord, and clean now. Oh, that all believers would live up to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their condition and privilege; but alas! too many are pining as if they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were still miserable sinners, and forgetting that they are in Christ    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus forgiven sinners, and therefore ought to be happy in the Lord.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Remember, beloved believer, that, as one with Christ, you are not with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sinners in the gall of bitterness, but with the saints in the land    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which floweth with milk and honey. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Your cleanness is not a thing of degrees, it is not a variable or   <br \/>&#160;&#160; vanishing quantity, it is present, abiding, perfect, you are clean    <br \/>&#160;&#160; through the Word, through the application of the blood of sprinkling to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the conscience, and through the imputation of the righteousness of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord Jesus Christ. Then lift up your head, and sing for joy of heart,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; seeing that your transgression is pardoned, your sin is covered, and in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you Jehovah seeth not iniquity. Dear friends, let not another moment    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pass till by faith in Jesus you have grasped this privilege. Be not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; content to believe that the priceless boon may be had, but lay hold    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon it for yourself. You will find the song of substitution a choice    <br \/>&#160;&#160; song if you are able to sing it. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;In my Surety I am free, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; His dear hands were pierced for me; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; With his spotless vesture on <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Holy as the Holy One.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Much of the force of the sentence before us lies in the Person   <br \/>&#160;&#160; praising. To be certified as clean by the blind priests of Rome, would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be small comfort to a true Christian. To receive the approving verdict    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of our fellow-men is consoling, but it is after all of small    <br \/>&#160;&#160; consequence. The human standard of purity is itself grossly incorrect,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and therefore to be judged by it is but a poor trial, and to be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; acquitted a slender comfort; but the Lord Jesus judges no man after the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; flesh, He came forth from God, and is Himself God, infinitely just and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; good, hence His tests are accurate, and His verdict is absolute. I wot    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whom He pronounces clean is clean indeed. Our Lord was omniscient, He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; would have at once detected the least evil in His disciples; if there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had remained upon the man unpardoned sin, He must have seen it; if any    <br \/>&#160;&#160; relic of condemnation had lingered upon them, He must have detected it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at once, no speck could have escaped His all-discerning eye; yet did He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; say without hesitation of all but Judas, &quot;Ye are clean.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Perhaps they did not catch the full glory of this utterance; possibly   <br \/>&#160;&#160; they missed much of that deep joyous meaning, which is now revealed to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us by the Spirit; otherwise, what bliss to have heard with their own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ears from those sacred lips, so plain, so positive, so sure a testimony    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to their character before God! Yet our hearts need not be filled with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; regret because we cannot hear that ever-blessed voice with these our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; earthly ears, for the testimony of Jesus in the Word is quite as sure    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as the witness of His lips when He spoke among the sons of men, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that testimony is, &quot;Whosoever believeth is justified from all things.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Yes, it is as certain as if you, dear friends, heard the Redeemer    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself speak, that you are free from all condemning sin if you are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; looking with your whole heart to Jesus only as your all in all. What a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; joy is yours and mine! He who is to judge the world in righteousness    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has Himself affirmed us to be clean. By how much the condemnation of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; guilt is black and terrible, by so much the forgiveness of sin is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bright and comforting. Let us rejoice in the Lord, whose indisputable    <br \/>&#160;&#160; judgment has given forth a sentence so joyous, so full of glory. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Jesus declares me clean, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Then clean indeed I am, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; However guilty I have been, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I&#8217;m cleans&#8217;d through the Lamb. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;His lips can never lie, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; His eye is never blind, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; If he acquit, I can defy <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; All hell a fault to find.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; It may cheer us to call to mind the persons praised. They were not   <br \/>&#160;&#160; cherubim and seraphim, but men, and notably they were men compassed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with infirmity. There was Peter, who a few minutes after was forward    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and presumptuous; and, indeed, it is not needful to name them one by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; one, for they all forsook their Master, and fled in His hour of peril.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Not one among them was more than a mere child in grace; they had little    <br \/>&#160;&#160; about them that was apostolic except their commission, they were very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; evidently men of like passions with us; yet their Lord declared them to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be clean, and clean they were. Here is good cheer for those souls who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are hungering after righteousness, and pining because they feel so much    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the burden of indwelling sin; for cleanliness before the Lord is not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; destroyed by our infirmities, nor prevented by our inward temptations.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; We stand in the righteousness of Another. No measure of personal    <br \/>&#160;&#160; weakness, spiritual anxiety, soul conflict, or mental agony can mar our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; acceptance in the Beloved. We may be weak infants, or wandering sheep    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in ourselves, and for both reasons we may be very far from what we wish    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be; but, as God sees us, we are viewed as washed in the blood of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus, and we, even we, are clean every whit. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What a forcible expression, &quot;clean every whit;&quot; every inch, from every   <br \/>&#160;&#160; point of view, in all respects, and to the uttermost degree! Dear    <br \/>&#160;&#160; friend, if a believer, this fact is true to you, even to you. Hesitate    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not to drink, for it is water out of your own cistern, given to you in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the covenant of grace. Think not that it is presumption to believe the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Word, marvellous though it be. You are dealing with a wonderful    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Saviour, who only doeth wonderful things, therefore stand not back on    <br \/>&#160;&#160; account of the greatness of the blessing, but rather believe the more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; readily because the Word is so like to everything the Lord doeth or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; speaketh. Yet when thou hast believed for thyself, and cast every doubt    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to the wind, thou wilt not wonder less, but more, and it will be thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; never-ceasing cry, &quot;Whence is this to me?&quot; How is it that I, who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wallowed with swine, should be made pure as the angels? Delivered from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the foulest guilt, is it indeed possible that I am made the possessor    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of a perfect righteousness? Sing, O heavens, for the Lord hath done it,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and He shall have everlasting praise! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Yes, thou, my soul, e&#8217;en thou art clean, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The Lord has wash&#8217;d thee white as snow, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In spotless beauty thou art seen, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And Jesus hath pronounced thee so. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Despite thy conflicts, doubts, and fears, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Yet art thou still in Christ all fair, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Haste then to wipe away thy tears, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And make His glory all thy care.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The time when the praise was given is not without instruction. The word   <br \/>&#160;&#160; of loving judgment is in the present tense, &quot;Ye are clean.&quot; It is not,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;ye were clean,&quot; that might be a rebuke for purity shamelessly sullied,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a condemnation for wilful neglect, a prophecy of wrath to come; neither    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is it, &quot;ye might have been clean,&quot; that would have been a stern rebuke    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for privileges rejected, and opportunities wasted; nor is it even, &quot;ye    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall be clean,&quot; though that would have been a delightful prophecy of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; good things to come at some distant period; but ye are clean, at this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; moment, in this room, and around this table. Though but just then Peter    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had spoken so rudely, yet he was even then clean. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What comfort is here amid our present sense of imperfection! Our   <br \/>&#160;&#160; cleanness is a matter of this present hour, we are, just here in our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; present condition and our position, &quot;clean every whit.&quot; Why then    <br \/>&#160;&#160; postpone joy? The cause of it is in possession, let the mirth be even    <br \/>&#160;&#160; now overflowing. Much of our heritage is certainly future, but if there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were no other boon tangible to faith in this immediate present, this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; one blessing alone should awaken all our powers to the highest praise.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Are we even now clothed with the fair white linen which is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; righteousness of saints? Yes, tis even so, for&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;We are wash&#8217;d in Jesu&#8217;s blood, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We&#8217;re pardon&#8217;d through His name; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And the good Spirit of our God <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Has sanctified our frame.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Then let us sing a new song unto Jehovah-Tsidkenu, the Lord our   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Righteousness. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; May the Holy Ghost now bear witness with every believer, &quot;and ye are   <br \/>&#160;&#160; clean.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Then may your souls rejoice and sing, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Then may your voices sweetly ring, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; For if your souls through Christ are clear, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What cause have you to faint or fear?&quot;   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p> THE BELIEVER NOT AN ORPHAN. &quot;I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; you.&quot;&#8211;John xiv. 18. <\/p>\n<p>THE BELIEVER NOT AN ORPHAN. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; YOU will notice that the margin reads, &quot;I will not leave you orphans: I   <br \/>&#160;&#160; will come to you.&quot; In the absence of our Lord Jesus Christ, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; disciples were like children deprived of their parents. During the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; three years in which He had been with them, He had solved all their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; difficulties, borne all their burdens, and supplied all their needs.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Whenever a case was too hard or too heavy for them, they took it to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him. When their enemies well nigh overcame them, Jesus came to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rescue, and turned the tide of battle. They were all happy and safe    <br \/>&#160;&#160; enough whilst the Master was with them; He walked in their midst like a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; father amid a large family of children, making all the household glad.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; But now He was about to be taken from them by an ignominious death, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they might well feel that they would be like little children deprived    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of their natural and beloved protector. Our Saviour knew the fear that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was in their hearts, and before they could express it, He removed it by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saying, &quot;You shall not be left alone in this wild and desert world;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; though I be absent in the flesh, yet I will be present with you in a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; more efficacious manner; I will come to you spiritually, and you shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; derive from My spiritual presence even more good than you could have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had from My bodily presence, had I still continued in your midst.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Observe, first, here is an evil averted: &quot;I will not leave you   <br \/>&#160;&#160; orphans;&quot; and, in the second place, here is a consolation provided: &quot;I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will come to you.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. First, here is, an evil averted. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Without their Lord, believers would, apart from the Holy Spirit, be   <br \/>&#160;&#160; like other orphans, unhappy and desolate. Give them what you might,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their loss could not have been recompensed. No number of lamps can make    <br \/>&#160;&#160; up for the sun&#8217;s absence; blaze as they may, it is still night. No    <br \/>&#160;&#160; circle of friends can supply to a bereaved woman the loss of her    <br \/>&#160;&#160; husband; without him, she is still a widow. Even thus, without Jesus,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it is inevitable that the saints should be as orphans; but Jesus has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; promised in the text that we shall not be so; the one only thing that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; can remove the trial He declares shall be ours, &quot;I will come to you.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now remember, that an orphan is one whose parent is dead. This in   <br \/>&#160;&#160; itself is a great sorrow, if there were no other. The dear father, so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; well beloved, was suddenly smitten down with sickness; they watched him    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with anxiety; they nursed him with sedulous care; but he expired. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; loving eye is closed in darkness for them. That active hand will no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; longer toil for the family. That heart and brain will no longer feel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and think for them. Beneath the green grass the father sleeps, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; every time the child surveys that hollowed hillock his heart swells    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with grief. Beloved, we are not orphans in that sense, for our Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus is not dead. It is true He died, for one of the soldiers with a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spear pierced His side, and forthwith came thereout blood and water, a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sure evidence that the pericardium had been pierced, and that the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fountain of life had been broken up. He died, tis certain, but He is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not dead now. Go not to the grave to seek Him. Angel voices say, &quot;He is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not here, for He is risen.&quot; He could not be holden by the bands of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; death. We do not worship a dead Christ, nor do we even think of Him now    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as a corpse. That picture on the wall, which the Romanists paint and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; worship, represents Christ as dead; but oh! it is so good to think of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ as living, remaining in an existence real and true, none the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; less living because He died, but all the more truly full of life    <br \/>&#160;&#160; because He has passed through the portals of the grave, and is now    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reigning for ever. See then, dear friends, the bitter root of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; orphan&#8217;s sorrow is gone from us, for our Jesus is not dead now. No    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mausoleum enshrines His ashes, no pyramid entombs His body, no monument    <br \/>&#160;&#160; records the place of His permanent sepulchre. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;He lives, the great Redeemer lives, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What joy the blest assurance gives!&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We are not orphans, for &quot;the Lord is risen indeed.