It sometimes happens that, through injudicious fondness, the parent is tempted to pamper the will of the child; but it is sowing to the flesh, and must yield corruption. It is not true love at all to indulge a child"s will, neither can it possibly minister to his true happiness or legitimate enjoyment. An over-indulged, self-willed child is miserable himself and a grievous infliction on all who have to do with him. Children should be taught to think of others, and to seek to promote their comfort and happiness in every way. How very unseemly it is, for example, for a child to enter the house and ascend the stairs whistling, singing, and shouting, in total disregard of other members of the household who may be seriously disturbed and annoyed by such conduct! No properly trained child would think of acting in such a way; and where such unsubdued, unruly, inconsiderate conduct is allowed, there is a serious defect in the domestic government.

It is essential to family peace, harmony, and comfort, that all the members should "consider one another." We are responsible to seek the good and the happiness of those around us, and not our own. If all would but remember this, what different households we should have! and what a different tale would families have to tell! Every Christian household should be the reflection of the divine character. The atmosphere should just be the very atmosphere of heaven. How is this to be? Simply by each one--parent, child, master, and servant--seeking to walk in the footsteps of Jesus, and manifest His spirit. He never pleased Himself, never sought His own interest in any thing; He did always the thing that pleased the Father; He came to serve and to give; He went about doing good, and healing all that were oppressed of the devil. Thus it was ever with that most blessed One--the gracious, loving, sympathizing Friend of all the sons and daughters of want, weakness, and sorrow; and if only the various members of each Christian family were formed on this perfect model, we should, at least, realize something of the power and efficacy of personal and domestic Christianity, which, blessed be G.o.d, can ever be maintained and exhibited notwithstanding the hopeless ruin of the professing church. "Thou and thy house" suggests a great golden principle which runs through the volume of G.o.d, from beginning to end. In every age, under every dispensation, in the days of the patriarchs, in the days of the law, and in the days of Christianity, we find, to our exceeding comfort and encouragement, that personal and domestic G.o.dliness has its place as something grateful to the heart of G.o.d and to the glory of His holy name.

This we consider to be most consolatory at all times, but more particularly at a time like the present, when the professing church seems so rapidly sinking into gross worldliness and open infidelity; and not this only, but when those who most earnestly desire to walk in obedience to the Word of G.o.d, and to act on the grand foundation-truth of the unity of the body, find it so difficult to maintain a a corporate testimony. In view of all this, we may well bless G.o.d, with overflowing hearts, that personal and family piety can always be maintained, and that from the heart and the home of every Christian a constant stream of praise may ascend to the throne of G.o.d, and a stream of active benevolence flow out to a needy, sorrowful, sin-stricken world. May it be so more and more, through the mighty ministry of G.o.d the Holy Ghost, that G.o.d, in all things, may be glorified in the hearts and homes of His beloved people.

We have now to consider the very solemn warning addressed to the congregation of Israel against the terrible sin of idolatry--a sin to which, alas! the poor human heart is ever p.r.o.ne, in one way or another. It is quite possible to be guilty of the sin of idolatry without bowing down before a graven image; wherefore it behooves us to weigh well the words of warning which fell from the lips of Israel"s venerable lawgiver. They are most a.s.suredly written for our learning.

"And ye came near and stood under the mountain; and the mountain burned with fire unto the midst of heaven, with darkness, clouds, and thick darkness." Solemn and suited accompaniments of the occasion!

"And the Lord spake unto you out of the midst of the fire." Oh, how differently He speaks in the gospel of His grace! "Ye heard the voice of the words, but saw no similitude." Important fact for them to ponder! "_Only a voice._" And "faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the Word of G.o.d." "And He declared unto you His covenant, which He commanded you to perform--ten commandments; and He wrote them upon two tables of stone. And the Lord commanded me at that time to teach you statutes and judgments," not that they might discuss them, sit in judgment upon them, or argue about them, but "that _ye might do them_"--the grand old story, the Deuteronomic theme of _obedience_, most precious! whether out of or "in the land whither ye go over to possess it."

