THE FELLOWSHIP OF GOD AND HIS FRIEND
II
We have seen that the fruit of Abraham's faith was
God's entrance
into close covenant relations with him; or, as James
puts it, 'It
was reckoned unto him for righteousness; and he was
called the
friend of God.' This incident shows us the
intercourse of the divine
and human friends in its familiarity, mutual
confidence, and power.
It is a forecast of Christ's own profound teachings
in His parting
words in the upper chamber, concerning the sweet and
wondrous
intercourse between the believing soul and the
indwelling God.
1. The friend of God catches a gleam of divine pity
and tenderness.
Abraham has no relations with the men of Sodom.
Their evil ways
would repel him; and he would be a stranger among
them still more
than among the Canaanites, whose iniquity was 'not
yet full.' But
though he has no special bonds with them, he cannot
but melt with
tender compassion when he hears their doom.
Communion with the very
Source of all gentle love has softened his heart,
and he yearns over
the wicked and fated city. Where else than from his
heavenly Friend
could he have learned this sympathy? It wells up in
this chapter
like some sudden spring among solemn solitudes--the
first instance
of that divine charity which is the best sign that
we have been with
God, and have learned of Him. All that the New
Testament teaches of
love to God, as necessarily issuing in love to man,
and of the true
love to man as overleaping all narrow bounds of
kindred, country,
race, and ignoring all questions of character, and
gushing forth in
fullest energy towards the sinners in danger of just
punishment, is
here in germ. The friend of God must be the friend
of men; and if
they be wicked, and he sees the frightful doom which
they do not
see, these make his pity the deeper. Abraham does
not contest the
justice of the doom. He lives too near his friend
not to know that
sin must mean death. The effect of friendship with
God is not to
make men wish that there were no judgments for
evil-doers, but to
touch their hearts with pity, and to stir them to
intercession and
to effort for their deliverance.
2. The friend of God has absolute trust in the
rectitude of His
acts. Abraham's remonstrance, if we may call it so,
embodies some
thoughts about the government of God in the world
which should be
pondered.
His first abrupt question, flung out without any
reverential
preface, assumes that the character of God requires
that the fate of
the righteous should be distinguished from that of
the wicked. The
very brusqueness of the question shows that he
supposed himself to
be appealing to an elementary and indubitable law of
God's dealings.
The teachings of the Fall and of the Flood had
graven deep on his
conscience the truth that the same loving Friend
must needs deal out
rewards to the good and chastisement to the bad.
That was the simple
faith of an early time, when problems like those
which tortured the
writers of the seventy-third Psalm, or of Job and
Ecclesiastes, had
not yet disturbed the childlike trust of the friend
of God, because
no facts in his experience had forced them on him.
But the belief
which was axiomatic to him, and true for his
supernaturally shaped
life with its special miracles and visible divine
guard, is not the
ultimate and irrefragable principle which he thought
it. In
widespread calamities the righteous are blended with
the wicked in
one bloody ruin; and it is the very misery of such
judgments that
often the sufferers are not the wrongdoers, but that
the fathers eat
the sour grapes, and the children's teeth are set on
edge. The
whirlwind of temporal judgments makes no
distinctions between the
dwellings of the righteous and the wicked, but
levels them both. No
doubt, the fact that the impending destruction was
to be a direct
Divine interposition of a punitive kind made it more
necessary that
it should be confined to the actual culprits. No
doubt, too,
Abraham's zeal for the honour of God's government
was right. But his
first plea belongs to the stage of revelation at
which he stood, not
to that of the New Testament, which teaches that the
eighteen on
whom the tower in Siloam fell were not sinners above
all men in
Jerusalem. Abraham's confidence in God's justice,
not Abraham's
conceptions of what that justice required, is to be
imitated. A
friend of God will hold fast by the faith that 'His
way is perfect,'
and will cherish it even in the presence of facts
more perplexing
than any which met Abraham's eyes.