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The orphan has a sharp sorrow springing out of the death of his parent,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; namely, that he is left alone. He cannot now make appeals to the wisdom    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the parent who could direct him. He cannot run, as once he did, when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; he was weary, to climb the paternal knee. He cannot lean his aching    <br \/>&#160;&#160; head upon the parental bosom. &quot;Father,&quot; he may say, but no voice gives    <br \/>&#160;&#160; an answer. &quot;Mother,&quot; he may cry, but that fond title, which would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; awaken the mother if she slept, cannot arouse her from the bed of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; death. The child is alone, alone as to those two hearts which were its    <br \/>&#160;&#160; best companions. The parent and lover are gone. The little ones know    <br \/>&#160;&#160; what it is to be deserted and forsaken. But we are not so; we are not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; orphans. It is true Jesus is not here in body, but His spiritual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; presence is quite as blessed as His bodily presence would have been.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Nay, it is better, for supposing Jesus Christ to be here in person, you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could not all come and touch the hem of His garment,&#8211;not all at once,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at any rate. There might be thousands waiting all the world over to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; speak with Him; but how could they all reach Him, if He were merely    <br \/>&#160;&#160; here in body? You might all be wanting to tell Him something, but in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the body He could only receive some one or two of you at a time. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But in spirit there is no need for you to stir from the pew, no need to   <br \/>&#160;&#160; say a word; Jesus hears your thoughts talk, and attends to all your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; needs at the same moment. No need to press to get at Him because the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; throng is great, for He is as near to me as He is to you, and as near    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to you as to saints in America, or the islands of the Southern Sea. He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is everywhere present, and all His beloved may talk with Him. You can    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tell Him at this moment the sorrows which you dare not open up to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; anyone else. You will feel that, in declaring them to Him, you have not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; breathed them to the air, but that a real Person has heard you, One as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; real as though you could grip His hand, and could see the loving flash    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of His eye and mark the sympathetic change of His countenance. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Is it not so with you, ye children of a living Saviour? You know it is;   <br \/>&#160;&#160; you have a Friend that sticketh closer than a brother. You have a near    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and dear One, who, in the dead of the night is in the chamber, and in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the heat and burden of the day is in the field of labour. You are not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; orphans, the &quot;Wonderful, Counsellor, the mighty God, the Everlasting    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Father, the Prince of Peace,&quot; is with you; your Lord is here; and, as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; one whom his mother comforteth, so Jesus comforts you. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The orphan, too, has lost the kind hand which took care always that   <br \/>&#160;&#160; food and raiment should be provided, that the table should be well    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stored, and that the house should be kept in comfort. Poor feeble one,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; who will provide for his wants? His father is dead, his mother is gone:    <br \/>&#160;&#160; who will take care of the little wanderer now? But it is not so with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us. Jesus has not left us orphans; His care for His people is no less    <br \/>&#160;&#160; now than it was when He sat at the table with Mary, and Martha, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lazarus, whom &quot;Jesus loved.&quot; Instead of the provisions being less, they    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are even greater, for since the Holy Spirit has been given to us, we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have richer fare and are more indulged with spiritual comforts than    <br \/>&#160;&#160; believers were before the bodily presence of the Master had departed.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Do your souls hunger to-night? Jesus gives you the bread of heaven. Do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you thirst to-night? The waters from the rock cease not to flow. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Come, make your wants, your burdens known.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; You have but to make known your needs to have them all supplied, Christ   <br \/>&#160;&#160; waits to be gracious in the midst of this assembly. He is here with His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; golden hand, opening that hand to supply the wants of every living    <br \/>&#160;&#160; soul. &quot;Oh!&quot; saith one, &quot;I am poor and needy.&quot; Go on with the quotation.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Yet the Lord thinketh upon me.&quot; &quot;Ah&quot; saith another, &quot;I have besought    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord thrice to take away a thorn in the flesh from me.&quot; Remember    <br \/>&#160;&#160; what he said to Paul, &quot;My grace is sufficient for thee.&quot; You are not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; left without the strength you want. The Lord is your Shepherd still. He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will provide for you till He leads you through death&#8217;s dark valley, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; brings you to the shining pastures upon the hill-tops of glory. You are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not destitute, you need not beg an asylum from an ungodly world by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bowing to its demands, or trusting its vain promises, for Jesus will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; never leave you nor forsake you. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The orphan, too, is left without the instruction which is most suitable   <br \/>&#160;&#160; for a child. We may say what we will, but there is none so fit to form    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a child&#8217;s character as the parent. It is a very sad loss for a child to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have lost either father or mother in its early days; for the most    <br \/>&#160;&#160; skilful preceptor, though he may do much, by the blessing of God very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; much, is but a stop-gap, and but half makes up for the original    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ordinance of Providence, that the parent&#8217;s love should fashion the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; child&#8217;s mind. But, dear friends, we are not orphans; we who believe in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus are not left without an education. Jesus is not here Himself, it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is true. I dare say some of you wish you could come on Lord&#8217;s-days, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; listen to Him! Would it not be sweet to look up to this pulpit, and see    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Crucified One, and to hear Him preach? Ah! so you think, but the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; apostle says, &quot;Though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now    <br \/>&#160;&#160; henceforth know we Him no more.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; It is most for your profit that you should receive the Spirit of truth,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; not through the golden vessel of Christ in His actual presence here,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but through the poor earthen vessels of humble servants of God like    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ourselves. At any rate, whether we speak, or an angel from heaven, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; speaker matters not; it is the Spirit of God alone that is the power of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Word, and makes that Word to become vital and quickening to you.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Now, you have the Spirit of God. The Holy Spirit is so given, that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; there is not a truth which you may not understand. You may be led into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the deepest mysteries by His teaching. You may be made to know and to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; comprehend those knotty points in the Word of God which have hitherto    <br \/>&#160;&#160; puzzled you. You have but humbly to look up to Jesus, and His Spirit    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will still teach you. I tell you, though you are poor and ignorant, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perhaps can scarcely read a word in the Bible; for all that, you may be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; better instructed in the things of God than doctors of divinity, if you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; go to the Holy Spirit, and are taught of Him. Those who go only to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; books and to the letter, and are taught of men, may be fools in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sight of God; but those who go to Jesus, and sit at His feet, and ask    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to be taught of His Spirit, shall be wise unto salvation. Blessed be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God, there are not a few amongst us of this sort. We are not left    <br \/>&#160;&#160; orphans; we have an Instructor with us still. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; There is one point in which the orphan is often sorrowfully reminded of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; his orphanhood, namely, in lacking a defender. It is so natural in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; little children, when some big boy molests them, to say, &quot;I&#8217;ll tell my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; father!&quot; How often did we use to say so, and how often have we heard    <br \/>&#160;&#160; from the little ones since, &quot;I&#8217;ll tell mother!&quot; Sometimes, the not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; being able to do this is a much severer loss than we can guess. Unkind    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and cruel men have snatched away from orphans the little which a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; father&#8217;s love had left behind; and in the court of law there has been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; no defender to protect the orphan&#8217;s goods. Had the father been there,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the child would have had its rights, scarcely would any have dared to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; infringe them; but, in the absence of the father, the orphan is eaten    <br \/>&#160;&#160; up like bread, and the wicked of the earth devour his estate. In this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sense, the saints are not orphans. The devil would rob us of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heritage if he could, but there is an Advocate with the Father who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pleads for us. Satan would snatch from us every promise, and tear from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us all the comforts of the covenant; but we are not orphans, and when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; he brings a suit-at-law against us, and thinks that we are the only    <br \/>&#160;&#160; defendants in the case, he is mistaken, for we have an Advocate on    <br \/>&#160;&#160; high. Christ comes in and pleads, as the sinners&#8217; Friend, for us; and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when He pleads at the bar of justice, there is no fear but that His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; plea will be of effect, and our inheritance shall be safe. He has not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; left us orphans. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now I want, without saying many words, to get you who love the Master   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to feel what a very precious thought this is, that you are not alone in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this world; that, if you have no earthly friends, if you have none to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whom you can take your cares, if you are quite lonely so far as outward    <br \/>&#160;&#160; friends are concerned, yet Jesus is with you, is really with you,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; practically with you, able to help you, and ready to do so, and that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you have a good and kind Protector close at hand at this present    <br \/>&#160;&#160; moment, for Christ has said it: &quot;I will not leave you orphans.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. Secondly, there is, a consolation provided: The remedy by which the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; evil is averted is this, our Lord Jesus said, &quot;I will come to you.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What does this mean? Does it not mean, from the connection, this&#8211;&quot;I   <br \/>&#160;&#160; will come to you by My Spirit&quot;? Beloved, we must not confuse the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Persons of the Godhead. The Holy Spirit is not the Son of God; Jesus,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Son of God, is not the Holy Spirit. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; They are two distinct Persons of the one Godhead. But yet there is such   <br \/>&#160;&#160; a wonderful unity, and the blessed Spirit acts so marvellously as the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Vicar of Christ, that it is quite correct to say that, when the Spirit    <br \/>&#160;&#160; comes, Jesus comes, too, and &quot;I will come to you,&quot; means &quot;I, by My    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Spirit, who shall take My place, and represent Me, I will come to be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with you.&quot; See then, Christian, you have the Holy Spirit in you and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with you to be the Representative of Christ. Christ is with you now,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not in person, but by His Representative,&#8211;an efficient, almighty,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; divine, everlasting Representative, who stands for Christ, and is as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ to you in His presence in your souls. Because you thus have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ by His Spirit, you cannot be orphans, for the Spirit of God is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; always with you. It is a delightful truth that the Spirit of God always    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dwells in believers;&#8211;not sometimes, but always. He is not always    <br \/>&#160;&#160; active in believers, and He may be grieved until His sensible presence    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is altogether withdrawn, but His secret presence is always there. At no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; single moment is the Spirit of God wholly gone from a believer. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; believer would die spiritually if this could happen, but that cannot    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be, for Jesus has said, &quot;Because I live, ye shall live also.&quot; Even when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the believer sins, the Holy Spirit does not utterly depart from him,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but is still in him to make him smart for the sin into which he has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fallen. The believer&#8217;s prayers prove that the Holy Spirit is still    <br \/>&#160;&#160; within him. &quot;Take not Thy Holy Spirit from me,&quot; was the prayer of a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saint who had fallen very foully, but in whom the Spirit of God still    <br \/>&#160;&#160; kept His residence, notwithstanding all the foulness of his guilt and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sin. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But, beloved, in addition to this, Jesus Christ by His Spirit makes   <br \/>&#160;&#160; visits to His people of a peculiar kind. The Holy Ghost becomes    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wonderfully active and potent at certain times of refreshing. We are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; then especially and joyfully sensible of His divine power. His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; influence streams through every chamber of our nature, and floods our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dark soul with His glorious rays, as the sun shining in its strength.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Oh, how delightful this is! Sometimes we have felt this at the Lord&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; table. My soul pants to sit with you at that table, because I do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; remember many a happy time when the emblems of bread and wine have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; assisted my faith, and kindled the passions of my soul into a heavenly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; flame. I am equally sure that, at the prayer-meeting, under the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; preaching of the Word, in private meditation, and in searching the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Scriptures, we can say that Jesus Christ has come to us. What! have you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; no hill Mizar to remember?&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;No Tabor-visits to recount, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When with Him in the Holy Mount&quot;? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Oh, yes! some of these blessed seasons have left their impress upon our   <br \/>&#160;&#160; memories, so that, amongst our dying thoughts, will mingle the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; remembrance of those blessed seasons when Jesus Christ manifested    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself unto us as He doth not unto the world. Oh, to be wrapped in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that crimson vest, closely pressed to His open side!&#8217; Oh, to put our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; finger into the print of nails, and thrust our hand into His side! We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; know what this means by past experience. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Dear Shepherd of Thy chosen few, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thy former mercies here renew.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Permit us once again to feel the truth of the promise, &quot;I will not   <br \/>&#160;&#160; leave you orphans; I will come to you.&quot; And now, gathering up the few    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thoughts I have uttered, let me remind you, dear friends, that every    <br \/>&#160;&#160; word of the text is instructive: &quot;I will not leave you orphans: I will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come to you.&quot; Observe the &quot;I&quot; there twice over. &quot;I will not leave you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; orphans; father and mother may, but I will not; friends once beloved    <br \/>&#160;&#160; may turn stony-hearted, but I will not; Judas may play the traitor, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Ahithophel may betray his David, but I will not leave you comfortless.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; You have had many disappointments, great heart-breaking sorrows, but I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have never caused you any; I&#8211;the faithful and the true Witness, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; immutable, the unchangeable Jesus, the same yesterday, to-day, and for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ever, I will not leave you comfortless; I will come unto you.