Here lies the solid ground of the appeal against idolatry. They _saw_ nothing. G.o.d did not show Himself to them. He did not a.s.sume any bodily shape, of which they might form an image. He gave them His word--His holy commandments, so plain that a child could understand them, and the wayfaring men though fools need not err therein. There was no need for them, therefore, to set about imagining what G.o.d was like; nay, this was _the_ very sin against which they were so faithfully warned. They were called to hear G.o.d"s voice, not to see His shape--to obey His commandment, not to make an image of Him.

Superst.i.tion vainly seeks to do honor to G.o.d by forming and worshiping an image; Faith, on the contrary, lovingly receives and reverently obeys His holy commandments. "If a man love Me," says our blessed Lord, "he will"--what? make an image of Me, and worship it? Nay, but "he will keep My words." This makes it so simple, so safe, so certain.

We are not called to work up our minds to form any conception of G.o.d; we have simply to hear His word and keep His commandments. We can have no idea whatever of G.o.d but as He has been pleased to reveal Himself.--"No man hath seen G.o.d at any time; the only begotten Son, which is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared Him."--"G.o.d, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of G.o.d in the face of Jesus Christ."

Jesus is declared to be the brightness of G.o.d"s glory and the exact impression of His substance. He could say, "He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father." Thus the Son reveals the Father; and it is by the Word, through the power of the Holy Ghost, that we know any thing of the Son; and therefore for any one to attempt, by any efforts of his mind or workings of his imagination, to conceive an image of G.o.d, or of Christ, is simply idolatry. To endeavor to arrive at any knowledge of G.o.d or of Christ save by Scripture, is simply mysticism and confusion; nay, more, it is to put ourselves directly into the hands of the devil, to be led by him into the wildest, darkest, and deadliest delusion.

Hence, therefore, as Israel, at Mount h.o.r.eb, was shut up to the "_voice_" of G.o.d and warned against any similitude, so we are shut up to holy Scripture and warned against every thing which would draw us away, the breadth of a hair, from that holy and all-sufficient standard. We must not listen to the suggestions of our own minds, nor to those of any other human mind: we must absolutely and sternly refuse to listen to any thing but the voice of G.o.d--the voice of holy Scripture. Here is true security, true rest; here we have absolute certainty, so that we can say, "I know _whom_"--not merely _what_--"I have believed; and am persuaded that _He_," etc.

"Take ye therefore good heed unto yourselves, (for ye saw no manner of similitude on the day that the Lord spake unto you in h.o.r.eb out of the midst of the fire,) lest ye corrupt yourselves, and make you a graven image, the similitude of any figure, the likeness of male or female, the likeness of any beast that is on the earth, the likeness of any winged fowl that flieth in the air, the likeness of any thing that creepeth on the ground, the likeness of any fish that is in the waters beneath the earth; and lest thou lift up thine eyes unto heaven, and when thou seest the sun, and the moon, and the stars, even all the host of heaven, shouldest be driven to worship them, and serve them, which the Lord thy G.o.d hath divided unto all nations under the whole heaven. But the Lord hath taken you, and brought you forth out of the iron furnace, even out of Egypt, to be unto Him a people of inheritance, as ye are this day."

There is a very weighty truth set before us here. The people are expressly taught that in making any image and bowing down thereto, they, in reality, lowered and corrupted themselves. Hence, when they made the golden calf, the Lord said unto Moses, "Go, get thee down; for thy people, which thou broughtest out of the land of Egypt, have corrupted themselves." It could not be otherwise. The worshiper must be inferior to the object of his worship; and therefore, in worshiping a calf, they actually put themselves below the level of the beasts that perish. Well, therefore, might He say, They "have corrupted themselves; they have turned aside quickly out of the way which I commanded them; they have made them a molten calf, and have worshiped it, and have sacrificed thereunto, and said, "These be thy G.o.ds, O Israel, which have brought thee up out of the land of Egypt.""

