TWO RETROSPECTS OF ONE LIFE
by Alexander Maclaren
'And Jacob said unto Pharaoh, Few and evil have the
days of the years of my life been.' -- GENESIS xlvii. 9.
'The God which fed me all my life long unto this
day; the Angel which redeemed me from all evil.' -- GENESIS xlviii. 15,16.
These are two strangely different estimates of the
same life to be
taken by the same man. In the latter Jacob
categorically contradicts
everything that he had said in the former. 'Few and
evil,' he said
before Pharaoh. 'All my life long,' 'the Angel which
redeemed me
from all evil,' he said on his death-bed.
If he meant what he said when he spoke to Pharaoh,
and characterised
his life thus, he was wrong. He was possibly in a
melancholy mood.
Very naturally, the unfamiliar splendours of a court
dazzled and
bewildered the old man, accustomed to a quiet
shepherd life down at
Hebron. He had not come to see Pharaoh, he only
cared to meet
Joseph; and, as was quite natural, the new and
uncongenial
surroundings depressed him. Possibly the words are
only a piece of
the etiquette of an Eastern court, where it is the
correct thing for
the subject to depreciate himself in all respects as
far inferior to
the prince. And there may be little more than
conventional humility
in the words of my first text. But I am rather
disposed to think
that they express the true feeling of the moment, in
a mood that
passed and was followed by a more wholesome one.
I put the two sayings side by side just for the sake
of gathering up
one or two plain lessons from them.
1. We have here two possible views of life.
Now the key to the difference between these two
statements and moods
of feeling seems to me to be a very plain one. In
the former of them
there is nothing about God. It is all Jacob. In the
latter we notice
that there is a great deal more about God than about
Jacob, and that
determines the whole tone of the retrospect. In the
first text Jacob
speaks of 'the days of the years of _my_
pilgrimage,' 'the days
of the years of _my_ life,' and so on, without a
syllable about
anything except the purely earthly view of life. Of
course, when you
shut out God, the past is all dark enough, grey and
dismal, like the
landscape on some cloudy day, where the woods stand
black, and the
rivers creep melancholy through colourless fields,
and the sky is
grey and formless above. Let the sun come out, and
the river flashes
into a golden mirror, and the woods are alive with
twinkling lights
and shadows, and the sky stretches a blue pavilion
above them, and
all the birds sing. Let God into your life, and its
whole complexion
and characteristics change. The man who sits whining
and
complaining, when he has shut out the thought of a
divine Presence,
finds that everything alters when he brings that in.
And, then, look at the two particulars on which the
patriarch
dwells. 'I am only one hundred and thirty years
old,' he says; a
mere infant compared with Abraham and Isaac! How did
he know he was
not going to live to be as old as either of them?
And 'if his days
were evil,' as he said, was it not a good thing that
they were few?
But, instead of that, he finds reasons for complaint
in the brevity
of the life which, if it were as evil as he made it
out to be, must
often have seemed wearisomely long, and dragged very
slowly. Now,
both things are true--life is short, life is long.
Time is elastic--you
can stretch it or you can contract it. It is short
compared with the
duration of God; it is short, as one of the Psalms
puts it pathetically,
as compared with this Nature round us--'The earth
abideth for ever';
we are strangers upon it, and there is no abiding
for us. It is short
as compared with the capacities and powers of the
creatures that possess
it; but, oh! if we think of our days as a series of
gifts of God, if we
look upon them, as Jacob looked upon them when he
was sane, as being one
continued shepherding by God, they stretch out into
blessed length. Life
is long enough if it manifests that God takes care
of us, and if we learn
that He does. Life is long enough if it serves to
build up a God-pleasing
character.
It is beautiful to see how the thought of God enters
into the dying
man's remembrances in the shape which was natural to
him, regard
being had to his own daily avocations. For the word
translated 'fed'
means much more than supplied with nourishment. It
is the word for
doing the office of shepherd, and we must not
forget, if we want to
understand its beauty, that Jacob's sons said, 'Thy
servants are
shepherds; both we and also our fathers.' So this
man, in the
solitude of his pastoral life, and whilst living
amongst his woolly
people who depended upon his guidance and care, had
learned many a
lesson as to how graciously and tenderly and
constantly fed, and
led, and protected, and fostered by God were the
creatures of His
hand.
It was he, I suppose, who first gave to religious
thought that
metaphor which has survived temple and sacrifice and
priesthood, and
will survive even earth itself; for 'I am the Good
Shepherd' is as
true to-day as when first spoken by Jesus, and 'the
Lamb which is in
the midst of the throne shall lead them,' and be
their Shepherd when
the flock is carried to the upper pastures and the
springs that
never fail. The life which has brought us that
thought of a
Shepherd-God has been long enough; and the days
which have been so
expanded as to contain a continuous series of His
benefits and
protections need never be remembered as 'few,'
whatsoever be the
arithmetic that is applied to them.