&quot; Catch at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that word, &quot;I,&quot; and let your souls say, &quot;Lord, I am not worthy that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thou shouldest come under my roof; if Thou hadst said, I will send an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; angel to thee,&#8217; it would have been a great mercy, but what sayest Thou,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I will come unto thee&#8217;? If Thou hadst bidden some of my brethren come    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and speak a word of comfort to me, I had been thankful, but Thou hast    <br \/>&#160;&#160; put it thus in the first person, I will come unto you.&#8217; O my Lord, what    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall I say, what shall I do, but feel a hungering and a thirsting    <br \/>&#160;&#160; after Thee, which nothing shall satisfy till Thou shalt fulfil Thine    <br \/>&#160;&#160; own Word, I will not leave you comfortless; I will come to you&#8217;&quot;? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And then notice the persons to whom it is addressed, &quot;I will not leave   <br \/>&#160;&#160; you comfortless, you, Peter, who will deny Me; you, Thomas, who will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; doubt Me; I will not leave you comfortless.&quot; O you who are so little in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Israel that you sometimes think it is a pity that your name is in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; church-book at all, because you feel yourselves to be so worthless, so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unworthy, He will not leave you comfortless, not even you! &quot;O Lord,&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thou sayest, &quot;if Thou wouldst look after the rest of Thy sheep, I would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bless Thee for Thy tenderness to them, but I&#8211;I deserve to be left; if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I were forsaken of Thee, I could not blame Thee, for I have played the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; harlot against Thy love, but yet Thou sayest, I will not leave you.&#8217;&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Heir of heaven, do not lose your part in this promise. I pray you say,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Lord, come unto me, and though Thou refresh all my brethren, yet,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord, refresh me with some of the droppings of Thy love; O Lord, fill    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the cup for me; my thirsty spirit pants for it. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;I thirst, I faint, I die to prove <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The greatness of redeeming love, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The love of Christ to me.&#8217; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now, Lord, fulfil Thy word to Thine unworthy handmaid, as I stand like   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Hannah in Thy presence. Come unto me, Thy servant, unworthy to lift so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; much as his eyes towards heaven, and only daring to say, God be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; merciful to me a sinner.&#8217; Fulfil Thy promise even to me, I will not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; leave you comfortless; I will come to you.&#8217;&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Take whichever of the words you will, and they each one sparkle and   <br \/>&#160;&#160; flash after this sort. Observe, too, the richness and sufficiency of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the text: &quot;I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to you.&quot; He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; does not promise, &quot;I will send you sanctifying grace, or sustaining    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mercy, or precious mercy,&quot; but He says, what is the only thing that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will prevent your being orphans, &quot;I will come to you.&quot; Ah! Lord, Thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grace is sweet, but Thou art better. The vine is good, but the clusters    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are better. It is well enough to have a gift from Thy hand, but oh! to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; touch the hand itself. It is well enough to hear the words of Thy lips,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but oh! to kiss those lips as the spouse did in the Song, this is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; better still. You know, if there be an orphan child, you cannot prevent    <br \/>&#160;&#160; its continuing an orphan. You may feel great kindness towards it,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; supply its wants, and do all you possibly can towards it, but it is an    <br \/>&#160;&#160; orphan still. It must get its father and its mother back, or else it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will still be an orphan. So, our blessed Lord, knowing this, does not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; say, &quot;I will do this and that for you,&quot; but, &quot;I will come to you.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Do you not see, dear friends, here is not only all you can want, but   <br \/>&#160;&#160; all you think you can want, wrapped up in a sentence, &quot;I will come to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you&quot;? &quot;It pleased the Father that in Him should all fulness dwell;&quot; so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that, when Christ comes, in Him &quot;all fulness&quot; comes. &quot;In Him dwelleth    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all the fulness of the Godhead bodily,&quot; so that, when Jesus comes, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; very Godhead comes to the believer. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;All my capacious powers can wish <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In Thee doth richly meet;&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; and if Thou shalt come to me, it is better than all the gifts of Thy   <br \/>&#160;&#160; covenant. If I get Thee, I get all, and more than all, at once.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Observe, then, the language and the sufficiency of the promise. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But I want you to notice, further, the continued freshness and force of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the promise. Somebody here owes another person fifty pounds, and he    <br \/>&#160;&#160; gives him a note of hand, &quot;I promise to pay you fifty pounds.&quot; Very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; well! the man calls with that note of hand tomorrow, and gets fifty    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pounds. And what is the good of the note of hand now? Why, it is of no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; further value, it is discharged. How would you like to have a note of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hand which would always stand good? That would be a right royal    <br \/>&#160;&#160; present. &quot;I promise to pay evermore, and this bond, though paid a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thousand times, shall still hold good.&quot; Who would not like to have a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cheque of that sort? Yet this is the promise which Christ gives you, &quot;I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will not leave you orphans: I will come to you.&quot; The first time a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sinner looks to Christ, Christ comes to him. And what then? Why, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; next minute it is still, &quot;I will come to you.&quot; But here is one who has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; known Christ for fifty years, and he has had this promise fulfilled a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thousand times a year: is it not done with? Oh, no! there it stands,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; just as fresh as when Jesus first spoke it, &quot;I will come to you.&quot; Then    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we will treat our Lord in His own fashion, and take Him at His word. We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will go to Him as often as ever we can, for we shall never weary Him;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and when He has kept His promise most, then is it that we will go to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him, and ask Him to keep it more still; and after ten thousand proofs    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the truth of it, we will only have a greater hungering and thirsting    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to get it fulfilled again. This is fit provision for life, and for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; death, &quot;I will come to you.&quot; In the last moment, when your pulse beats    <br \/>&#160;&#160; faintly, and you are just about to pass the curtain, and enter into the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; invisible world, you may have this upon your lips, and say to your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord, &quot;My Master, still fulfil the word on which Thou hast caused me to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hope, I will not leave you comfortless: I will come to you.&#8217;&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let me remind you that the text is at this moment valid, and for this I   <br \/>&#160;&#160; delight in it. &quot;I will not leave you comfortless.&quot; That means now, &quot;I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will not leave you comfortless now.&quot; Are you comfortless at this hour?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; It is your own fault. Jesus Christ does not leave you so, nor make you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; so. There are rich and precious things in this word, &quot;I will not leave    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you comfortless: I will come to you, I will come to you now.&quot; It may be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a very dull time with you, and you are pining to come nearer to Christ.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Very well, then plead the promise before the Lord. Plead the promise as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you sit where you are: &quot;Lord, Thou hast said Thou wilt come unto me;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come unto me to-night.&quot; There are many reasons, believer, why you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; should plead thus. You want Him; you need Him; you require Him;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; therefore plead the promise, and expect its fulfilment. And oh! when He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cometh, what a joy it is; He is as a bridegroom coming out of his    <br \/>&#160;&#160; chamber with his garments fragrant with aloes and cassia! How well the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; oil of joy will perfume your heart! How soon will your sackcloth be put    <br \/>&#160;&#160; away, and the garments of gladness adorn you! With what joy of heart    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will your heavy soul begin to sing when Jesus Christ shall whisper that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you are His, and that He is yours! Come, my Beloved, make no tarrying;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be Thou like a roe or a young hart upon the mountains of separation,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and prove to me Thy promise true, &quot;I will not leave you orphans: I will    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come to you.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And now, dear friends, in conclusion, let me remind you that there are   <br \/>&#160;&#160; many who have no share in the text. What can I say to such? From my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; soul I pity you who do not know what the love of Christ means. Oh! if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you could but tell the joy of God&#8217;s people, you would not rest an hour    <br \/>&#160;&#160; without it. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;His worth, if all the nations knew, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Sure the whole world would love Him too.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Remember, if you would find Christ, He is to be found in the way of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; faith. Trust Him, and He is yours. Depend upon the merit of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sacrifice; cast yourselves entirely upon that, and you are saved, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ is yours. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; God grant that we may all break bread in the kingdom above, and feast   <br \/>&#160;&#160; with Jesus, and share His glory! We are expecting His second coming. He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is coming personally and gloriously. This is the brightest hope of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people. This will be the fulness of their redemption, the time of their    <br \/>&#160;&#160; resurrection. Anticipate it, beloved, and may God make your souls to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sing for joy! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Mid the splendours of the glory <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Which we hope ere long to share; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Christ our Head, and we His members, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Shall appear, divinely fair. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Oh, how glorious! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When we meet Him in the air! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Bright the prospect soon that greets us <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Of that long&#8217;d-for nuptial day, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When our heavenly Bridegroom meets us <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; On His kingly, conquering way; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; In the glory, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Bride and Bridegroom reign for aye!&quot;   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; COMMUNION WITH CHRIST AND HIS PEOPLE. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; AN ADDRESS AT A COMMUNION SERVICE AT MENTONE. &quot;The cup of blessing which we   <br \/>&#160; bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ? The bread which we    <br \/>&#160; break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? For we being many are    <br \/>&#160; one bread, and one body: for we are all partakers of that one bread.&quot;&#8211;1 Cor.    <br \/>&#160; x. 16, 17. <\/p>\n<p>COMMUNION WITH CHRIST AND HIS PEOPLE. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I WILL read you the text as it is given in the Revised Version: &quot;The   <br \/>&#160;&#160; cup of blessing which we bless, is it not a communion of the blood of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ?&quot; That is to say,&#8211;Is it not one form of expressing the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion of the blood of Christ? &quot;The bread,&quot; or as it is in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; margin, &quot;the loaf which we break, is it not a communion of the body of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ? seeing that we, who are many, are one loaf, one body: for we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all partake of the one loaf.&quot; The word &quot;loaf&quot; helps to bring out more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; clearly the idea of unity intended to be set forth by the apostle. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; It is a lamentable fact that some have fancied that this simple   <br \/>&#160;&#160; ordinance of the Lord&#8217;s supper has a certain magical, or at least    <br \/>&#160;&#160; physical power about it, so that, by the mere act of eating and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; drinking this bread and wine, men can be made partakers of the body and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blood of Christ. It is marvellous that so plain a symbol should have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been so complicated by genuflexions, adornments, and technical phrases.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Can anyone see the slightest resemblance between the Master&#8217;s sitting    <br \/>&#160;&#160; down with the twelve, and the mass of the Roman community? The original    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rite is lost in the super-imposed ritual. Superstition has produced a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sacrament where Jesus intended a fellowship. Too many, who would not go    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the length of Rome, yet speak of this simple feast as if it were a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mystery dark and obscure. They employ all manner of hard words to turn    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the children&#8217;s bread into a stone. It is not the Lord&#8217;s supper, but the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Eucharist; we see before us no plate, but a &quot;paten&quot;; the cup is a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;chalice&quot; and the table is an &quot;altar.&quot; These are incrustations of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; superstition, whereby the blessed ordinance of Christ is likely to be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; again overgrown and perverted. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What does this supper mean? It means communion: communion with Christ,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; and communion with one another. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What is communion? The word breaks up easily into union, and its prefix   <br \/>&#160;&#160; com, which means with, union with. We must, therefore, first enjoy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; union with Christ, and with His Church, or else we cannot enjoy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion. Union lies at the basis of communion. We must be one with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ in heart, and soul, and life; baptized into His death; quickened    <br \/>&#160;&#160; by His life, and so brought to be members of His body, one with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whole Church of which He is the Head. We cannot have communion with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ till we are in union with Him; and we cannot have communion with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Church till we are in vital union with it. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. The teaching of the Lord&#8217;s supper is just this&#8211;that while we have   <br \/>&#160;&#160; many ways of communion with Christ, yet the receiving of Christ into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our souls as our Saviour is the best way of communion with Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I said, dear friends, that we have many ways of communion with Christ;   <br \/>&#160;&#160; let me show you that it is so. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Communion is ours by personal intercourse with the Lord Jesus. We speak   <br \/>&#160;&#160; with Him in prayer, and He speaks with us through the Word. Some of us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; speak oftener with Christ than we do with wife or child, and our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion with Jesus is deeper and more thorough than our fellowship    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with our nearest friend. In meditation and its attendant thanksgiving    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we speak with our risen Lord, and by His Holy Spirit He answers us by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; creating fresh thought and emotion in our minds. I like sometimes in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; prayer, when I do not feel that I can say anything, just to sit still,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and look up; then faith spiritually descries the Well-beloved, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hears His voice in the solemn silence of the mind. Thus we have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; intercourse with Jesus of a closer sort than any words could possibly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; express. Our soul melts beneath the warmth of Jesus&#8217; love, and darts    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upward her own love in return. Think not that I am dreaming, or am    <br \/>&#160;&#160; carried off by the memory of some unusual rhapsody: no, I assert that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the devout soul can converse with the Lord Jesus all the day, and can    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have as true fellowship with Him as if He still dwelt bodily among men.