REAL CONTACT WITH JESUS
"And Jesus said, Somebody hath touched Me: for I perceive that virtue
is gone out of Me."—Luke 8:46.
Our
Lord was very frequently in the midst of a crowd. His preaching was so plain
and so forcible that He always attracted a vast company of hearers; and,
moreover, the rumour of the loaves and fishes no doubt had something to do
with increasing His audiences, while the expectation of beholding a miracle
would be sure to add to the numbers of the hangers-on. Our Lord Jesus Christ
often found it difficult to move through the streets, because of the masses
who pressed upon Him. This was encouraging to Him as a preacher, and yet how
small a residuum of real good came of all the excitement which gathered
around His personal ministry! He might have looked upon the great mass, and
have said, "What is the chaff to the wheat?" for here it was piled up upon
the threshing-floor, heap upon heap; and yet, after His decease, His
disciples might have been counted by a few scores, for those who had
spiritually received Him were but few. Many were called, but few were
chosen. Yet, wherever one was blessed, our Saviour took note of it; it
touched a chord in His soul. He never could be unaware when virtue had gone
out of Him to heal a sick one, or when power had gone forth with His
ministry to save a sinful one. Of all the crowd that gathered round the
Saviour upon the day of which our text speaks, I find nothing said about one
of them except this solitary "somebody" who had touched Him. The crowd came,
and the crowd went; but little is recorded of it all. Just as the ocean,
having advanced to full tide, leaves but little behind it when it retires
again to its channel, so the vast multitude around the Saviour left only
this one precious deposit—one "somebody" who had touched Him, and had
received virtue from Him.
Ah,
my Master, it may be so again this evening! These Sabbath mornings, and
these Sabbath evenings, the crowds come pouring in like a mighty ocean,
filling this house, and then they all retire again; only here and there is a
"somebody" left weeping for sin, a "somebody" left rejoicing in Christ, a
"somebody" who can say, "I have touched the hem of His garment, and I have
been made whole." The whole of my other hearers are not worth the "somebodies."
The many of you are not worth the few, for the many are the pebbles, and the
few are the diamonds; the many are the heaps of husks, and the few are the
precious grains. May God find them out at this hour, and His shall be all
the praise!
Jesus
said, "Somebody hath touched Me," from which we observe that, in the use
of means and ordinances, we should never be satisfied unless we get into
personal contact with Christ, so that we touch Him, as this woman
touched His garment. Secondly, if we can get into such personal contact,
we shall have a blessing: "I perceive that virtue is gone out of Me;"
and, thirdly, if we do get a blessing, Christ will know it; however
obscure our case may be, He will know it, and He will have us let others
know it; He will speak, and ask such questions as will draw us out, and
manifest us to the world.
I.
First, then, IN THE USE OF ALL MEANS AND ORDINANCES, LET IT BE OUR CHIEF AIM
AND OBJECT TO COME INTO PERSONAL CONTACT WITH THE LORD JESUS CHRIST.
Peter
said, "The multitude throng Thee, and press Thee," and that is true of the
multitude to this very day; but of those who come where Christ is in the
assembly of His saints, a large proportion only come because it is their
custom to do so. Perhaps they hardly know why they go to a place of worship.
They go because they always did go, and they think it wrong not to go. They
are just like the doors which swing upon their hinges; they take no interest
in what is done, at least only in the exterior parts of the service; into
the heart and soul of the business they do not enter, and cannot enter. They
are glad if the sermon is rather short, there is so much the less tedium for
them. They are glad if they can look around and gaze at the congregation,
they find in that something to interest them; but getting near to the Lord
Jesus is not the business they come upon. They have not looked at it in that
light. They come and they go; they come and they go; and it will be so till,
by-and-by, they will come for the last time, and they will find out in the
next world that the means of grace were not instituted to be matters of
custom, and that to have heard Jesus Christ preached, and to have rejected
Him, is no trifle, but a solemn thing for which they will have to answer in
the presence of the great Judge of all the earth.