Another assumption in his prayer is that the
righteous are sources
of blessing and shields for the wicked. Has he there
laid hold of a
true principle? Certainly, it is indeed the law that
'every man
shall bear his own burden,' but that law is modified
by the
operation of this other, of which God's providence
is full. Many a
drop of blessing trickles from the wet fleece to the
dry ground.
Many a stroke of judgment is carried off harmlessly
by the lightning
conductor. Where God's friends are inextricably
mixed up with evil-
doers, it is not rare to see diffused blessings
which are destined
indeed primarily for the former, but find their way
to the latter.
Christians are the 'salt of the earth' in this sense
too, that they
save corrupt communities from swift destruction, and
for their sakes
the angels delay their blow. In the final resort,
each soul must
reap its own harvest from its own deeds; but the
individualism of
Christianity is not isolation. We are bound together
in mysterious
community, and a good man is a fountain of
far-flowing good. The
truest 'saviours of society' are the servants of
God.
A third principle is embodied in the solemn
question, 'Shall not the
Judge of all the earth do right?' This is not meant
in its bearing
here, as we so often hear it quoted, to silence
man's questionings
as to mysterious divine acts, or to warn us from
applying our
measures of right and wrong to these. The very
opposite thought is
conveyed; namely, the confidence that what God does
must approve
itself as just to men. He is Judge of all the earth,
and therefore
bound by His very nature, as by His relations to
men, to do nothing
that cannot be pointed to as inflexibly right. If
Abraham had meant,
'What God does, must needs be right, therefore crush
down all
questions of how it accords with thy sense of
justice,' he would
have been condemning his own prayer as presumptuous,
and the thought
would have been entirely out of place. But the
appeal to God to
vindicate His own character by doing what shall be
in manifest
accord with His name, is bold language indeed, but
not too bold,
because it is prompted by absolute confidence in
Him. God's
punishments must be obviously righteous to have
moral effect, or to
be worthy of Him.
But true as the principle is, it needs to be
guarded. Abraham
himself is an instance that men's conceptions of
right do not
completely correspond to the reality. His notion of
'right' was, in
some particulars, as his life shows, imperfect,
rudimentary, and far
beneath New Testament ideas. Conscience needs
education. The best
men's conceptions of what befits divine justice are
relative,
progressive; and a shifting standard is no standard.
It becomes us
to be very cautious before we say to God, 'This is
the way. Walk
Thou in it,' or dismiss any doctrine as untrue on
the ground of its
contradicting our instincts of justice.
3. The friend of God has power with God. 'Shall I
hide from Abraham
that thing which I do?' The divine Friend recognises
the obligation
of confidence. True friendship is frank, and cannot
bear to hide its
purposes. That one sentence in its bold attribution
of a like
feeling to God leads us deep into the Divine heart,
and the sweet
reality of his amity. Insight into His will ever
belongs to those
who live near Him. It is the beginning of the long
series of
disclosures of 'the secret of the Lord' to 'them
that fear Him,'
which is crowned by 'henceforth I call you not
servants; but ...
friends; for all things that I have heard of My
Father I have made
known unto you.' So much for the divine side of the
communion.
On the human side, we are here taught the great
truth, that God's
friends are intercessors, whose voice has a
mysterious but most real
power with God. If it be true, that, in general
terms, the righteous
are shields and sources of blessing to the unholy,
it is still more
distinctly true that they have access to God's
secret place with
petitions for others as well as for themselves. The
desires which go
up to God, like the vapours exhaled to heaven, fall
in refreshing
rain on spots far away from that whence they rose.
In these days we
need to keep fast hold of our belief in the efficacy
of prayer for
others and for ourselves. God knows Himself and the
laws of His
government a great deal better than any one besides
does; and He has
abundantly shown us in His Word, and by many
experiences, that
breath spent in intercession is not wasted. In these
old times, when
worship was mainly sacrificial, this wonderful
instance of pure
intercession meets us, an anticipation of later
times. And from
thence onwards there has never failed proof to those
who will look
for it, that God's friends are true priests, and
help their brethren
by their prayers. Our voices should 'rise like a
fountain night and
day' for men. But there is a secret distrust of the
power, and a
flagrantly plain neglect of the duty, of
intercession nowadays,
which need sorely the lesson that God 'remembered
Abraham' and
delivered Lot. Luther, in his rough, strong way,
says: 'If I have a
Christian who prays to God for me, I will be of good
courage, and be
afraid of nothing. If I have one who prays against
me, I had rather
have the Grand Turk for my enemy.'