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; This thing comes to me, not by the hearing of the ear, but by my own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; personal experience: I know of a surety that Jesus manifests Himself    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unto His people as He doth not unto the world. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Ah, what sweet communion often exists between the saint and the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Well-beloved, when there is no bread and wine upon the table, for the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Spirit Himself draws the heart of the renewed one, and it runs after    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus, while the Lord Himself appears unto the longing spirit! Truly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ. Do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you enjoy this charming converse? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Next, we have communion with Christ in His thoughts, views, and   <br \/>&#160;&#160; purposes; for His thoughts are our thoughts according to our capacity    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and sanctity. Believers take the same view of matters as Jesus does;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that which pleases Him pleases them, and that which grieves Him grieves    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them also. Consider, for instance, the greatest theme of our thought,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and see whether our thoughts are not like those of Christ. He delights    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the Father, He loves to glorify the Father: do not we? Is not the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Father the centre of our soul&#8217;s delight? Do we not rejoice at the very    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sound of His name? Does not our spirit cry, &quot;Abba, Father&quot;? Thus it is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; clear we feel as Jesus feels towards the Father, and so we have the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; truest communion with Him. This is but one instance; your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; contemplations will bring before you a wide variety of topics wherein    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we think with Jesus. Now, identity of judgment, opinion, and purpose    <br \/>&#160;&#160; forms the highway of communion; yea, it is communion. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We have also communion with Christ in our emotions. Have you never felt   <br \/>&#160;&#160; a holy horror when you have heard a word of blasphemy in the street?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thus Jesus felt when He saw sin, and bore it in His own person: only He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; felt it infinitely more than you do. Have you never felt as you looked    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon sinners that you must weep over them? Those are holy tears, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; contain the same ingredients as those which Jesus shed when He lamented    <br \/>&#160;&#160; over Jerusalem. Yes, in our zeal for God, our hatred of sin, our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; detestation of falsehood, our pity for men, we have true communion with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Further, we have had fellowship with Christ in many of our actions.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Have you ever tried to teach the ignorant? This Jesus did. Have you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; found it difficult? So Jesus found it. Have you striven to reclaim the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; backslider? Then you were in communion with the Good Shepherd who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hastens into the wilderness to find the one lost sheep, finds it, lays    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it upon His shoulders, and brings it home rejoicing. Have you ever    <br \/>&#160;&#160; watched over a soul night and day with tears? Then you have had    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion with Him who has borne all our names upon His broken heart,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and carries the memorial of them upon His pierced hands. Yes, in acts    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of self-denial, liberality, benevolence, and piety, we enter into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion with Him who went about doing good. Whenever we try to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; disentangle the snarls of strife, and to make peace between men who are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at enmity, then are we doing what the great Peace-maker did, and we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have communion with the Lord and Giver of peace. Wherever, indeed, we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; co-operate with the Lord Jesus in His designs of love to men, we are in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; true and active communion with Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; So it is with our sorrows. Certain of us have had large fellowship with   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord Jesus in affliction. &quot;Jesus wept&quot;: He lost a friend, and so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have we. Jesus grieved over the hardness of men&#8217;s hearts: we know that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grief. Jesus was exceedingly sorry that the hopeful young man turned    <br \/>&#160;&#160; away, and went back to the world: we know that sorrow. Those who have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sympathetic hearts, and live for others, readily enter into the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; experience of &quot;the Man of sorrows.&quot; The wounds of calumny, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reproaches of the proud, the venom of the bigoted, the treachery of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; false, and the weakness of the true, we have known in our measure; and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; therein have had communion with our Lord Jesus. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Nor this alone: we have been with our Divine Master in His joys. I   <br \/>&#160;&#160; suppose there never lived a happier man than the Lord Jesus. He was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rightly called &quot;the Man of sorrows&quot;; but He might, with unimpeachable    <br \/>&#160;&#160; truth, have been called, &quot;the Man of joys.&quot; He must have rejoiced as He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; called His disciples, and they came unto Him; as He bestowed healing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and relief; as He gave pardon to penitents, and breathed peace on    <br \/>&#160;&#160; believers. His was the joy of finding the sheep, and taking the piece    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of money out of the dust. His work was His joy: such joy that, for its    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sake, He endured the cross, despising the shame. The exercise of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; benevolence is joy to loving hearts: the more pain it costs, the more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; joy it is. Kind actions make us happy, and in such joy we find    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion with the great heart of Jesus. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thus have I given you a list of windows of agate and gates of carbuncle   <br \/>&#160;&#160; through which you may come at the Lord; but the ordinance of the Lord&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; supper sets forth a way which surpasses them all. It is the most    <br \/>&#160;&#160; accessible and the most effectual method of fellowship. Here it is that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we have fellowship with the Lord Jesus by receiving Him as our Saviour.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; We, being guilty, accept of His atonement as our sacrificial cleansing,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and in token thereof we eat this bread and drink this cup. &quot;Oh!&quot; says    <br \/>&#160;&#160; one, &quot;I do not feel that I can get near to Christ. He is so high and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; holy, and I am only a poor sinner.&quot; Just so. For that very reason you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; can have fellowship with Christ in that which lies nearest to His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heart: He is a Saviour, and to be a Saviour there must be a sinner to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be saved. Be you that one, and Christ and you shall at once be in union    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and communion: He shall save, and you shall be saved; He shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sanctify, and you shall be sanctified; and twain shall thus be one.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; This table sets before you His great sacrifice. Jesus has offered it;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will you accept it? He does not ask you to bring anything,&#8211;no drop of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blood, no pang of flesh; all is here, and your part is to come and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; partake of it, even as of old the offerer partook of the peace-offering    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which he had brought, and so feasted with God and with the priest. If    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you work for Christ, that will certainly be some kind of fellowship    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with Him; but I tell you that the communion of receiving him into your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; inmost soul is the nearest and closest fellowship possible to mortal    <br \/>&#160;&#160; man. The fellowship of service is exceedingly honourable, when we and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ work together for the same objects; the fellowship of suffering    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is exceedingly instructive, when our heart has graven upon it the same    <br \/>&#160;&#160; characters as were graven upon the heart of Christ: but the fellowship    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of the soul which receives Christ, and is received by Christ, is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; closer, more vital, more essential than any other. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Such fellowship is eternal. No power upon earth can henceforth take   <br \/>&#160;&#160; from me the piece of bread which I have just now eaten, it has gone    <br \/>&#160;&#160; where it will be made up into blood, and nerve, and muscle, and bone.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; It is within me, and of me. That drop of wine has coursed through my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; veins, and is part and parcel of my being. So he that takes Jesus by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; faith to be his Saviour has chosen the good part which shall not be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; taken away from him. He has received the Christ into his inward parts,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and all the men on earth, and all the devils in hell, cannot extract    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ from him. Jesus saith, &quot;He that eateth Me, even he shall live by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Me.&quot; By our sincere reception of Jesus into our hearts, an indissoluble    <br \/>&#160;&#160; union is established between us and the Lord, and this manifests itself    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in mutual communion. To as many as received Him, to them has He given    <br \/>&#160;&#160; this communion, even to them that believe on His name. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. I have now to look at another side of communion,&#8211;namely, the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellowship of true believers with each other. We have many ways of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communing the one with the other, but there is no way of mutual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communing like the common reception of the same Christ in the same way.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I have said that there are many ways in which Christians commune with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; one another, and these doors of fellowship I would mention at some    <br \/>&#160;&#160; length. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let me go over much the same ground as before. We commune by holy   <br \/>&#160;&#160; converse. I wish we had more of this. Time was when they that feared    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord spake often one to another; I am afraid that now they more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; often speak one against another. It is a grievous thing that full often    <br \/>&#160;&#160; love lies bleeding by a brother&#8217;s hand. Where we are not quite so bad    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as that, yet we are often backward and silent, and so miss profitable    <br \/>&#160;&#160; converse. Our insular reserve has often made one Christian sit by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; another in utter isolation, when each would have been charmed with the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; other&#8217;s company. Children of one family need not wait to be introduced    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to each other: having eaten of this one bread, we have given and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; received the token of brotherhood; let us therefore act consistently    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with our relationship, and fall into holy conversation next time we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; meet. I am afraid that Christian brotherhood in many cases begins and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ends inside the place of worship. Let it not be so among us. Let it be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our delight to find our society in the circle of which Jesus is the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; centre, and let us make those our friends who are the friends of Jesus.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; By frequent united prayer and praise, and by ministering the one to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; other the things which we have learned by the Spirit, we shall have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellowship with each other in our Lord Jesus Christ. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I am sure that all Christians have fellowship together in their   <br \/>&#160;&#160; thoughts. In the essentials of the gospel we think alike: in our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thoughts of God, of Christ, of sin, of holiness, we keep step; in our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; intense desire to promote the kingdom of our Lord, we are as one. All    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spiritual life is one. The thoughts raised by the Spirit of God in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; souls of men are never contrary to each other. I say not that the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thoughts of all professors agree, but I do assert that the minds of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; truly regenerate in all sects, and in all ages, are in harmony with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; each other,&#8211;a harmony which often excites delighted surprise in those    <br \/>&#160;&#160; who perceive it. The marks that divide one set of nominal Christians    <br \/>&#160;&#160; from another set are very deep and wide to those who have nothing of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; religion but the name; yet living believers scarcely notice them.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Boundaries which separate the cattle of the field are no division to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the birds of the air. Our minds, thoughts, desires, and hopes are one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in Christ Jesus, and herein we have communion. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Beloved friends, our emotions are another royal road of fellowship. You   <br \/>&#160;&#160; sit down and tell your experience, and I smile to think that you are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; telling mine. Sometimes a young believer enlarges upon the sad story of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; his trials and temptations, imagining that nobody ever had to endure so    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great a fight, when all the while he is only describing the common    <br \/>&#160;&#160; adventures of those who go on pilgrimage, and we are all communing with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; him. When we talk together about our Lord, are we not agreed? When we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; speak of our Father, and all His dealings with us, are we not one? And    <br \/>&#160;&#160; when we weep, and when we sigh, and when we sing, and when we rejoice,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are we not all akin? Heavenly fingers touching like strings within our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hearts bring forth the self-same notes, for we are the products of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; same Maker, and tuned to the same praise. Real harmony exists among all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the true people of God: Christians are one in Christ. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We have communion with one another, too, in our actions. We unite in   <br \/>&#160;&#160; trying to save men: I hope we do. We join in instructing, warning,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; inviting, and persuading sinners to come to Jesus. Our life-ministry is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the same: we are workers together with God. We live out the one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; desire,&#8211;&quot;Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; heaven.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Certainly we have much communion one with the other in our sufferings.   <br \/>&#160;&#160; There is not a poor sick or despondent saint upon the earth with whom    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we do not sympathize at this moment, for we are fellow-members, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; partakers of the sufferings of Christ. I hope we can say, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Is there a lamb in all Thy flock, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I would disdain to feed? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Is there a foe, before whose face, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I fear Thy cause to plead?&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; No, we suffer with each other, and bear each other&#8217;s burden, and so   <br \/>&#160;&#160; fulfil the law of Christ. If we do not, we have reason for questioning    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our own faith; but if we do so, we have communion with each other. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I hope we have fellowship in our joys. Is one happy? We would not envy   <br \/>&#160;&#160; him, but rejoice with him. Perhaps this is not so universal as it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; should be among professors. Are we at once glad because another    <br \/>&#160;&#160; prospers? If another star outshines ours, do we delight in its    <br \/>&#160;&#160; radiance? When we meet a brother with ten talents, do we congratulate    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ourselves on having such a man given to help us, or do we depreciate    <br \/>&#160;&#160; him as much as we can? Such is the depravity of our nature, that we do    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not readily rejoice in the progress of others if they leave us behind;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but we must school ourselves to this. A man will speedily sit down and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sympathize with a friend&#8217;s griefs; but if he sees him honoured and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; esteemed, he is apt to regard him as a rival, and does not so readily    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rejoice with him. This ought not to be; without effort we ought to be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; happy in our brother&#8217;s happiness. If we are ill, be this our comfort,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that many are in robust health; if we are faint, let us be glad that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; others are strong in the Lord. Thus shall we enjoy a happy fellowship    <br \/>&#160;&#160; like that of the perfected above. