And so for all of us, the true anaesthetic or "painkiller" is that all-dominant sense of obligation and duty which lays hold upon us, and grips us, and makes us, not exactly indifferent to, but very partially conscious of, the sorrows or the hindrances or the pains that may come in our way. You cannot stop an express train by stretching a rope across the line, nor stay the flow of a river with a barrier of straw.

And if a man has once yielded himself fully to that great conception of G.o.d"s will driving him on through life, and prescribing his path for him, it is neither in sorrow nor in joy to arrest his course. They may roll all the golden apples out of the garden of the Hesperides in his path, and he will not stop to pick one of them up; or Satan may block it with his fiercest flames, and the man will go into them, saying, "When I pa.s.s through the fires He will be with me."

III. Lastly, what Paul won thereby.

"That I _may_ finish my course ... I _have_ finished my course"; in the same lofty meaning, not merely _ended_, though that was true, but "completed, accomplished, perfected."

Now some hyper-sensitive people have thought that it was very strange that the Apostle, who was always preaching the imperfection of all human obedience and service, should, at the end of his life, indulge in such a piece of what they fancy was self-complacent retrospect as to say "I have kept the faith; I have fought a good fight; I have finished my course." But it was by no means complacent self-righteousness. Of course he did not mean that he looked back upon a career free from faults and flecks and stains. No. There is only one pair of human lips that ever could say, in the full significance of the word, "It is finished! ... I have completed the work which Thou gavest Me to do."

Jesus Christ"s retrospect of a stainless career, without defect or discordance at any point from the divine ideal, is not repeated in any of His servants" experiences. But, on the other hand, if a man in the middle of his difficulties and his conflict pulls himself habitually together and says to himself, "Nothing shall move me, so that I may complete this bit of my course," depend upon it, his effort, his believing effort, will not be in vain; and at the last he will be able to look back on a career which, though stained with many imperfections, and marred with many failures, yet on the whole has realised the divine purpose, though not with absolute completeness, at least sufficiently to enable the faithful servant to feel that all his struggle has not been in vain.

Brethren, no one else can. And oh! how different the two "courses" of the G.o.dly man and the worldling look, in their relative importance, when seen from this side, as we are advancing towards them, and from the other as we look back upon them! Pleasures, escape from pains, ease, comfort, popularity, quiet lives--all these things seem very attractive; and G.o.d"s will often seems very hard and very repulsive, when we are advancing towards some unwelcome duty. But when we get beyond it and look back, the two careers have changed their characters; and all the joys that could be bought at the price of the smallest neglected duty or the smallest perpetrated sin, dwindle and dwindle and dwindle, and the light is out of them, and they show for what they are--nothings, gilded nothings, painted emptinesses, lies varnished over. And on the other hand, to do right, to discharge the smallest duty, to recognise G.o.d"s will, and with faithful effort to seek to do it in dependence upon Him, that towers and towers and towers, and there seems to be, as there really is, nothing else worth living for.

So let us live with the continual remembrance in our minds that all which we do has to be pa.s.sed in review by us once more, from another standpoint, and with another illumination falling upon it. And be sure of this, that the one thing worth looking back upon, and possible to be looked back upon with peace and quietness, is the humble, faithful, continual discharge of our appointed tasks for the dear Lord"s sake. If you and I, whilst work and troubles last, do truly say, "None of these things move me, so that I _might_ finish my course," we too, with all our weaknesses, may be able to say at the last, "Thanks be to G.o.d! I _have_ finished my course."

PARTING WORDS [Footnote: Preached prior to a long absence in Australia.]

"And now, brethren, I commend you to G.o.d, and to the word of His grace...."--ACTS xx. 32.

I may be pardoned if my remarks now should a.s.sume somewhat of a more personal character than is my wont. I desire to speak mainly to my own friends, the members of my own congregation; and other friends who have come to give me a parting "G.o.dspeed" will forgive me if my observations have a more special bearing on those with whom I am more immediately connected.