What a spectacle! A whole congregation, led by Aaron the high-priest, bowing in worship before a thing formed by a graving tool out of the earrings which had just been taken from the ears of their wives and daughters! Only conceive a number of intelligent beings--people endowed with reason, understanding, and conscience--saying of a molten calf, "These be thy G.o.ds, O Israel, which have brought thee up out of the land of Egypt"! They actually displaced Jehovah by an image graven by art and man"s device! And these were the people who had seen the mighty works of Jehovah in the land of Egypt. They had seen plague after plague falling upon Egypt and its obdurate king; they had seen the land, as it were, shaken to its very centre by the successive strokes of Jehovah"s governmental rod; they had seen Egypt"s first-born laid in death by the sword of the destroying angel; they had seen the Red Sea divided by one stroke of Jehovah"s rod, and they had pa.s.sed through upon dry ground between those crystal walls which afterwards fell, in crushing power, upon their enemies--all these things had pa.s.sed before their eyes, and yet they could so soon forget all and say of a molten calf, "These be thy G.o.ds, O Israel, which have brought thee up out of the land of Egypt." Did they really believe that a molten image had made the land of Egypt to tremble, humbled its proud monarch, and brought them forth victoriously? Had a calf divided the sea for them, and led them majestically through its depths? So, at least, they said; for what will people not say when the eye and the heart are turned away from G.o.d and His Word?

But we may perhaps be asked, Has all this a voice for us? Are Christians to learn any thing from Israel"s molten calf? and do the warnings addressed to Israel against idolatry convey any voice to the ear of the Church? Are we in danger of bowing down to a graven image?

Is it possible that we, whose high privilege it is to walk in the full-orbed light of New-Testament Christianity, could ever worship a molten calf?

To all this we reply, first of all, in the language of Romans xv. 4, "_Whatsoever things_ were written aforetime"--Exodus x.x.xii. and Deuteronomy iv. included--"were written for our learning, that we through patience and comfort of the Scriptures might have hope." This brief pa.s.sage contains our chartered right to range through the wide field of Old-Testament scripture and gather up and appropriate its golden lessons, to feed upon its "exceeding great and precious promises," to drink in its deep and varied consolation, and to profit by its solemn warnings and wholesome admonitions.

And then, as to our being capable of or liable to the gross sin of idolatry, we have a striking answer in 1 Corinthians x, where the inspired apostle uses the very scene at Mount h.o.r.eb as a warning to the Church of G.o.d. We cannot do better than quote the entire pa.s.sage for the reader. There is nothing like the Word of G.o.d; may we love, prize, and reverence it more and more each day.

"Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant, how that _all_ our fathers were under the cloud"--those whose carca.s.ses fell in the wilderness, as well as those who reached the land of promise,--"and all pa.s.sed through the sea; and were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea; and did all eat the same spiritual meat; and did all drink the same spiritual drink: for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them; and that Rock was Christ."

How strong, how solemn, and how searching is this for all professors!

"But with many of them G.o.d was not well pleased; for they were overthrown in the wilderness. Now these things were _our examples_"

(let us carefully mark this), "to the intent we should not l.u.s.t after _evil things_"--things in any way contrary to the mind of Christ, "as they also l.u.s.ted. Neither _be ye idolaters_" (so that professing Christians may be idolaters) "as were some of them; as it is written, "The people sat down to eat and drink, and rose up to play." Neither let us commit fornication, as some of them committed, and fell in one day three and twenty thousand. Neither let us tempt Christ, as some of them also tempted, and were destroyed of serpents. Neither murmur ye, as some of them also murmured, and were destroyed of the destroyer.

Now _all these things_ happened unto them for ensamples; and _they are written for our admonition_, upon whom the ends of the ages are come.

Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall."