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When I have put all these modes of Christian communion together, no one   <br \/>&#160;&#160; of them is so sure, so strong, so deep, as communion in receiving the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; same Christ as our Saviour, and trusting in the same blood for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cleansing unto eternal life. Here on the table you have the tokens of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the broadest and fullest communion. This is a kind of communion which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you and I cannot choose or reject: if we are in Christ, it is and must    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be ours. Certain brethren restrict their communion in the outward    <br \/>&#160;&#160; ordinance, and they think they have good reasons for doing so; but I am    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unable to see the force of their reasoning, because I joyfully observe    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that these brethren commune with other believers in prayer, and praise,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and hearing of the Word, and other ways: the fact being that the matter    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of real communion is very largely beyond human control, and is to the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; spiritual body what the circulation of the blood is to the natural    <br \/>&#160;&#160; body, a necessary process not dependent upon volition. In perusing a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; deeply spiritual book of devotion, you have been charmed and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; benefitted, and yet upon looking at the title-page it may be you have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; found that the author belonged to the Church of Rome. What then? Why,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; then it has happened that the inner life has broken all barriers, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your spirits have communed. For my own part, in reading certain    <br \/>&#160;&#160; precious works, I have loathed their Romanism, and yet I have had close    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellowship with their writers in weeping over sin, in adoring at the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; foot of the cross, and in rejoicing in the glorious enthronement of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord. Blood is thicker than water, and no fellowship is more inevitable    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and sincere than fellowship in the precious blood, and in the risen    <br \/>&#160;&#160; life of our Lord Jesus Christ. Here, in the common reception of the one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; loaf, we bear witness that we are one; and in the actual participation    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of all the chosen in the one redemption, that unity is in very deed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; displayed and matured in the most substantial manner. Washed in the one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blood, fed on the same loaf, cheered by the same cup, all differences    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pass away, and &quot;we, being many, are one body in Christ, and every one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; members one of another.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Now, then, dear friends, if this kind of fellowship be the best, let us   <br \/>&#160;&#160; take care to enjoy it. Let us at this hour avail ourselves of it. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let us take care to see Christ in the mirror of this ordinance. Have   <br \/>&#160;&#160; any of you eaten the bread, and yet have you not seen Christ? Then you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have gained no benefit. Have you drunk the wine, but have you not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; remembered the Lord? Alas! I fear you have eaten and drunk condemnation    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to yourselves, not discerning the Lord&#8217;s body. But if you did see    <br \/>&#160;&#160; through the emblems, as aged persons see through their spectacles, then    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you have been thankful for such aids to vision. But what is the use of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glasses if there is nothing to look at? and what is the use of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; communion if Christ be not in our thoughts and hearts? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; If you did discern the Lord, then be sure, again, to accept Him. Say to   <br \/>&#160;&#160; yourself, &quot;All that Christ is to any, He shall be to me. Does He save    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sinners? He shall save me. Does He change men&#8217;s hearts? He shall change    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mine. Is He all in all to those that trust Him? He shall be all in all    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to me.&quot; I have heard persons say that they do not know how to take    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ. What says the apostle? &quot;The Word is nigh thee, even in thy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mouth, and in thy heart.&quot; If you have something in your mouth that you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; desire to eat, what is the best thing to do? Will you not swallow it?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; That is exactly what faith does. Christ&#8217;s word of grace is very near    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you, it is on your tongue; let it go down into your inmost soul. Say to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your Saviour, &quot;I know I am not fit to receive Thee, O Jesus, but since    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thou dost graciously come to me as bread comes to the hungry, I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thankfully receive Thee, rejoicing to feed upon Thee! Since Thou dost    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come to me as the fruit of the vine to a thirsty man, Lord, I take    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Thee, willingly, and I thank Thee that this reception is all that Thou    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dost require of me. Has not Thy Spirit so put it&#8211;As many as received    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God, even to them that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; believe on His name&#8217;?&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Beloved friends, when you have thus received Jesus, fail not to rejoice   <br \/>&#160;&#160; in Him as having received Him. How many there are who have received    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ, who talk and act as if they never had received Him! It is a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; poor dinner of which a man says, after he has eaten it, that he feels    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as if he had not dined; and it is a poor Christ of whom anyone can say,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;I have received Him, but I am none the happier, none the more at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; peace.&quot; If you have received Jesus into your heart, you are saved, you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are justified. Do you whisper, &quot;I hope so&quot;? Is that all? Do you not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; know? The hopings and hoppings of so many are a poor way of going; put    <br \/>&#160;&#160; both feet down, and say, &quot;I know whom I have believed, and am persuaded    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that He is able to keep that which I have committed unto Him against    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that day.&quot; You are either saved or lost; there is no state between the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; two. You are either pardoned or condemned; and you have good reason for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the highest happiness, or else you have grave causes for the direst    <br \/>&#160;&#160; anxiety. If you have received the atonement, be as glad as you can be;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and if you are still an unbeliever, rest not till Christ is yours. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Oh, the joy of continually entering into fellowship with Christ, in   <br \/>&#160;&#160; such a way that you never lose His company! Be this yours, beloved,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; every day, and all the day! May His shadow fall upon you as you rest in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the sun, or stray in the gardens! May His voice cheer you as you lie    <br \/>&#160;&#160; down upon the sea-shore, and listen to the murmuring of the waves; may    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His presence glorify the mountain solitude as you climb the hills! May    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus be to you an all-surrounding presence, lighting up the night,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perfuming the day, gladdening all places, and sanctifying all pursuits!    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Our Beloved is not a Friend for Lord&#8217;s-days only, but for week-days,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; too; He is the inseparable Companion of His loving disciples. Those who    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have had fellowship with His body and His blood at this table may have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the Lord as an habitual Guest at their own tables; those who have met    <br \/>&#160;&#160; their Master in this upper room may expect Him to make their own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; chamber bright with His royal presence. Let fellowship with Jesus and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; with the elect brotherhood be henceforth the atmosphere of our life,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the joy of our existence. This will give us a heaven below, and prepare    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us for a heaven above.    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; THE SIN-BEARER. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; A COMMUNION MEDITATION AT MENTONE. &quot;Who His own self bare our sins in His own   <br \/>&#160; body on the tree, that we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness:    <br \/>&#160; by whose stripes ye were healed. For ye were as sheep going astray; but are    <br \/>&#160; now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your souls.&quot;&#8211;1 Peter ii. 24, 25. <\/p>\n<p>THE SIN-BEARER. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; THIS wonderful passage is a part of Peter&#8217;s address to servants; and in   <br \/>&#160;&#160; his day nearly all servants were slaves. Peter begins at the eighteenth    <br \/>&#160;&#160; verse: &quot;Servants, be subject to your masters with all fear; not only to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the good and gentle, but also to the froward. For this is thankworthy,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; if a man for conscience toward God endure grief, suffering wrongfully.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; For what glory is it, if, when ye be buffeted for your faults, ye shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; take it patiently? but if, when ye do well, and suffer for it, ye take    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it patiently, this is acceptable with God. For even hereunto were ye    <br \/>&#160;&#160; called: because Christ also suffered for us, leaving us an example,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that ye should follow His steps: who did no sin, neither was guile    <br \/>&#160;&#160; found in His mouth: who, when He was reviled, reviled not again; when    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He suffered, He threatened not; but committed Himself to Him that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; judgeth righteously: who His own self bare our sins in His own body on    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the tree, that we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness:    <br \/>&#160;&#160; by whose stripes ye were healed.&quot; If we are in a lowly condition of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; life, we shall find our best comfort in thinking of the lowly Saviour    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bearing our sins in all patience and submission. If we are called to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; suffer, as servants often were in the Roman times, we shall be solaced    <br \/>&#160;&#160; by a vision of our Lord buffeted, scourged, and crucified, yet silent    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the majesty of His endurance. If these sufferings are entirely    <br \/>&#160;&#160; undeserved, and we are grossly slandered, we shall be comforted by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; remembering Him who did no sin, and in whose lips was found no guile.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Our Lord Jesus is Head of the Guild of Sufferers: He did well, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; suffered for it, but took it patiently. Our support under the cross,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which we are appointed to bear, is only to be found in Him &quot;who His own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; self bare our sins in His own body on the tree.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We ourselves now know by experience that there is no place for comfort   <br \/>&#160;&#160; like the cross. It is a tree stripped of all foliage, and apparently    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dead; yet we sit under its shadow with great delight, and its fruit is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sweet unto our taste. Truly, in this case, &quot;like cures like.&quot; By the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; suffering of our Lord Jesus, our suffering is made light. The servant    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is comforted since Jesus took upon Himself the form of a servant; the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sufferer is cheered &quot;because Christ also suffered for us;&quot; and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; slandered one is strengthened because Jesus also was reviled. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;Is it not strange, the darkest hour <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; That ever dawned on sinful earth <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Should touch the heart with softer power <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; For comfort than an angel&#8217;s mirth? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; That to the cross the mourner&#8217;s eye should turn <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Sooner than where the stars of Christmas burn?&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let us, as we hope to pass through the tribulations of this world,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; stand fast by the cross; for if that be gone, the lone-star is quenched    <br \/>&#160;&#160; whose light cheers the down-trodden, shines on the injured, and brings    <br \/>&#160;&#160; light to the oppressed. If we lose the cross,&#8211;if we miss the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; substitutionary sacrifice of our Lord Jesus Christ, we have lost all. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The verse on which we would now devoutly meditate speaks of three   <br \/>&#160;&#160; things: the bearing of our sins, the changing of our condition, and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; healing of our spiritual diseases. Each of these deserves our most    <br \/>&#160;&#160; careful notice. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. The first is, the bearing of our sins by our Lord; &quot;Who His own self   <br \/>&#160;&#160; bare our sins in His own body on the tree.&quot; These words in plainest    <br \/>&#160;&#160; terms assert that our Lord Jesus did really bear the sins of His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people. How literal is the language! Words mean nothing if substitution    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is not stated here. I do not know the meaning of the fifty-third of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Isaiah if this is not its meaning. Hear the prophet&#8217;s words: &quot;The Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all;&quot; &quot;for the transgression of my    <br \/>&#160;&#160; people was He stricken;&quot; &quot;He shall bear their iniquities:&quot; &quot;He was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; numbered with the transgressors, and He bare the sin of many.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I cannot imagine that the Holy Spirit would have used language so   <br \/>&#160;&#160; expressive if He had not intended to teach us that our Saviour did    <br \/>&#160;&#160; really bear our sins, and suffer in our stead. What else can be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; intended by texts like these&#8211;&quot;Christ was once offered to bear the sins    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of many&quot; (Heb. ix. 28); &quot;He hath made Him to be sin for us, who knew no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him&quot; (2 Cor. v.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; 21); &quot;Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; curse for us: for it is written, Cursed is every one that hangeth on a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tree&quot; (Gal. iii. 13); &quot;Christ also hath loved us, and hath given    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling    <br \/>&#160;&#160; savour&quot; (Eph. v. 2); &quot;Once in the end of the world hath He appeared to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself&quot; (Heb. ix. 26)? I say    <br \/>&#160;&#160; modestly, but firmly, that these Scriptures either teach the bearing of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our sins by our Lord Jesus, or they teach nothing. In these days, among    <br \/>&#160;&#160; many errors and denials of truth, there has sprung up a teaching of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;modern thought&quot; which explains away the doctrine of substitution and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vicarious sacrifice. One wise man has gone so far as to say that the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; transference of sin or righteousness is impossible, and another    <br \/>&#160;&#160; creature of the same school has stigmatized the idea as immoral. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;He bore on the tree the sentence for me.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Had the sorrow been figurative, the sin-bearing might have been   <br \/>&#160;&#160; mythical; but the one fact is paralleled by the other. There is no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; figure in our text; it is a bare, literal fact: &quot;Who His own self bare    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our sins in His own body on the tree.&quot; Oh, that men would give up    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cavilling! To question and debate at the cross, is an act near akin to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the crime of the soldiers when they parted His garments among them, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cast lots for His vesture. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Note how personal are the terms here employed! How expressly the Holy   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Ghost speaketh! &quot;Who His own self bare our sins in His own body.&quot; It    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was not by delegation, but &quot;His own self&quot;; and it was not in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; imagination, but &quot;in His own body.