The Apostle whose words I have taken for my text was leaving, as he supposed, for the last time, the representatives of the Church in Ephesus, to whom he had been painting in very sombre colours the dangers of the future and his own forebodings and warnings.

Exhortations, prophecies of evil, expressions of anxious solicitude, motions of Christian affection, all culminate in this parting utterance. High above them all rises the thought of the present G.o.d, and of the mighty word which in itself, in the absence of all human teachers, had power to "build them up, and to give them an inheritance amongst them that are sanctified."

If we think of that Church in Ephesus, this brave confidence of the Apostle"s becomes yet more remarkable. They were set in the midst of a focus of heathen superst.i.tion, from which they themselves had only recently been rescued. Their knowledge was little, they had no Apostolic teacher to be present with them; they were left alone there to battle with the evils of that corrupt society in which they dwelt.

And yet Paul leaves them--"sheep in the midst of wolves," with a very imperfect Christianity, with no Bible, with no teachers--in the sure confidence that no harm will come to them, because G.o.d is with them, and the "word of His grace" is enough.

And that is the feeling, dear brethren, with which I now look you in the face for the last time for a little while. I desire that you and I should together share the conviction that each of us is safe because G.o.d and the "word of His grace" will go and remain with us.

I. So then, first of all, let me point you to the one source of security and enlightenment for the Church and for the individual.

We are not to separate between G.o.d and the "word of His grace," but rather to suppose that the way by which the Apostle conceived of G.o.d as working for the blessing and the guardianship of that little community in Ephesus was mainly, though not exclusively, through that which he here designates "the word of His grace." We are not to forget the ever-abiding presence of the indwelling Spirit who guards and keeps the life of the individual and of the community. But what is in the Apostle"s mind here is the objective revelation, the actual spoken word (not yet written) which had its origin in G.o.d"s condescending love, and had for its contents, mainly, the setting forth of that love. Or to put it into other words, the revelation of the grace of G.o.d in Jesus Christ, with all the great truths that cl.u.s.ter round and are evolved from it, is the all-sufficient source of enlightenment and security for individuals and for Churches. And whosoever will rightly use and faithfully keep that great word, no evil shall befall him, nor shall he ever make shipwreck of the faith. It is "able to build you up," says Paul. In G.o.d"s Gospel, in the truth concerning Jesus Christ the divine Redeemer, in the principles that flow from that Cross and Pa.s.sion, and that risen life and that ascension to G.o.d, there is all that men need, all that they want for life, all that they want for G.o.dliness. The basis of their creed, the sufficient guide for their conduct, the formative powers that will shape into beauty and n.o.bleness their characters, all lie in the germ in this message, "G.o.d was in Christ reconciling the world unto Himself." Whoever keeps that in mind and memory, ruminates upon it till it becomes the nourishment of his soul, meditates on it till the precepts and the promises and the principles that are enwrapped in it unfold themselves before Him, needs none other guide for life, none other solace in sorrow, none other anchor of hope, none other stay in trial and in death. "I commend you to G.o.d and the word of His grace," which is a storehouse full of all that we need for life and for G.o.dliness. Whoever has it is like a landowner who has a quarry on his estate, from which at will he can dig stones to build his house. If you truly possess and faithfully adhere to this Gospel, you have enough.

Remember that these believers to whom Paul thus spoke had no New Testament, and most of them, I dare say, could not read the Old. There were no written Gospels in existence. The greater part of the New Testament was not written; what was written was in the shape of two or three letters that belonged to Churches in another part of the world altogether. It was to the spoken word that he commended them. How much more securely may we trust one another to that permanent record of the divine revelation which we have here in the pages of Scripture!