The other contradiction is equally eloquent and
significant. 'Few
and evil' have my days been, said Jacob, when he was
not thinking
about God; but when he remembered the Angel of the
Presence, that
mysterious person with whom he had wrestled at
Peniel, and whose
finger had lamed the thigh while His lips proclaimed
a blessing, his
view changed, and instead of talking about 'evil'
days, he says,
'The Angel that redeemed me from all evil.' Yes, his
life had been
evil, whether by that we mean sorrowful or sinful,
and the sorrows
and the sins had been closely connected. A sorely
tried man he had
been. Far away back in the past had been his
banishment from home;
his disappointment and hard service with the
churlish Laban; the
misbehaviour of his sons; the death of Rachel--that
wound which was
never stanched; and then the twenty years' mourning
for Rachel's
son, the heir of his inheritance. These were the
evils, the sins
were as many, for every one of the sorrows, except
perhaps the
chiefest of them all, had its root in some piece of
duplicity,
dishonesty, or failure. But he was there in Egypt
beside Joseph. The
evils had stormed over him, but he was there still.
And so at the
end he says, 'The Angel ... redeemed me from evil,
though it smote
me. Sorrow became chastisement, and I was purged of
my sin by my
calamities.' The sorrows are past, like some raging
inundation that
comes up for a night over the land and then
subsides; but the
blessing of fertility which it brought in its tawny
waves abides
with me yet. Joseph is by my side. 'I had not
thought to see thy
face, and God hath showed me the face of thy seed.'
That sorrow is
over. Rachel's grave is still by the wayside, and
that sorest of
sorrows has wrought with others to purify character.
Jacob has been
tried by sorrows; he has been purged from sins. 'The
Angel delivered
me from all evil.' So, dear friends, sorrow is not
evil if it helps
to strip us from the evil that we love, and the ills
that we bear
are good if they alienate our affections from the
ills that we do.
2. Secondly, note the wisdom and the duty of taking
the completer
and brighter view.
These first words of Jacob's are very often quoted
as if they were
the pattern of the kind of thing people ought to
say, 'Few and evil
have been the days of the years of my pilgrimage.'
That is a text
from which many sermons have been preached with
approbation of the
pious resignation expressed in it. But it does not
seem to me that
that is the tone of them. If the man believed what
he said, then he
was very ungrateful and short-sighted, though there
were excuses to
be made for him under the circumstances. If the days
had been evil,
he had made them so.
But the point which I wish to make now is that it is
largely a
matter for our own selection which of the two views
of our lives we
take. We may make our choice whether we shall fix
our attention on
the brighter or on the darker constituents of our
past.
Suppose a wall papered with paper of two colours,
one black, say,
and the other gold. You can work your eye and adjust
the focus of
vision so that you may see either a black background
or a gold one.
In the one case the prevailing tone is gloomy,
relieved by an
occasional touch of brightness; and in the other it
is brightness,
heightened by a background of darkness. And so you
can do with life,
fixing attention on its sorrows, and hugging
yourselves in the
contemplation of these with a kind of morbid
satisfaction, or
bravely and thankfully and submissively and wisely
resolving that
you will rather seek to learn what God means by
darkness, and not
forgetting to look at the unenigmatical blessings,
and plain,
obvious mercies, that make up so much of our lives.
We have to
govern memory as well as other faculties, by
Christian principle. We
have to apply the plain teaching of Christian truth
to our
sentimental, and often unwholesome, contemplations
of the past.
There is enough in all our lives to make material
for plenty of
whining and complaining, if we choose to take hold
of them by that
handle. And there is enough in all our lives to make
us ashamed of
one murmuring word, if we are devout and wise and
believing enough
to lay hold of them by that one. Remember that you
can make your
view of your life either a bright one or a dark one,
and there will
be facts for both; but the facts that feed
melancholy are partial
and superficial, and the facts that exhort, 'Rejoice
in the Lord
alway; and again I say, Rejoice,' are deep and
fundamental.
3. So, lastly, note how blessed a thing it is when
the last look is
the happiest.
When we are amongst the mountains, or when we are
very near them,
they look barren enough, rough, stony, steep. When
we travel away
from them, and look at them across the plain, they
lie blue in the
distance; and the violet shadows and the golden
lights upon them and
the white peaks above make a dream of beauty. Whilst
we are in the
midst of the struggle, we are often tempted to think
that things go
hardly with us and that the road is very rough. But
if we keep near
our dear Lord, and hold by His hand, and try to
shape our lives in
accordance with His will--whatever be their outward
circumstances
and texture--then we may be very sure of this, that
when the end
comes, and we are far enough away from some of the
sorrows to see
what they lead to and blossom into, then we shall be
able to say, It
was all very good, and to thank Him for all the way
by which the
Lord our God has led us.
In the same conversation in which the patriarch,
rising to the
height of a prophet and organ of divine revelation,
gives this his
dying testimony of the faithfulness of God, and
declares that he has
been delivered from all evil, he recurs to the
central sorrow of his
life; and speaks, though in calm words, of that day
when he buried
Rachel by 'Ephrath, which is Bethel.' But the pain
had passed and
the good was present to him. And so, leaving life,
he left it
according to his own word, 'satisfied with favour,
and full of the
blessing of the Lord.' So we in our turns may, at
the last, hope
that what we know not now will largely be explained;
and may seek to
anticipate our dying verdict by a living confidence,
in the midst of
our toils and our sorrows, that 'all things work
together for good
to them that love God.'
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