&quot; Observe, also, the personality from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our side of the question, He &quot;bare our sins,&quot; that is to say, my sins    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and your sins. There is a sort of cadence of music here,&#8211;&quot;His own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; self,&quot; &quot;our sins.&quot; As surely as it was Christ&#8217;s own self that suffered    <br \/>&#160;&#160; on the cross, so truly was it our own sins that Jesus bore in His own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; body on the tree. Our Lord has appeared in court for us, accepting our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; place at the bar: &quot;He was numbered with the transgressors.&quot; Nay, more,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He has appeared at the place of execution for us, and has borne the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; death-penalty upon the gibbet of doom in our stead. In propria persona,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our Redeemer has been arraigned, though innocent; has come under the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; curse, though for ever blessed; and has suffered to the death, though    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He had done nothing worthy of blame. &quot;He was wounded for our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our peace was upon Him; and with His stripes we are healed.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This sin-bearing on our Lord&#8217;s part was continual. The passage before   <br \/>&#160;&#160; us has been forced beyond its teaching, by being made to assert that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our Lord Jesus bore our sins nowhere but on the cross: this the words    <br \/>&#160;&#160; do not say. &quot;The tree&quot; was the place where beyond all other places we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; see our Lord bearing the chastisement due to our sins; but before this,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He had felt the weight of the enormous load. It is wrong to base a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great doctrine upon the incidental form of one passage of Scripture,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; especially when that passage of Scripture bears another meaning. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The marginal reading, which is perfectly correct, is &quot;Who His own self   <br \/>&#160;&#160; bare our sins in His own body to the tree.&quot; Our Lord carried the burden    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of our sins up to the tree, and there and then He made an end of it. He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had carried that load long before, for John the Baptist said of Him,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away&quot; (the verb is in the present    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tense, &quot;which taketh away&quot;) &quot;the sin of the world&quot; (John i. 29). Our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord was then bearing the sin of the world as the Lamb of God. From the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; day when He began His divine ministry, I might say even before that, He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bore our sins. He was the Lamb &quot;slain from the foundation of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; world;&quot; so, when He went up to Calvary, bearing His cross, He was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bearing our sins up to the tree. Yet, specially and peculiarly in His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; death-agony He stood in our stead, and upon His soul and body burst the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tempest of justice which had gathered through our transgressions. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; This sin-bearing is final. He bore our sins in His own body on the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; tree, but He bears them now no more. The sinner and the sinner&#8217;s Surety    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are both free, for the law is vindicated, the honour of government is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cleared, the substitutionary sacrifice is complete. He dieth no more,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; death hath no more dominion over Him; for He has ended His work, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has cried, &quot;It is finished.&quot; As for the sins which He bore in His own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; body on the tree, they cannot be found, for they have ceased to be,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; according to that ancient promise, &quot;In those days, and in that time,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; saith the Lord, the iniquity of Israel shall be sought for, and there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shall be none; and the sins of Judah, and they shall not be found&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; (Jeremiah i. 20). The work of the Messiah was &quot;to finish the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; transgression, and to make an end of sins, and to make reconciliation    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for iniquity, and to bring in everlasting righteousness&quot; (Daniel ix.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; 24). Now, if sin is made an end of, there is an end of it; and if    <br \/>&#160;&#160; transgression is &quot;finished&quot;, there is no more to be said about it. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let us look back with holy faith, and see Jesus bearing the stupendous   <br \/>&#160;&#160; load of our sins up to the tree, and on the tree; and see how effectual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; was His sacrifice for discharging the whole mass of our moral liability    <br \/>&#160;&#160; both in reference to guiltiness in the sight of God, and the punishment    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which follows thereon. It is a law of nature that nothing can be in two    <br \/>&#160;&#160; places at the same time; and if sin was borne away by our Lord, it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cannot rest upon us. If by faith we have accepted the Substitute whom    <br \/>&#160;&#160; God Himself has accepted, then it cannot be that the penalty should be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; twice demanded, first of the Surety, and then of those for whom He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; stood. The Lord Jesus bore the sins of His people away, even as the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; scape-goat, in the type, carried the sin of Israel to a land    <br \/>&#160;&#160; uninhabited. Our sins are gone for ever. &quot;As far as the east is from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the west, so far hath He removed our transgressions from us.&quot; He hath    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cast all our iniquities into the depths of the sea; he hath hurled them    <br \/>&#160;&#160; behind his back, where they shall no more be seen. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Beloved friends, we very calmly and coolly talk about this thing, but   <br \/>&#160;&#160; it is the greatest marvel in the universe; it is the miracle of earth,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the mystery of heaven, the terror of hell. Could we fully realize the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; guilt of sin, the punishment due to it, and the literal substitution of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ, it would work in us an intense enthusiasm of gratitude, love,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and praise. I do not wonder that our Methodist friends shout,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;Hallelujah!&quot; This is enough to make us all shout and sing, as long as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we live, &quot;Glory, glory to the Son of God!&quot; What a wonder that the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Prince of glory, in whom is no sin, who was indeed incapable of evil,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; should condescend to come into such contact with our sin as is implied    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in His being &quot;made sin for us&quot;! Our Lord Jesus did not handle sin with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the golden tongs, but He bore it on His own shoulders. He did not lift    <br \/>&#160;&#160; it with golden staves, as the priests carried the ark; but He Himself    <br \/>&#160;&#160; bore the hideous load of our sin in His own body on the tree. This is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the mystery of grace which angels desire to look into. I would for ever    <br \/>&#160;&#160; preach it in the plainest and most unmistakable language. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. In the second place, briefly notice the change in our condition,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; which the text describes as coming out of the Lord&#8217;s bearing of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sins: &quot;That we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The change is a dying and a reviving, a burial and a resurrection: we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are brought from life to death, and from death to life. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We are henceforth legally dead to the punishment of sin. If I were   <br \/>&#160;&#160; condemned to die for an offence, and some other died in my stead, then    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I died in him who died for me. The law could not a second time lay its    <br \/>&#160;&#160; charge against me, and bring me again before the judge, and condemn me,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and lead me out to die. Where would be the justice of such a procedure?    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I am dead already: how can I die again? I have borne the wrath of God    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the person of my glorious and ever-blessed Substitute; how then can    <br \/>&#160;&#160; I bear it again? Where was the use of a Substitute if I am to bear it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; also? Should Satan come before God to lay an accusation against me, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; answer is, &quot;This man is dead. He has borne the penalty, and is dead to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sins,&#8217; for the sentence against him has been executed upon Another.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; What a wonderful deliverance for us! Bless the Lord, O my soul! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But Peter also means to remind us that, by and through the influence of   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ&#8217;s death upon our hearts, the Holy Ghost has made us now to be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; actually &quot;dead to sins&quot;: that is to say, we no longer love them, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; they have ceased to hold dominion over us. Sin is no longer at home in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our hearts; if it enters there, it is as an intruder. We are no more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; its willing servants. Sin calls to us by temptation, but we give it no    <br \/>&#160;&#160; answer, for we are dead to its voice. Sin promises us a high reward,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but we do not consent, for we are dead to its allurements. We sin, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our will is not to sin. It would be heaven to us to be perfectly holy.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Our heart and life go after perfection, but sin is abhorred of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; soul. &quot;Now, if I do that which I would not, it is no more I that do it,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but sin that dwelleth in me.&quot; Our truest and most real self loathes    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sin; and though we fall into it, it is a fall,&#8211;we are out of our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; element, and escape from the evil with all speed. The new-born life    <br \/>&#160;&#160; within us has no dealings with sin; it is dead to sin. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The Greek word here used cannot be fully rendered into English; it   <br \/>&#160;&#160; signifies &quot;being unborn to sins.&quot; We were born in sin, but by the death    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Christ, and the work of the Holy Spirit upon us, that birth is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; undone, &quot;we are unborn to sins.&quot; That which was wrought in us by sin,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; even at our birth, is through the death of Jesus counteracted by the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; new life which His Spirit imparts. &quot;We are unborn to sins.&quot; I like the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; phrase, unusual as it sounds. Does it seem possible that birth should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; be reversed: the born unborn? Yet so it is. The true ego, the reallest    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;I,&quot; is now unborn to sins, for we are &quot;born, not of blood, nor of the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God.&quot; We are unborn    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to sins, and born unto God. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; But our Lord&#8217;s sin-bearing has also brought us into life. Dead to evil   <br \/>&#160;&#160; according to law, we also live in newness of life in the kingdom of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; grace. Our Lord&#8217;s object is &quot;that we should live unto righteousness.&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Not only are our lives to be righteous, which I trust they are, but we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are quickened and made sensitive and vigorous unto righteousness:    <br \/>&#160;&#160; through our Lord&#8217;s death we are made quick of eye, and quick of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thought, and quick of lip, and quick of heart unto righteousness.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Certainly, if the doctrine of His atoning sacrifice does not vivify us,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nothing will. When we sin, it is the sorrowful result of our former    <br \/>&#160;&#160; death; but when we work righteousness, we throw our whole soul into it,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;We live unto righteousness.&quot; Because our Divine Lord has died, we feel    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that we must lay ourselves out for His praise. The tree which brought    <br \/>&#160;&#160; death to our Saviour is a tree of life to us. Sit under this true arbor    <br \/>&#160;&#160; vitae, and you will shake off the weakness and disease which came in by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that tree of knowledge of good and evil. Livingstone in Africa used    <br \/>&#160;&#160; certain medicines which are known as Livingstone&#8217;s Rousers; but what    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rousers are those glorious truths which are extracted from the bitter    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wood of the cross! O my brethren, let us show in our lives what wonders    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our Lord Jesus has done for us by His agony and bloody sweat, by His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cross and passion! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; III. The apostle then speaks of the healing of our diseases by Christ&#8217;s   <br \/>&#160;&#160; death: &quot;By whose stripes ye were healed. For ye were as sheep going    <br \/>&#160;&#160; astray; but are now returned unto the Shepherd and Bishop of your    <br \/>&#160;&#160; souls.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We were healed, and we remain so. It is not a thing to be done in the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; future; it has been wrought. Peter describes our disease in the words    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which compose verse twenty-five. What was it, then? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; First, it was brutishness. &quot;Ye were as sheep.&quot; Sin has made us so that   <br \/>&#160;&#160; we are only fit to be compared to beasts, and to those of the least    <br \/>&#160;&#160; intelligence. Sometimes the Scripture compares the unregenerate man to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; an ass. Man is said to be &quot;born like a wild ass&#8217;s colt.&quot; Amos likens    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Israel to the &quot;kine of Bashan&quot;, and he saith to them, &quot;Ye shall go out    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at the breaches, every cow at that which is before her.&quot; David compared    <br \/>&#160;&#160; himself to behemoth: &quot;So foolish was I, and ignorant: I was as a beast    <br \/>&#160;&#160; before Thee.&quot; We are nothing better than beasts until Christ comes to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us. But we are not beasts after that: a living, heavenly, spiritual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nature is created within us when we come into contact with our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Redeemer. We still carry about with us the old brutish nature, but by    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the grace of God it is put in subjection, and kept there; and our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fellowship now is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ. We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; &quot;were as sheep,&quot; but we are now men redeemed unto God. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We are cured also of the proneness to wander which is so remarkable in   <br \/>&#160;&#160; sheep. &quot;Ye were as sheep going astray,&quot; always going astray, loving to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; go astray, delighting in it, never so happy as when they are wandering    <br \/>&#160;&#160; away from the fold. We wander still, but not as sheep wander: we now    <br \/>&#160;&#160; seek the right way, and desire to follow the Lamb whithersoever He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; goeth. If we wander, it is through ignorance or temptation. We can    <br \/>&#160;&#160; truly say, &quot;My soul followeth hard after Thee.&quot; Our Lord&#8217;s cross has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; nailed us fast as to hands and feet: we cannot now run greedily after    <br \/>&#160;&#160; iniquity; rather do we say, &quot;Return unto thy rest, O my soul; for the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord hath dealt bountifully with thee!&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;My wanderings, Lord, are at an end, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I&#8217;m now return&#8217;d to Thee: <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Be Thou my Father and my Friend, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Be all in all to me.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Another disease of ours was inability to return: &quot;Ye were as sheep   <br \/>&#160;&#160; going astray; but are now returned.&quot; Dogs and even swine are more    <br \/>&#160;&#160; likely to return home than wandering sheep. But now, beloved, though we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wandered, we have returned, and do still return to our Shepherd. Like    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Noah&#8217;s dove, we have found no rest for the sole of our foot anywhere    <br \/>&#160;&#160; out of the ark, and therefore we return unto Him, and He graciously    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pulls us in unto Him. If we wander at any time, we bless God that there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is a sacred something within us which will not let us rest, and there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is a far more powerful something above us which draws us back. We are    <br \/>&#160;&#160; like the needle in the compass: touch that needle with your finger, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; compel it to point to the east, or to the south, and it may do so for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the moment; but take away the pressure, and in an instant it returns to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the pole. So we must go back to Jesus; we must return to the Bishop of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our souls. Our soul cries, &quot;Whom have I in heaven but Thee? and there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is none upon earth that I desire beside Thee.