Here we learn, in the plainest manner, that there is no depth of sin and folly, no form of moral pravity, into which we are not capable of plunging, at any moment, if not kept by the mighty power of G.o.d. There is no security for us save in the moral shelter of the divine presence. We know that the Spirit of G.o.d does not warn us against things to which we are not liable. He would not say to us, "Neither be ye idolaters," if we were not capable of being such. Idolatry takes various shapes. It is not, therefore, a question of the shape of the thing, but the thing itself--not the outward form, but the root or principle of the thing. We read that "covetousness is idolatry," and that a covetous man is an idolater; that is, a man desiring to possess himself of more than G.o.d has given him is an idolater--is actually guilty of the sin of Israel when they made the golden calf and worshiped it. Well might the blessed apostle say to the Corinthians--say to us, "Wherefore, my dearly beloved, flee from idolatry." Why be warned to _flee_ from a thing to which we are not liable? Are there any idle words in the volume of G.o.d? What mean those closing words of the first epistle of John--"Little children, keep yourselves from idols"? Do they not tell us that we are in danger of worshiping idols? a.s.suredly they do. Our treacherous hearts are capable of departing from the living G.o.d, and setting up some other object beside Him; and what is this but idolatry? Whatever commands the heart is the heart"s idol, be it what it may--money, pleasure, power, or aught else,--so that we may well see the urgent need for the many warnings given us by the Holy Ghost against the sin of idolatry.

But we have in the fourth chapter of Galatians a very remarkable pa.s.sage, and one which speaks in most impressive accents to the professing church. The Galatians had, like all other Gentiles, worshiped idols; but, on the reception of the gospel, had turned from idols to serve the living and true G.o.d. The Judaizing teachers, however, had come among them and taught them that unless they were circ.u.mcised and kept the law, they could not be saved.

Now this, the blessed apostle unhesitatingly p.r.o.nounces to be idolatry--a going back to the grossness and moral degradation of their former days, and all this after having professed to receive the glorious gospel of Christ. Hence the moral force of the apostle"s inquiry, "Howbeit then, when ye knew not G.o.d, ye did service unto them which by nature are no G.o.ds. _But now_, after that ye have known G.o.d, or rather are known of G.o.d, how _turn ye again_ to the weak and beggarly elements, whereunto ye desire _again_ to be in bondage? Ye observe days, and months, and times, and years. I am afraid of you, lest I have bestowed upon you labor in vain."

This is peculiarly striking. The Galatians were not outwardly going back to the worship of idols. It is not improbable that they would have indignantly repudiated any such idea. But, for all that, the inspired apostle asks them, "How turn ye again?" What does this inquiry mean if they were not going back to idolatry? and what are we now to learn from the whole pa.s.sage? Simply this, that circ.u.mcision, and getting under the law, and observing days, and months, and times, and years--that all this, though apparently so different, was nothing more or less than going back to their old idolatry. The observance of days and the worship of false G.o.ds were both a turning away from the living and true G.o.d, from His Son Jesus Christ, from the Holy Ghost, from that brilliant cl.u.s.ter of dignities and glories which belong to Christianity.

All this is peculiarly solemn for professing Christians. We question if the full import of Galatians iv. 8-10 is really apprehended by the great majority of those who profess to believe the Bible. We solemnly press this whole subject upon the attention of all whom it may concern. We pray G.o.d to use it for the purpose of stirring up the hearts and consciences of His people every where to consider their position, their habits, ways, and a.s.sociations; and to inquire how far they are really following the example of the a.s.semblies of Galatia, in the observance of saints" days and such like, which can only lead away from Christ and His glorious salvation. There is a day coming which will open the eyes of thousands to the reality of these things, and then they will see what they now refuse to see, that the very darkest and grossest forms of paganism may be reproduced under the name of Christianity, and in connection with the very highest truths that ever shone on the human understanding.

But however slow we may be to admit our tendency to fall into the sin of idolatry, it is very plain, in Israel"s case, that Moses, as taught and inspired of G.o.d, felt the deep need of warning them against it, in the most solemn and affecting terms. He appeals to them on every possible ground, and reiterates his counsels and admonitions in a manner so impressive as to leave them, a.s.suredly, without any excuse.

They never could say that they fell into idolatry from the want of warning, or of the most gracious and affectionate entreaty. Take such words as the following: "But the Lord hath taken you, and brought you forth out of the iron furnace, even out of Egypt, to be unto Him a people of inheritance, as ye are this day." (Ver. 20.)

Could any thing be more affecting than this? Jehovah, in His rich and sovereign grace, and by His mighty hand, brought them forth from the land of death and darkness, a redeemed and delivered people. He had brought them to Himself, that they might be to Him a peculiar treasure, above all the people upon earth. How, then, could they turn away from Him, from His holy covenant, and from His precious commandments?