As for the individual, so for the Church, that written word is the guarantee for its purity and immortality. Christianity is the only religion that has ever pa.s.sed through periods of decadence and purified itself again. They used to say that Thames water was the best to put on shipboard because, after it became putrid, it cleared itself and became sweet again. I do not know anything about whether that is true or not, but I know that it is true about Christianity. Over and over again it has rotted, and over and over again it has cleared itself, and it has always been by the one process. Men have gone back to the word and laid hold again of it in its simple omnipotence, and so a decadent Christianity has sprung up again into purity and power. The word of G.o.d, the principles of the revelation contained in Christ and recorded for ever in this New Testament, are the guarantee of the Church"s immortality and of the Church"s purity. This man and that man may fall away, provinces may be lost from the empire for a while, standards of rebellion and heresy may be lifted, but "the foundation of G.o.d standeth sure," and whoever will hark back again and dig down through the rubbish of human buildings to the living Rock will build secure and dwell at peace. If all our churches were pulverised to-morrow, and every formal creed of Christendom were torn in pieces, and all the inst.i.tutions of the Church were annihilated--if there was a New Testament left they would all be built up again. "I commend you to G.o.d, and to the word of His grace."

II. Secondly, notice the possible benefit of the silencing of the _human_ voice.

Paul puts together his absence and the power of the word. "Now I know that you will see my face no more"--"I commend you to G.o.d." That is to say, it is often a good thing that the voice of man may be hushed in order that the sweeter and deeper music of the word of G.o.d, sounding from no human lips, may reach our hearts. Of course I am not going to depreciate preachers and books and religious literature and the thought and the acts of good and wise men who have been interpreters of G.o.d"s meaning and will to their brethren, but the human ministration of the divine word, like every other help to knowing G.o.d, may become a hindrance instead of a help; and in all such helps there is a tendency, unless there be continual jealous watchfulness on the part of those who minister them, and on the part of those who use them, to a.s.sert themselves instead of leading to G.o.d, and to become not mirrors in which we may behold G.o.d, but obscuring _media_ which come between us and Him. This danger belongs to the great ordinance and office of the Christian ministry, large as its blessings are, just as it belongs to all other offices which are appointed for the purpose of bringing men to G.o.d. We may make them ladders or we may make them barriers; we may climb by them or we may remain in them. We may look at the colours on the painted gla.s.s until we do not see or think of the light which strikes through the colours.

So it is often a good thing that a human voice which speaks the divine word, should be silenced; just as it is often a good thing that other helps and props should be taken away. No man ever leans all his weight upon G.o.d"s arm until every other crutch on which he used to lean has been knocked from him.

And therefore, dear brethren, applying these plain things to ourselves, may I not say that it may and should be the result of my temporary absence from you that some of you should be driven to a more first-hand acquaintance with G.o.d and with His word? I, like all Christian ministers, have of course my favourite ways of looking at truth, limitations of temperament, and idiosyncrasies of various sorts, which colour the representations that I make of G.o.d"s great word. All the river cannot run through any pipe; and what does run is sure to taste somewhat of the soil through which it runs. And for some of you, after thirty years of hearing my way of putting things--and I have long since told you all that I have got to say--it will be a good thing to have some one else to speak to you, who will come with other aspects of that great Truth, and look at it from other angles and reflect other hues of its perfect whiteness. So partly because of these limitations of mine, partly because you have grown so accustomed to my voice that the things that I say do not produce half as much effect on many of you as if I were saying them to somebody else, or somebody else were saying them to you, and partly because the affection, born of so many years of united worship, for which in many respects I am your debtor, may lead you to look at the vessel rather than the treasure, do you not think it may be a means of blessing and help to this congregation that I should step aside for a little while and some one else should stand here, and you should be driven to make acquaintance with "G.o.d and the word of His grace" a little more for yourselves? What does it matter though you do not have nay sermons? You have your Bibles and you have G.o.d"s Spirit.