Others
there are who come to the house of prayer, and try to enter into the
service, and do so in a certain fashion; but it is only self-righteously or
professionally. They may come to the Lord's table; perhaps they attend to
baptism; they may even join the church. They are baptized, yet not by the
Holy Spirit; they take the Lord's supper, but they take not the Lord
Himself; they eat the bread, but they never eat His flesh; they drink the
wine, but they never drink His blood; they have been buried in the pool, but
they have never been buried with Christ in baptism, nor have they risen
again with Him into newness of life. To them, to read, to sing, to kneel, to
hear, and so on, are enough. They are content with the shell, but the
blessed spiritual kernel, the true marrow and fatness, these they know
nothing of. These are the many, go into what church or meeting-house you
please. They are in the press around Jesus, but they do not touch Him. They
come, but they come not into contact with Jesus. They are outward, external
hearers only, but there is no inward touching of the blessed person of
Christ, no mysterious contact with the ever-blessed Saviour, no stream of
life and love flowing from Him to them. It is all mechanical religion. Of
vital godliness, they know nothing.
But,
"somebody," said Christ, "somebody hath touched Me," and that is the soul of
the matter. O my hearer, when you are in prayer alone, never be satisfied
with having prayed; do not give it up till you have touched Christ in
prayer; or, if you have not got to Him, at any rate sigh and cry until you
do! Do not think you have prayed, but try again. When you come to public
worship, I beseech you, rest not satisfied with listening to the sermon, and
so on, as you all do with sufficient attention; to that I bear you
witness;—but do not be content unless you get at Christ the Master, and
touch Him. At all times when you come to the communion table, count it to
have been no ordinance of grace to you unless you have gone right through
the veil into Christ's own arms, or at least have touched His garment,
feeling that the first object, the life and soul of the means of grace, is
to touch Jesus Christ Himself; and except "somebody" hath touched Him, the
whole has been a mere dead performance, without life or power.
The
woman in our text was not only amongst those who were in the crowd, but she
touched Jesus; and therefore, beloved, let me hold her up to your example in
some respects, though I would to God that in other respects you might excel
her.
Note,
first, she felt that it was of no use being in the crowd, of no use to be in
the same street with Christ, or near to the place where Christ was, but
she must get at Him; she must touch Him. She touched Him, you will
notice, under many difficulties. There was a great crowd. She was a
woman. She was also a woman enfeebled by a long disease which had drained
her constitution, and left her more fit to be upon a bed than to be
struggling in the seething tumult. Yet, notwithstanding that, so intense was
her desire, that she urged on her way, I doubt not with many a bruise, and
many an uncouth push, and at last, poor trembler as she was, she got near to
the Lord. Beloved, it is not always easy to get at Jesus. It is very easy to
kneel down to pray, but not so easy to reach Christ in prayer. There is a
child crying, it is your own, and its noise has often hindered you when you
were striving to approach Jesus; or a knock will come at the door when you
most wish to be retired. When you are sitting in the house of God, your
neighbour in the seat before you may unconsciously distract your attention.
It is not easy to draw near to Christ, especially coming as some of you do
right away from the counting-house, and from the workshop, with a thousand
thoughts and cares about you. You cannot always unload your burden outside,
and come in here with your hearts prepared to receive the gospel. Ah! it is
a terrible fight sometimes, a real foot-to-foot fight with evil, with
temptation, and I know not what. But, beloved, do fight it out, do fight it
out; do not let your seasons for prayer be wasted, nor your times for
hearing be thrown away; but, like this woman, be resolved, with all your
feebleness, that you will lay hold upon Christ. And oh! if you be resolved
about it, if you cannot get to Him, He will come to you, and sometimes, when
you are struggling against unbelieving thoughts, He will turn and say, "Make
room for that poor feeble one, that she may come to Me, for My desire is to
the work of My own hands; let her come to Me, and let her desire be granted
to her."
Observe,
again, that this woman touched Jesus very secretly. Perhaps there is
a dear sister here who is getting near to Christ at this very moment, and
yet her face does not betray her. It is so little contact that she has
gained with Christ that the joyous flush, and the sparkle of the eye, which
we often see in the child of God, have not yet come to her. She is sitting
in yonder obscure corner, or standing in this aisle, but though her touch is
secret, it is true. Though she cannot tell another of it, yet it is
accomplished. She has touched Jesus. Beloved, that is not always the nearest
fellowship with Christ of which we talk the most. Deep waters are still.