Alas! alas! they could and did. "They _made_ a calf, and said, "These be thy G.o.ds, O Israel, which have brought thee up out of the land of Egypt."" Think of this! A calf, made by their own hands--an image, graven by art and man"s device, had brought them up out of Egypt! A thing made out of the women"s earrings had redeemed and delivered them! And this has been written for our admonition. But why should it be written for us if we are not capable of and liable to the very same sin? We must either admit that G.o.d the Holy Ghost has penned an unnecessary sentence, or admit our need of an admonition against the sin of idolatry; and a.s.suredly, our needing the admonition proves our tendency to the sin.

Are we better than Israel? In no wise. We have brighter light and higher privileges, but, so far as we are concerned, we are made of the same material, have the same capabilities and the same tendencies, as they. Our idolatry may take a different shape from theirs; but idolatry is idolatry, be the shape what it may; and the higher our privileges, the the greater our sin. We may perhaps feel disposed to wonder how a rational people could be guilty of such egregious folly as to make a calf and bow down to it, and this, too, after having had such a display of the majesty, power, and glory of G.o.d. Let us remember that their folly is recorded for our admonition; and that we, with all our light, all our knowledge, all our privileges, are warned to "flee from idolatry."

Let us deeply ponder all this and seek to profit by it. May every chamber of our hearts be filled with Christ, and then we shall have no room for idols. This is our only safeguard. If we slip away the breadth of a hair from our precious Saviour and Shepherd, we are capable of plunging into the darkest forms of error and moral evil.

Light, knowledge, spiritual privileges, church position, sacramental benefits, are no security for the soul. They are very good in their right place and if rightly used, but in themselves they only increase our moral danger.

Nothing can keep us safe, right, and happy but having Christ dwelling in our hearts by faith. Abiding in Him and He in us, that wicked one toucheth us not. But if personal communion be not diligently maintained, the higher our position, the greater our danger and the more disastrous our fall. There was not a nation beneath the canopy of heaven more favored and exalted than Israel when they gathered around Mount h.o.r.eb to hear the word of G.o.d: there was not a nation on the face of the earth more degraded or more guilty than they when they bowed before the golden calf--an image of their own formation.

We must now give our attention to a fact of very deep interest, presented at verse 21 of our chapter, and that is, that Moses, for the third time, reminds the congregation of G.o.d"s judicial dealing with himself. He had spoken of it, as we have seen, in chapter i. 37, and again at chapter iii. 26, and here, again, he says to them, "Furthermore _the Lord was angry with me for your sakes_, and sware that I should not go over Jordan, and that I should not go in unto that good land which the Lord thy G.o.d giveth thee for an inheritance; but I must die in this land, I must not go over Jordan; but ye shall go over and possess that good land."

Now, we may ask, Why this threefold reference to the same fact? and why the special mention, in each instance, of the circ.u.mstance that Jehovah was angry with him on their account? One thing is certain, it was not for the purpose of throwing the blame over upon the people, or of exculpating himself. No one but an infidel could think this. We believe the simple object was, to give increased moral force to his appeal, more solemnity to his warning voice. If Jehovah was angry with such an one as Moses--if he, for his unadvised speaking at the waters of Meribah, was forbidden to enter the promised land (much as he desired it), how needful for them to take heed! It is a serious thing to have to do with G.o.d--blessed, no doubt, beyond all human expression or thought, but most serious, as the lawgiver himself was called to prove in his own person.

That this is the correct view of this interesting question seems evident from the following words: "_Take heed unto yourselves_, lest ye forget the covenant of the Lord your G.o.d, which He made with you, and make you a graven image, or the likeness of any thing which the Lord thy G.o.d hath forbidden thee. For the Lord thy G.o.d is a consuming fire, even a jealous G.o.d."