And if my silence shall lead any of you to prize and to use _these_ more than you have done, then my silence will have done a great deal more than my speech. Ministers are like doctors, the test of their success is that they are not needed any more. And when we can say, "They can stand without us, and they do not need us," that is the crown of our ministry.

III. Thirdly, notice the best expression of Christian solicitude and affection.

"I commend you," says Paul, "to G.o.d, and to the word of His grace." If we may venture upon a very literal translation of the word, it is, "I lay you down beside G.o.d." That is beautiful, is it not? Here had Paul been carrying the Ephesian Church on his back for a long time now. He had many cares about them, many forebodings as to their future, knowing very well that after his departure grievous wolves were going to enter in. He says, "I cannot carry the load any longer; here I lay it down at the Throne, beneath those pure Eyes, and that gentle and strong Hand."

For to commend them to G.o.d is in fact a prayer casting the care which Paul could no longer exercise, upon Him.

And that is the highest expression of, as it is the only soothing for, manly Christian solicitude and affection. Of course you and I, looking forward to these six months of absence, have all of us our anxieties about what may be the issue. I may feel afraid lest there should be flagging here, lest good work should be done a little more languidly, lest there should be a beggarly account of empty pews many a time, lest the bonds of Christian union here should be loosened, and when I come back I may find it hard work to reknit them. All these thoughts must be in the mind of a true man who has put most of his life, and as much of himself as during that period he could command, into his work. What then? "I commend you to G.o.d." You may have your thoughts and anxieties as well as I have mine. Dear brethren, let us make an end of solicitude and turn it into pet.i.tion and bring one another to G.o.d, and leave one another there.

This "commending," as it is the highest expression of Christian solicitude, so it is the highest and most natural expression of Christian affection. I am not going to do what is so easy to do--bring tears at such a moment. I do not purpose to speak of the depth, the sacredness of the bond that unites a great many of us together. I think we can take that for granted without saying any more about it. But, dear brethren, I do want to pledge you and myself to this, that our solicitude and our affection should find voice in prayer, and that when we are parted we may be united, because the eyes of both are turned to the one Throne. There is a reality in prayer. Do you pray for me, as I will for you, when we are far apart. And as the vapour that rises from the southern seas where I go may fall in moisture, refreshing these northern lands, so what rises on one side of the world from believing hearts in loving prayers may fall upon the other in the rain of a divine blessing. "I commend you to G.o.d, and the word of His grace."

IV. Lastly, notice the parting counsels involved in the commendation.

If it be true that G.o.d and His Word are the source of all security and enlightenment, and are so, apart altogether from human agencies, then to commend these brethren to G.o.d was exhortation as well as prayer, and implied pointing them to the one source of security that they might cling to that source. I am going to give no advices about little matters of church order and congregational prosperity. These will all come right, if the two main exhortations that are involved in this text are laid to heart; and if they are not laid to heart, then I do not care one rush about the smaller things, of full pews and prosperous subscription lists and Christian work. These are secondary, and they will be consequent if you take these two advices that are couched in my text:--

(_a_) "Cleave to the Lord with full purpose of heart," as the limpet does to the rock. Cling to Jesus Christ, the revelation of G.o.d"s grace.

And how do we cling to Him? What is the cement of souls? Love and trust; and whoever exercises these in reference to Jesus Christ is built into Him, and belongs to Him, and has a vital unity knitting him with that Lord. Cleave to Christ, brother, by faith and love, by communion and prayer, and by practical conformity of life. For remember that the union which is effected by faith can be broken by sin, and that there will be no reality in our union to Jesus unless it is manifested and perpetuated by righteousness of conduct and character.

Two smoothly-ground pieces of gla.s.s pressed together will adhere. If there be a speck of sand, microscopic in dimensions, between the two, they will fall apart; and if you let tiny grains of sin come between you and your Master, it is delusion to speak of being knit to Him by faith and love. Keep near Jesus Christ and you will be safe.