The tone of Abraham's intercession may teach us how
familiar the
intercourse with the Heavenly Friend may be. The
boldest words from
a loving heart, jealous of God's honour, are not
irreverent in His
eyes. This prayer is abrupt, almost rough. It sounds
like
remonstrance quite as much as prayer. Abraham
appeals to God to take
care of His name and honour, as if he had said, If
Thou doest this,
what will the world say of Thee, but that Thou art
unmerciful? But
the grand confidence in God's character, the eager
desire that it
should be vindicated before the world, the dread
that the least film
should veil the silvery whiteness or the golden
lustre of His name,
the sensitiveness for His honour--these are the
effects of communion
with Him; and for these God accepts the bold prayer
as truer
reverence than is found in many more guarded and
lowly sounding
words. Many conventional proprieties of worship may
be broken just
because the worship is real. 'The frequent sputter
shows that the
soul's depths boil in earnest.' We may learn, too,
that the most
loving familiarity never forgets the fathomless gulf
between God and
it. Abraham remembers that he is 'dust and ashes';
he knows that he
is venturing much in speaking to God. His
pertinacious prayers have
a recurring burden of lowly recognition of his
place. Twice he
heralds them with 'I have taken upon me to speak
unto the Lord';
twice with 'Oh let not the Lord be angry.' Perfect
love casts out
fear and deepens reverence. We may come with free
hearts, from which
every weight of trembling and every cloud of doubt
has been lifted.
But the less the dread, the lower we shall bow
before the Loftiness
which we love. We do not pray aright until we tell
God everything.
The 'boldness' which we as Christians ought to have,
means literally
a frank speaking out of all that is in our hearts.
Such 'boldness
and access with confidence' will often make short
work of so-called
seemly reverence, but it will never transgress by so
much as a
hair's-breadth the limits of lowly, trustful love.
Abraham's persistency may teach us a lesson. If one
might so say, he
hangs on God's skirt like a burr. Each petition
granted only
encourages him to another. Six times he pleads, and
God waits till
he has done before He goes away; He cannot leave His
friend till
that friend has said all his say. What a contrast
the fiery fervour
and unwearying pertinacity of Abraham's prayers make
to the stiff
formalism of the intercessions one is familiar with!
The former are
like the successive pulses of a volcano driving a
hot lava stream
before it; the latter, like the slow flow of a
glacier, cold and
sluggish. Is any part of our public or private
worship more
hopelessly formal than our prayers for others? This
picture from the
old world may well shame our languid petitions, and
stir us up to a
holy boldness and persistence in prayer. Our Saviour
Himself teaches
that 'men ought always to pray, and not to faint,'
and Himself
recommends to us a holy importunity, which He
teaches us to believe
is, in mysterious fashion, a power with God. He
gives room for such
patient continuance in prayer by sometimes delaying
the apparent
answer, not because He needs to be won over to
bless, but because it
is good for us to draw near, and to keep near, the
Lord. He is ever
at the door, ready to open, and if sometimes, like
Rhoda to Peter,
He does not open immediately, and we have to keep
knocking, it is
that our desires may increase by delay, and so He
may be able to
give a blessing, which will be the greater and
sweeter for the
tarrying.
So the friendship is manifested on both sides: on
God's, by
disclosure of His purpose and compliance with His
friend's request;
on Abraham's, by speech which is saved from
irreverence by love, and
by prayer which is acceptable to God by its very
importunity. Jesus
Christ has promised us the highest form of such
friendship, when He
has said, 'I have called you friends: for all things
that I have
heard of My Father I have made known unto you'; and
again, 'If ye
abide in Me, ... ye shall ask what ye will, and it
shall be done
unto you.'
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