This is peculiarly solemn. We must allow this statement to have its full, moral weight with our souls. We must not attempt to turn aside its sharp edge by any false notions about grace. We sometimes hear it said that "G.o.d is a consuming fire to the world." By and by He will be so, no doubt; but now He is dealing in grace, patience, and long-suffering mercy with the world. He is not dealing in judgment with the world now; but, as the apostle Peter tells us, "the time is come that judgment must begin at the house of G.o.d; and if it first begin at us, what shall the end be of them that obey not the gospel of G.o.d?" So also, in Hebrews xii, we read, "For _our_ G.o.d _is_ a consuming fire." He is not speaking of what G.o.d will be to the world, but of what He is to us. Neither is it, as some put it, "G.o.d is a consuming fire out of Christ." We know nothing of G.o.d out of Christ.

He could not be "_our_ G.o.d" out of Christ.

No, reader; Scripture does not need such twistings and turnings: it must be taken as it stands. It is clear and distinct, and all we have to do is to hearken and obey. "Our G.o.d is a consuming fire," "a jealous G.o.d," not to consume us, blessed be His holy name, but to consume the evil in us and in our ways. He is intolerant of every thing in us that is contrary to Himself--contrary to His holiness, and therefore contrary to our true happiness, our real, solid blessing. As the "Holy Father," He keeps us in a way worthy of Himself, and He chastens us in order to make us partakers of His holiness. He allows the world to go on its way for the present, not interfering publicly with it; but He judges His house, and He chastens His children, in order that they may more fully answer to His mind and be the expression of His moral image.

And is not this an immense privilege? Yes, verily; it is a privilege of the very highest order--a privilege flowing from the infinite grace of our G.o.d, who condescends to interest Himself in us, and occupy Himself even with our infirmities, our failures, and our sins, in order to deliver us from them, and make us partakers of His holiness.

There is a very fine pa.s.sage bearing upon this subject in the opening of Hebrews xii, which, because of its immense practical importance, we must quote for the reader.--"My son, despise not thou the chastening of the Lord, nor faint when thou art rebuked of Him; for _whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth_, and _scourgeth every son_ whom He receiveth. If ye endure chastening, G.o.d dealeth with you as with sons; for _what son_ is he whom the Father chasteneth not? But if ye be _without chastis.e.m.e.nt_, whereof all are partakers, then are ye _b.a.s.t.a.r.ds_ and _not sons_. Furthermore, we have had fathers of our flesh which corrected us, and we gave them reverence; shall we not much rather be in subjection unto the Father of spirits, and live? For they verily for a few days chastened us after their own pleasure; _but He for our profit, that we might be partakers of His holiness_. Now no chastening for the present _seemeth_ to be joyous, but grievous; nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto them which are exercised thereby. Wherefore lift up the hands which hang down, and the feeble knees."

There are three ways of meeting divine chastening: We may "_despise_"

it, as something commonplace--something that may happen to any one; we do not see _the hand of G.o.d_ in it. Again, we may "_faint_" under it, as something too heavy for us to bear--something entirely beyond endurance; we do not see _the Father"s heart_ in it, or recognize His gracious object in it, namely, to make us partakers of His holiness.

Lastly, we may be "_exercised_" by it. This is the way to reap "the peaceable fruit of righteousness afterward." We dare not "_despise_" a thing in which we trace the hand of G.o.d: we need not "_faint_" under a trial in which we plainly discern the heart of a loving Father, who will not suffer us to be tried above what we are able, but will with the trial make an issue, that we may be able to bear it, and who also graciously explains to us His object in the discipline, and a.s.sures us that every stroke of His rod is a proof of His love, and a direct response to the prayer of Christ in John xvii. 11, wherein He commends us to the care of the "Holy Father," to be kept according to that name and all that name involves.

Furthermore, there are three distinct att.i.tudes of heart in reference to divine chastening, namely, subjection, acquiescence, and rejoicing.

When the will is broken, there is subjection; when the understanding is enlightened as to the object of the chastening, there is calm acquiescence; and when the affections are engaged with the Father"s heart, there is rejoicing, and we can go forth with glad hearts to reap a golden harvest of the peaceable fruit of righteousness, to the praise of Him who, in His painstaking love, undertakes to care for us and to deal with us in holy government, and concentrate His care upon each one as though there were but that one to attend to.