&quot; Thus, by the virtue of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our Lord&#8217;s death, an immortal love is created in us, which leads us to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; seek His face, and renew our fellowship with Him. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Our Lord&#8217;s death has also cured us of our readiness to follow other   <br \/>&#160;&#160; leaders. If one sheep goes through a gap in the hedge, the whole flock    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will follow. We have been accustomed to follow ringleaders in sin or in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; error: we have been too ready to follow custom, and to do that which is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; judged proper, respectable, and usual: but now we are resolved to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; follow none but Jesus, according to His word, &quot;My sheep hear My voice,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and I know them, and they follow Me. A stranger will they not follow,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but will flee from him: for they know not the voice of strangers.&quot; For    <br \/>&#160;&#160; my own part, I am resolved to follow no human leader. Faith in Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; creates a sacred independence of mind. We have learned so entire a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dependence upon our crucified Lord that we have none to spare for men. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Finally, beloved friends, when we were wandering we were like sheep   <br \/>&#160;&#160; exposed to wolves, but we are delivered from this by being near the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Shepherd. We were in danger of death, in danger from the devil, in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; danger from a thousand temptations, which, like ravenous beasts,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; prowled around us. Having ended our wandering, we are now in a place of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; safety. When the lion roars, we are driven the closer to the Shepherd,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and rejoice that His crook protects us. He says, &quot;My sheep hear My    <br \/>&#160;&#160; voice, and I know them, and they follow Me: and I give unto them    <br \/>&#160;&#160; eternal life; and they shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck    <br \/>&#160;&#160; them out of My hand.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What a wonderful work of grace has been wrought in us! We owe all this,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; not to the teaching of Christ, though that has helped us greatly; not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to the example of Christ, though that is charming us into a diligent    <br \/>&#160;&#160; copying of it; but we owe it all to His stripes: &quot;By whose stripes ye    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were healed.&quot; Brethren, we preach Christ crucified, because we have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; been saved by Christ crucified. His death is the death of our sins. We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; can never give up the doctrine of Christ&#8217;s substitutionary sacrifice,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for it is the power by which we hope to be made holy. Not only are we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; washed from guilt in His blood, but by that blood we overcome sin.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Never, so long as breath or pulse remains, can we conceal the blessed    <br \/>&#160;&#160; truth that He &quot;His own self bare our sins in His own body on the tree,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness.&quot; The Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; give us to know much more of this than I can speak, for Jesus Christ&#8217;s    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sake! Amen.    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; SWOONING AND REVIVING CHRIST&#8217;S FEET. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; AN ADDRESS DELIVERED AT THE CLOSE OF ONE OF THE PASTORS&#8217; COLLEGE CONFERENCES.   <br \/>&#160; &quot;And when I saw Him, I fell at His feet as dead. And He laid His right hand    <br \/>&#160; upon me saying unto me, Fear not; I am the first and the last: I am He that    <br \/>&#160; liveth, and was dead; and, behold. I am alive for evermore, Amen; and have the    <br \/>&#160; keys of hell and of death.&quot;&#8211;Revelation i. 17, 18. <\/p>\n<p>SWOONING AND REVIVING AT CHRIST&#8217;S FEET. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; WE have nothing now to think of but our Lord. We come to Him that He   <br \/>&#160;&#160; may cause us to forget all others. We are not here as ministers,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cumbered with much serving, but we now sit at His feet with Mary, or    <br \/>&#160;&#160; lean on His bosom with John. The Lord Himself gives us our watchword as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we muster our band for the last assembly. &quot;Remember Me,&quot; is His loving    <br \/>&#160;&#160; command. We beseech Him to fill the full circle of our memory as the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sun fills the heavens and the earth with light. We are to think only of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus, and of Him only will I speak. Oh, for a touch of the live coal    <br \/>&#160;&#160; from Him who is our Altar as well as our Sacrifice! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; My text is found in the words of John, in the first chapter of the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Revelation, at the seventeenth and eighteenth verses:&#8211; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;And when I saw Him, I fell at His feet as dead. And He laid His right   <br \/>&#160;&#160; hand upon me, saying unto me, Fear not; I am the first and the last: I    <br \/>&#160;&#160; am He that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive for evermore,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Amen; and have the keys of hell and of death.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; John was of all men the most familiar with Jesus, and his Lord had   <br \/>&#160;&#160; never needed to say to him, &quot;Lovest thou Me?&quot; Methinks, if any man    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could have stood erect in the presence of the glorified Saviour, it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; would have been that disciple whom Jesus loved. Love permits us to take    <br \/>&#160;&#160; great liberties: the child will climb the knee of his royal father, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; no man accuses him of presuming. John had such love, and yet even he    <br \/>&#160;&#160; could not look into the face of the Lord of glory without being    <br \/>&#160;&#160; overcome with awe. While yet in the body, even John must swoon if he be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; indulged with a premature vision of the Well-beloved in His majesty. If    <br \/>&#160;&#160; permitted to see the Lord before our bodies have undergone that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wondrous change by which we are made like Jesus that we may see Him as    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He is, we shall find the sight to be more than we can bear. A clear    <br \/>&#160;&#160; view of our Lord&#8217;s heavenly splendour while we are here on earth would    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not be fitting, for it would not be profitable for us always to be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; lying in a swoon at our Redeemer&#8217;s feet, while there is so much work    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for us to do. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Permit me, dear brethren, to take my text from its connection, and to   <br \/>&#160;&#160; apply it to ourselves, by bringing it down from the throne up yonder to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the table here. It may be, I trust it will be, that as we see Jesus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; even here, we shall with John fall at His feet as dead. We shall not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; swoon, but we shall be dead in another sense, most sweetly dead, while    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our life is revealed in Him. After we have thought upon that, we shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; come to what my text implies: then, may we revive with John, for if he    <br \/>&#160;&#160; had not revived he could never have told us of his fainting fit. Thus    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we shall have death with Christ, and resurrection in Him. Oh, for a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; deep experience of both, by the power of the Holy Spirit! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; I. If we are permitted to see Christ in the simple and instructive   <br \/>&#160;&#160; memorials which are now upon the table, we shall, in a blessed sense,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fall at His feet as dead. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; For, first, here we see provision for the removal of our sin, and we   <br \/>&#160;&#160; are thus reminded of it. Here is the bread broken because we have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; broken God&#8217;s law, and must have been broken for ever had there not been    <br \/>&#160;&#160; a bruised Saviour. In this wine we see the token of the blood with    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which we must be cleansed, or else be foul things to be cast away into    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the burnings of Tophet, because abominable in the sight of God.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Inasmuch as we have before us the memorial of the atonement for sin, it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; reminds us of our death in sin in which we should still have remained    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but for that: grace which spoke us into life and salvation. Are you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; growing great? Be little again as you see that you are nothing but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; slaves that have been ransomed. &quot;God&#8217;s freed-men&quot; is still your true    <br \/>&#160;&#160; rank. Are you beginning to think that, because you are sanctified; you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have the less need of daily cleansing? Hear that word, &quot;If we walk in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the light, as He is in the light, we have fellowship one with another,&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; yet even then &quot;the blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, cleanseth us from    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all sin.&quot; We sin even when in the highest and divinest fellowship, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; need still the cleansing blood. How this humbles us before the Lord! We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; are to be winners of sinners, and yet we ourselves are sinners still,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; needing as truly the Bread of life as those to whom we serve it out. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Ah! and some of us have been very special sinners; and therefore, if we   <br \/>&#160;&#160; love much, it is because we have had much forgiven. We have erred since    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we knew the Saviour, and that is a kind of sinnership which is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; exceedingly grievous; we have sinned since we have entered into the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; highest state of spiritual joy, and have been with Him on the holy    <br \/>&#160;&#160; mount, and have beheld His glory! This breeds a holy shamefacedness. We    <br \/>&#160;&#160; may well fall at Jesus&#8217; feet, though He only reveals Himself in bread    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and wine, for these convey a sense of our sinnership while they remind    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us of how our Lord met our sin, and put it away. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Herein we fall as low as the dead. Where is the &quot;I&quot;? Where is the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; self-glorying? Have you any left in the presence of the crucified    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Saviour? As you in spirit eat His flesh and drink His blood, can you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; glory in your own flesh, or feel the pride of blood and birth? Fie upon    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us if there mingles a tinge of pride with our ministry, or a taint of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; self-laudation with our success! When we see Jesus, our Saviour, the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Saviour of sinners, surely self will sink, and humility will fall at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His feet. When we think of Gethsemane and Calvary, and all our great    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Redeemer&#8217;s pain and agony, surely, by the Holy Ghost, self-glorying,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; self-seeking, and self-will must fall as though slain with a deadly    <br \/>&#160;&#160; wound. &quot;When I saw Him, I fell at His feet as dead.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Here, also, we learn a second lesson. Jesus has placed upon this table   <br \/>&#160;&#160; food. The bread sets forth all that is necessary, and the cup all that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is luxurious: provision for all our wants and for all our right    <br \/>&#160;&#160; desires, all that we need for sustenance and joy. Then, what a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; poverty-stricken soul am I that I cannot find myself in bread! As to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; comforts, I may not think of them; they must be given me or I shall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; never taste them. Brothers, we are Gentlemen Commoners upon the bounty    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of our great Kinsman: we come to His table for our maintenance, we have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; no establishments of our own. He who feeds the sparrows feeds our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; souls; in spiritual things, we no more gather into barns than do the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blessed birds; our heavenly Father feeds us from that &quot;all fulness&quot;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; which it hath pleased Him to lay up for us in Jesus. We could not live    <br \/>&#160;&#160; an hour spiritually without Him who is not only bread, but life; not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; only the wine which cheereth, but consolation itself. Our life hangs    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon Jesus; He is our Head as well as our food. We shall never outgrow    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our need of natural bread, and spiritually we shall never rise out of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our need of a present Christ, but the rather we shall feel a stronger    <br \/>&#160;&#160; craving and a more urgent passion for Him. Look at yonder vain person.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He feels that he is a great man, and you own that he is your superior    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in gifts; but what a cheat he is, what a foolish creature to dream of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; being somebody! Now will he be found wanting; for, like ourselves, he    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is not sufficient even to think anything of himself. A beggar who has    <br \/>&#160;&#160; to live on alms, to eat the bread of dependence, to take the cup of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; charity,&#8211;what has he to boast of? He is the great One who feeds us,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; who gives us all that we enjoy, who is our all in all; and as for us,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we are suppliants,&#8211;I had almost said mendicants,&#8211;a community of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Begging Fr res, to all personal spiritual wealth as dead as the slain    <br \/>&#160;&#160; on Marathon. The negro slave at least could claim his own breath, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; we cannot claim even that. The Spirit of God must give us spiritual    <br \/>&#160;&#160; breath, or our life will expire. When we think of this, surely the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sight of Christ in this bread and Wine, though it be a dim vision    <br \/>&#160;&#160; compared with that which ravished the heart of John, will make us fall    <br \/>&#160;&#160; at the Redeemer&#8217;s feet as dead. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The &quot;I&quot; cannot live, for our Lord has provided no food for the vain   <br \/>&#160;&#160; Ego, and its lordliness. He has provided all for necessity, but nothing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for boasting. Oh, blessed sense of self-annihilation! We have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; experienced it several times this week when certain of those papers    <br \/>&#160;&#160; were read to us by our brethren; and, moreover, we shrivelled right up    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in the blaze of the joy with which our Master favoured us. I hope this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; happy assembly and its heavenly exercises have melted the Ego within    <br \/>&#160;&#160; us, and made it, for the while, flow away in tears. Dying to self is a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; blessed feeling. May we all realize it! When we are weak to the utmost    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in conscious death of self, then are we strong to the fulness of might.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Swooning away unto self-death, and losing all consciousness of personal    <br \/>&#160;&#160; power, we are introduced into the infinite, and live in God. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; II. Now let us consider how we get alive again, and so know the Lord as   <br \/>&#160;&#160; the resurrection and the life. John did revive, and he tells us how it    <br \/>&#160;&#160; came about. He says of the Ever-blessed One,&#8211;&quot;He laid His right hand    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon me, saying unto me, Fear not; I am the first and the last: I am He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that liveth, and was dead; and, behold, I am alive for evermore, Amen;    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and have the keys of hell and of death.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; All the life-floods of our being will flow with renewed force if, first   <br \/>&#160;&#160; of all, we are brought into contact with Jesus: &quot;He laid His right hand    <br \/>&#160;&#160; upon me.&quot; Marvellous patience that He does not set His foot upon us,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and tread us down as the mire of the streets! I have lain at His feet    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as dead, and had He spurned me as tainted with corruption, I could not    <br \/>&#160;&#160; have impugned His justice. But there is nothing here about His foot!    <br \/>&#160;&#160; That foot has been pierced for us, and it cannot be that the foot which    <br \/>&#160;&#160; has been nailed to the cross for His people should ever trample them in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; His wrath. Hear these words, &quot;He laid His right hand upon me.&quot; The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; right hand of His strength and of His glory He laid upon His fainting    <br \/>&#160;&#160; servant. It was the hand of a man. It is the right hand of Him who, in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all our afflictions, was afflicted, who is a Brother born for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; adversity. Hence, everything about His hand has a reviving influence.