(_b_) Cleave to "the word of His grace." Try to understand its teachings better; study your Bibles with more earnestness; believe more fully than you have ever done that in that great Gospel there lie every truth that we need and guidance in all circ.u.mstances. Bring the principles of Christianity into your daily life; walk by the light of them; and live in the radiance of a present G.o.d. And then all these other matters which I have spoken of, which are important, highly important but secondary, will come right.

Many of you, dear brethren, have listened to my voice for long years, and have not done the one thing for which I preach--viz. set your faith, as sinful men, on the great atoning Sacrifice and Incarnate Lord. I beseech you let my last word go deeper than its predecessors, and yield yourselves to G.o.d in Christ, bringing all your weakness and all your sin to Him, and trusting yourselves wholly and utterly to His sacrifice and life.

"I commend you to G.o.d and to the word of His grace," and beseech you "that, whether I come to see you or else be absent, I may hear of your affairs, that ye stand fast in one spirit, with one mind striving together for the faith of the Gospel."

THE BLESSEDNESS OF GIVING

"...It is more blessed to give than to receive."--ACTS xx. 35.

How "many other things Jesus did" and said "which are not written in this book"! Here is one precious unrecorded word, which was floating down to the ocean of oblivion when Paul drew it to sh.o.r.e and so enriched the world. There is, however, a saying recorded, which is essentially parallel in content though differing in garb, "The Son of Man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister." It is tempting to think that the text gives a glimpse into the deep fountains of the pure blessedness of Jesus Himself, and was a transcript of His own human experience. It helps us to understand how the Man of Sorrows could give as a legacy to His followers "My joy," and could speak of it as abiding and full.

I. The reasons on which this saying rests.

It is based not only on the fact that the act of giving has in it a sense of power and of superiority, and that the act of receiving may have a painful consciousness of obligation, though a cynic might endorse it on that ground, but on a truth far deeper than these, that there is a pure and G.o.dlike joy in making others blessed.

The foundation on which the axiom rests is that giving is the result of love and self-sacrifice. Whenever they are not found, the giving is not the giving which "blesses him that gives." If you give with some _arriere pensee_ of what you will get by it, or for the sake of putting some one under obligation, or indifferently as a matter of compulsion or routine, if with your alms there be contempt to which pity is ever near akin, then these are not examples of the giving on which Christ p.r.o.nounced His benediction. But where the heart is full of deep, real love, and where that love expresses itself by a cheerful act of self-sacrifice, then there is felt a glow of calm blessedness far above the base and greedy joys of self-centred souls who delight only in keeping their possessions, or in using them for themselves. It comes not merely from contemplating the relief or happiness in others of which our gifts may have been the source, but from the working in our own hearts of these two G.o.dlike emotions. To be delivered from making myself my great object, and to be delivered from the undue value set upon having and keeping our possessions, are the twin factors of true blessedness. It is heaven on earth to love and to give oneself away.

Then again, the highest joy and n.o.blest use of all our possessions is found in imparting them.

True as to this world"s goods.

The old epitaph is profoundly true, which puts into the dead lips the declaration: "What I kept I lost. What I gave I kept." Better to learn that and act on it while living!

True as to truth, and knowledge.

True as to the Gospel of the grace of G.o.d.

II. The great example in G.o.d of the blessedness of giving.

G.o.d gives--gives only--gives always--and He in giving has joy, blessedness. He would not be "the ever-blessed G.o.d" unless He were "the giving G.o.d." Creation we are perhaps scarcely warranted in affirming to be a necessity to the divine nature, and we run on perilous heights of speculation when we speak of it as contributing to His blessedness; but this at least we may say, that He, in the deep words of the Psalmist, "delights in mercy." Before creation was realised in time, the divine Idea of it was eternal, inseparable from His being, and therefore from everlasting He "rejoiced in the habitable parts of the earth, and His delights were with the sons of men."

The light and glory thus thrown on His relation to us.

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