How wonderful is all this! and how the thought of it should help us in all our trials and exercises! We are in the hands of One whose love is infinite, whose wisdom is unerring, whose power is omnipotent, whose resources are inexhaustible. Why, then, should we ever be cast down? If He chastens us, it is because He loves us and seeks our real good. We may think the chastening grievous--we may feel disposed to wonder, at times, how love can inflict pain and sickness upon us; but we must remember that divine love is wise and faithful, and only inflicts the pain, the sickness, or the sorrow for our profit and blessing. We must not always judge of love by the form in which it clothes itself. Look at that fond and tender mother applying a blister to her child whom she loves as her own soul. She knows full well that the blister will cause her child real pain and suffering, and yet she unhesitatingly applies it, though her heart feels keenly at having to do it. But she knows it is absolutely necessary; she believes that, humanly and medically speaking, the child"s life depends upon it; she feels that a few moments" pain may, with the blessing of G.o.d, restore the health of her precious child. Thus, while the child is only occupied with the transient suffering, the mother is thinking of the permanent good; and if the child could but think with the mother, the blister would not seem so hard to bear.

Now, it is just thus in the matter of our Father"s disciplinary dealings with us; and the remembrance of this would greatly help us to endure whatever His chastening hand may lay upon us. It may perhaps be said that there is a very wide difference between a blister laid on for a few minutes, and years of intense bodily suffering. No doubt there is; but there is also a very wide difference between the result reached in each case. It is only with the principle of the thing we have to do. When we see a beloved child of G.o.d, or servant of Christ, called to pa.s.s through years of intense suffering, we may feel disposed to wonder why it is; and perhaps the beloved sufferer may also feel disposed to wonder, and at times be ready to faint under the weight of his long-protracted affliction. He may feel led to cry out, Why am I thus? Can this be love? can this be the expression of a Father"s tender care? "Yes, verily," is Faith"s bright and decided reply. "It is all love--all divinely right. I would not have it otherwise for worlds. I know this transient suffering is working out eternal blessing. I know my loving Father has put me into this furnace to purge away my dross and bring out in me the expression of His own image. I know that divine love will always do the very best for its object, and therefore this intense suffering is the very best thing for me. Of course, I feel it, for I am not a stick or a stone. My Father means me to feel it, just as the mother means the blister to rise, for it would do no good otherwise. But I bless Him, with my whole heart, for the grace that shines in the wondrous fact of His occupying Himself with me, in this way, to correct what He sees to be wrong in me. I praise Him for putting me into the furnace; and how can I but praise Him, when I see Himself, in infinite grace and patience, sitting over the furnace to watch the process, and lift me out the moment the work is done?"

This, beloved Christian reader, is the true way, and this the right spirit in which to pa.s.s through chastening of any kind, be it bodily affliction, sore bereavement, loss of property, or pressure of circ.u.mstances. We have to trace the hand of G.o.d, to read a Father"s heart, to recognize the divine object in it all. This will enable us to vindicate, justify, and glorify G.o.d in the furnace of affliction.

It will correct every murmuring thought, and hush every fretful utterance; it will fill our hearts with sweetest peace and our mouths with praise.

We must now turn, for a few moments, to the remaining verses of our chapter, in which we shall find some most touching and powerful appeals to the heart and conscience of the congregation. The lawgiver, in the deep, true, and fervent love of his heart, makes use of the most solemn warnings, the most earnest admonition, and the most tender entreaties, in order to move the people to the one grand and all-important point of obedience. If he speaks to them of the iron furnace of Egypt, out of which Jehovah, in His sovereign grace, had delivered them; if he dwells upon the mighty signs and wonders wrought on their behalf; if he holds up to their view the glories of that land on which they were about to plant their foot; or if he recounts the marvelous dealings of G.o.d with them in the wilderness, it is all for the purpose of strengthening the moral basis of Jehovah"s claim upon their loving and reverent obedience. The past, the present, and the future are all brought to bear upon them--all made to furnish powerful arguments in favor of their whole-hearted consecration of themselves to the service of their gracious and almighty Deliverer. In short, there was every reason why they should obey, and no possible excuse for disobedience. All the facts of their history, from first to last, were eminently calculated to give moral force to the exhortation and warning of the following pa.s.sage:--

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