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; The speech of sympathy, my brothers, is often too unpractical, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hence it is too feeble to revive the fainting; the touch of sympathy is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; far more effectual. You remember that happy story of the wild negro    <br \/>&#160;&#160; child who could never be won till the little lady sat down by her, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; laid her hand upon her. Eva won poor Topsy by that tender touch. The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; tongue failed, but the hand achieved the victory. So was it with our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; adorable Lord. He showed us that He was bone of our bone and flesh of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our flesh; He brought Himself into contact with us, and made us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; perceive the reality of His love to us, and then He became more than a    <br \/>&#160;&#160; conqueror over us. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thus, we felt that He was no fiction, but a real Christ, for there was   <br \/>&#160;&#160; His hand, and we felt the gentle pressure. The laying on of the right    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hand of the Lord had brought healing to the sick, sight to the blind,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and even life to the dead, and it is no strange thing that it should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; restore a fainting disciple. May you all feel it at this very moment in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; its full reviving power! May there stream down from the Lord&#8217;s right    <br \/>&#160;&#160; hand, not merely His sympathy, because He is a man like ourselves, but    <br \/>&#160;&#160; as much of the power of His deity as can be gotten into man, so that we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; may be filled with the fulness of God! That is possible at this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; instant. The Lord&#8217;s supper represents the giving of the whole body of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Christ to us, to enter into us for food; surely, if we enter into its    <br \/>&#160;&#160; true meaning, we may expect to be revived and vitalized; for we have    <br \/>&#160;&#160; here more than a mere touch of the hand, it is the whole Christ that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; enters into us spiritually, and so comes into contact with our    <br \/>&#160;&#160; innermost being. I believe in &quot;the real presence&quot;: do not you? The    <br \/>&#160;&#160; carnal presence is another thing: that we do not even desire. Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Jesus, come into a many-handed contact with us now by dwelling in us,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and we in Thee! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Still, there was something else wanted, for our Lord Jesus, after the   <br \/>&#160;&#160; touch, gave the word: &quot;Fear not; I am the first and the last.&quot; What    <br \/>&#160;&#160; does He say? Does He say, &quot;Thou art&quot;? Open your Testaments, and see.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Does He exclaim, &quot;Fear not; thou art the beloved disciple, John the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; apostle and divine&quot;? I find nothing of the kind. He did not direct His    <br \/>&#160;&#160; servant to look at himself, but to remember the great I Am, his    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Saviour, and Lord. The living comfort of every swooning child of God,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of everyone who is conscious of a death-wound to the natural &quot;I,&quot; lies    <br \/>&#160;&#160; in that majestic &quot;I,&quot; who alone can say &quot;I am.&quot; You live because there    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is an &quot;I am&quot; who has life in Himself, and has that life for you. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;I am the first.&quot; &quot;I have gone before you, and prepared your way; I   <br \/>&#160;&#160; loved you before you loved Me; I ordained your whole course in life    <br \/>&#160;&#160; before you were in existence. In every work of grace for you and within    <br \/>&#160;&#160; you, I am the first. Like the dew which comes from the Lord, I waited    <br \/>&#160;&#160; not for man, neither tarried for the sons of men. And I also am the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; last, perfecting that which concerneth you, and keeping you unto the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; end. I am the Alpha and the Omega to you, and all the letters in    <br \/>&#160;&#160; between; I began with you, and I shall end with you, if an end can be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; thought of. I march in the van, and I bring up the rear. Your final    <br \/>&#160;&#160; preservation is as much from Me as your hopeful commencement.&quot; Brother,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; does a fear arise concerning that dark hour which threatens soon to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; arrive? What hour is that? Jesus knows, and He will be with you through    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the night, and till the day breaketh. If Jesus is the beginning and the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; end to us, what is there else? What have we to fear unless it be those    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unhallowed inventions of our mistrust, those superfluities of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; naughtiness which fashion themselves into unbeliefs, and doubts, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; unkind imaginings? Christ shuts out everything that could hurt us, for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; He covers all the time, and all the space; He is above the heights, and    <br \/>&#160;&#160; beneath the depths; and everywhere He is Love. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Read on,&#8211;&quot;I am He that liveth.&quot; &quot;Because I live, ye shall live also;   <br \/>&#160;&#160; no real death shall befal you, for death hath no more dominion over    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Me,&#8211;your Head, your Life.&quot; While there is a living Christ in heaven,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; no believer shall ever see death: he shall sleep in Jesus, and that is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; all, for even then he shall be &quot;for ever with the Lord.&quot; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Read on,&#8211;&quot;and was dead.&quot; &quot;Therefore, though die, you shall go no lower   <br \/>&#160;&#160; than I went; and you shall be brought up again even as I have returned    <br \/>&#160;&#160; from the tomb.&quot; Think of Jesus as having traversed the realm of    <br \/>&#160;&#160; death-shade, and you will not fear to follow in His track. Where should    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the dying members rest but on the same couch with their once dying    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Head? <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; &quot;And behold, I am alive for evermore.&quot; Yes, behold it, and never cease   <br \/>&#160;&#160; to behold it: we serve an ever-living Lord. Brothers, go home from this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; conference in the power of this grand utterance! The dear child may    <br \/>&#160;&#160; sicken, or the precious wife may be taken home; but Christ says, &quot;I am    <br \/>&#160;&#160; alive for evermore.&quot; The believing heart can never be a widow, for its    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Husband is the living God. Our Lord Jesus will not leave us orphans, He    <br \/>&#160;&#160; will come unto us. Here is our joy, then: not in ourselves, but in the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; fact that He ever lives to carry out the Father&#8217;s good pleasure in us    <br \/>&#160;&#160; and for us. Onward, soldiers of the cross, for our immortal Captain    <br \/>&#160;&#160; leads the way. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Read once more,&#8211;&quot;and have the keys of hell and of death.&quot; As I thought   <br \/>&#160;&#160; over these words, I marvelled for the poverty and meanness of the cause    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of evil; for the prince of it, the devil, has not the keys of his own    <br \/>&#160;&#160; house; he cannot be trusted with them; they are swinging at the girdle    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of Christ. Surely I shall never go to hell, for my Lord Jesus turned    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the key against my entrance long ago. The doors of hell were locked for    <br \/>&#160;&#160; me When He died on my behalf. I saw Him lock the door, and, what is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; more, I saw Him hang the key at His girdle, and there it is to this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; day. Christ has the keys of hell; then, whenever He chooses, He can    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cage the devouring lion, and restrain his power for evil. Oh, that the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; day were come! It is coming, for the dragon hath great wrath, knowing    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that his time is short. Let us not go forth alone to battle with this    <br \/>&#160;&#160; dread adversary; let us tell his Conqueror of him, and entreat Him to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; shorten his chain. I admire the forcible words of a dying woman to one    <br \/>&#160;&#160; who asked her what she did when she was tempted by the devil on account    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of her sin. She replied, &quot;The devil does not tempt me now; he came to    <br \/>&#160;&#160; me a little while ago, and he does not like me well enough to come    <br \/>&#160;&#160; again!&quot; &quot;Why not?&quot; &quot;Well, he went away because I said to him, Chosen,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; chosen!&quot; &quot;What did you mean by that?&quot; &quot;Do you not remember how it is    <br \/>&#160;&#160; said in the Scripture, The Lord rebuke thee, O Satan; even the Lord    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that hath chosen Jerusalem rebuke thee&#8217;?&quot; The aged woman&#8217;s text was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; well taken, and well does the enemy know the rebuke which it contains.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; When Joshua, the high priest, clothed in filthy garments, stood before    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the angel, Satan stood at his right hand to resist him, but he was    <br \/>&#160;&#160; silenced by being told of the election of God: &quot;The Lord which hath    <br \/>&#160;&#160; chosen Jerusalem rebuke thee.&quot; Ah, brethren, when Christ&#8217;s right hand    <br \/>&#160;&#160; is upon us, the evil one departs! He knows too well the weight of that    <br \/>&#160;&#160; right hand. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Conclude the verse,&#8211;&quot;and of death.&quot; Our Lord has the keys of death,   <br \/>&#160;&#160; and this will be a joyful fact to us when our last hours arrive. If we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; say to Him, &quot;Master, whither am I going?&quot; He answers, &quot;I have the key    <br \/>&#160;&#160; of death and the spirit world. Will we not reply, &quot;We feel quite    <br \/>&#160;&#160; confident to go wherever Thou wilt lead us, O Lord&quot;? We shall then    <br \/>&#160;&#160; pursue His track in His company. Our bodies shall descend into what men    <br \/>&#160;&#160; call a charnel-house, though it is really the unrobing-room of saints,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; the vestibule of heaven, the wardrobe of our dress where it shall be    <br \/>&#160;&#160; cleansed and perfected. We have a fit spiritual array for the interval,    <br \/>&#160;&#160; but we expect that our bodies shall rise again in the likeness of &quot;the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Lord from heaven.&quot; What gainers we shall be when we shall take up the    <br \/>&#160;&#160; robes we laid aside, and find them so gloriously changed, and made fit    <br \/>&#160;&#160; for us to wear even in the presence of our Lord! So, if the worst fear    <br \/>&#160;&#160; that crosses you should be realized, and you should literally die at    <br \/>&#160;&#160; your Lord&#8217;s feet, there is no cause for dread, for no enemy can do you    <br \/>&#160;&#160; harm, since the divine right hand is pledged to deliver you to the end.    <br \/>&#160;&#160; Let us give the Well-beloved the most devout and fervent praise as we    <br \/>&#160;&#160; now partake of this regal festival. The King sitteth at His table, let    <br \/>&#160;&#160; our spikenard give forth its sweetest smell.    <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; C. H. SPURGEON&#8217;S COMMUNION HYMN. <\/p>\n<p>&#160; (No. 939 in &quot;Our Own Hymn Book.&quot;) <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; AMIDST us our Belov&#8217;d stands, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And bids us view His pierc&#8217;d hands; <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Points to His wounded feet and side, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Blest emblems of the Crucified. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; What food luxurious loads the board, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When at His table sits the Lord! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; The wine how rich, the bread how sweet, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When Jesus deigns the guests to meet! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; If now with eyes defiled and dim, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; We see the signs but see not Him, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Oh, may His love the scales displace, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; And bid us see Him face to face! <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Our former transports we recount, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; When with Him in the holy mount, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; These cause our souls to thirst anew, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; His marr&#8217;d but lovely face to view. <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thou glorious Bridegroom of our hearts, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Thy present smile a heaven imparts: <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Oh, lift the veil, if veil there be, <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Let every saint Thy beauties see!   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; Indexes   <br \/>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ <\/p>\n<p>Index of Scripture References <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Genesis <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [1]1:27&#160;&#160; [2]15:1&#160;&#160; [3]18&#160;&#160; [4]32:24-30 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Exodus <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [5]20:16 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Leviticus <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [6]19:13-18&#160;&#160; [7]19:17 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Numbers <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [8]23:21 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Joshua <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [9]5:13 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; 1 Kings <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [10]4:22 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Nehemiah <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [11]9:17 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Job <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [12]22:6 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Psalms <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [13]17:3&#160;&#160; [14]39:16&#160;&#160; [15]40:7&#160;&#160; [16]40:8&#160;&#160; [17]63:7&#160;&#160; [18]91:1 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Proverb <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [19]8:31 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Song of Solomon <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [20]1:6&#160;&#160; [21]1:8&#160;&#160; [22]1:10&#160;&#160; [23]2:3&#160;&#160; [24]2:3&#160;&#160; [25]2:3&#160;&#160; [26]2:14   <br \/>&#160;&#160; [27]2:16&#160;&#160; [28]2:17&#160;&#160; [29]4:1&#160;&#160; [30]4:6&#160;&#160; [31]4:7&#160;&#160; [32]5:16    <br \/>&#160;&#160; [33]6:4-7&#160;&#160; [34]6:9&#160;&#160; [35]7:6&#160;&#160; [36]8:2&#160;&#160; [37]8:2&#160;&#160; [38]8:3 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Isaiah <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [39]5:1&#160;&#160; [40]27:3&#160;&#160; [41]32:2&#160;&#160; [42]32:2&#160;&#160; [43]43:1&#160;&#160; [44]43:1   <br \/>&#160;&#160; [45]49:2&#160;&#160; [46]49:2&#160;&#160; [47]52:13-15 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Jeremiah <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [48]1:20 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Ezekiel <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [49]16:8-16 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Daniel <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [50]3:19-25&#160;&#160; [51]9:24&#160;&#160; [52]10:19 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Hosea <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [53]11:4 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Matthew <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [54]5:23&#160;&#160; [55]5:24&#160;&#160; [56]5:43&#160;&#160; [57]11:28&#160;&#160; [58]25:34&#160;&#160; [59]26:30   <br \/>&#160;&#160; [60]26:30 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Mark <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [61]4:38&#160;&#160; [62]4:39 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Luke <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [63]8:46&#160;&#160; [64]12:50&#160;&#160; [65]15:4-7&#160;&#160; [66]17:3&#160;&#160; [67]22:14&#160;&#160; [68]22:42 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; John <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [69]1:16&#160;&#160; [70]1:16&#160;&#160; [71]1:29&#160;&#160; [72]13:1&#160;&#160; [73]13:10&#160;&#160; [74]14:18   <br \/>&#160;&#160; [75]14:18&#160;&#160; [76]15:9 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Romans <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [77]13:9&#160;&#160; [78]14:10&#160;&#160; [79]15:26 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; 1 Corinthians <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [80]10:16&#160;&#160; [81]10:17 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; 2 Corinthians <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [82]5:21&#160;&#160; [83]9:13 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Galatians <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [84]2:20&#160;&#160; [85]3:13 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Ephesians <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [86]1:6&#160;&#160; [87]2:6&#160;&#160; [88]5:2&#160;&#160; [89]5:27 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Colossians <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [90]1:22&#160;&#160; [91]2:10-13 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Hebrews <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [92]2:11&#160;&#160; [93]2:14&#160;&#160; [94]2:15&#160;&#160; [95]4:15&#160;&#160; [96]9:26&#160;&#160; [97]9:28   <br \/>&#160;&#160; [98]13:16 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; James <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [99]2:8 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; 1 Peter <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [100]2:24&#160;&#160; [101]2:25 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; 2 Peter <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [102]1:4 <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; Revelation <\/p>\n<p>&#160;&#160; [103]1:17&#160;&#160; [104]1:18&#160;&#160; [105]3:19<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ &#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; Title: Till He Come &#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; Creator(s): Spurgeon, Charles Hadden (1834-1892) &#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; Rights: Public Domain &#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ &#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; &quot;TILL HE COME.&quot; COMMUNION MEDITATIONS &#160; AND ADDRESSES &#160; BY C. H. SPURGEON. &#160; (Not published in The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit.) &#160; 1896. &#160;&#160;&#160;&#160; __________________________________________________________________ &#160;&#160; PREFATORY NOTE. &#160;&#160; For many years, whether at home&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"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-5544","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5544","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\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=5544"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5544\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5544"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=5544"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=5544"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}