Nay, I am not sure but what we sometimes get nearer to Christ when we think
we are at a distance than we do when we imagine we are near Him, for we are
not always exactly the best judges of our own spiritual state, and we may be
very close to the Master, and yet for all that we may be so anxious to get
closer that we may feel dissatisfied with the measure of grace which we have
already received. To be satisfied with self, is no sign of grace; but to
long for more grace, is often a far better evidence of the healthy state of
the soul. Friend, if thou canst not come to the table to-night publicly,
come to the Master in secret. If thou darest not tell thy wife, or thy
child, or thy father, that thou art trusting in Jesus, it need not be told
as yet. Thou mayest do it secretly, as he did to whom Jesus said, "When thou
wast under the fig tree, I saw thee." Nathanael retired to the shade that no
one might see him; but Jesus saw him, and marked his prayer, and He will see
thee in the crowd, and in the dark, and not withhold His blessing.
This
woman also came into contact with Christ under a very deep sense of
unworthiness. I dare say she thought, "If I touch the Great Prophet, it
will be a wonder if He does not strike me with some sudden judgment," for
she was a woman ceremonially unclean. She had no right to be in the throng.
Had the Levitical law been strictly carried out, I suppose she would have
been confined to her house; but there she was wandering about, and she must
needs go and touch the holy Saviour. Ah! poor heart, you feel to-night that
you are not fit to touch the skirts of the Master's robe, for you are so
unworthy. You never felt so undeserving before as you do to-night. In the
recollection of last week and its infirmities, in the remembrance of the
present state of your heart, and all its wanderings from God, you feel as if
there never was so worthless a sinner in the house of God before. "Is grace
for me?" say you. "Is Christ for me?" Oh! yes, unworthy one. Do not be put
off without it. Jesus Christ does not save the worthy, but the unworthy.
Your plea must not be righteousness, but guilt. And you, too, child of God,
though you are ashamed of yourself, Jesus is not ashamed of you; and though
you feel unfit to come, let your unfitness only impel you with the greater
earnestness of desire. Let your sense of need make you the more fervent to
approach the Lord, who can supply your need.
Thus,
you see, the woman came under difficulties, she came secretly, she came as
an unworthy one, but still she obtained the blessing.
I
have known many staggered with that saying of Paul's, "He that eateth and
drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to himself." Now,
understand that this passage does not refer to the unworthiness of those
persons who come to the Lord's table; for it does not say, "He that eateth
and drinketh being unworthy." It is not an adjective; it is an
adverb: "He that eateth and drinketh unworthily," that is to say, he
who shall come to the outward and visible sign of Christ's presence, and
shall eat of the bread in order to obtain money being a member of the
church, knowing himself to be a hypocrite, or who shall do it jestingly,
trifling with the ordinance: such a person would be eating and drinking
unworthily, and he will be condemned. The sense of the passage is, not
"damnation", as our version reads it, but "condemnation." There can be no
doubt that members of the church, coming to the Lord's table in an unworthy
manner, do receive condemnation. They are condemned for so doing, and the
Lord is grieved. If they have any conscience at all, they ought to feel
their sin; and if not, they may expect the chastisements of God to visit
them. But, O sinner, as to coming to Christ,—which is a very different thing
from coming to the Lord's table,—as to coming to Christ, the more unworthy
you feel yourself to be, the better. Come, thou filthy one, for Christ can
wash thee. Come, thou loathsome one, for Christ can beautify thee. Come
utterly ruined and undone, for in Jesus Christ there is the strength and
salvation which thy case requires.
Notice,
once again, that this woman touched the Master very tremblingly, and it
was only a hurried touch, but still it was the touch of faith. Oh,
beloved, to lay hold on Christ! Be thankful if you do but get near Him for a
few minutes. "Abide with me," should be your prayer; but oh, if He only give
you a glimpse, be thankful! Remember that a touch healed the woman. She did
not embrace Christ by the hour together. She had but a touch, and she was
healed; and oh, may you have a sight of Jesus now, my beloved! Though it be
but a glimpse, yet it will gladden and cheer your souls. Perhaps you are
waiting on Christ, desiring His company, and while you are turning it over
in your mind you are asking, "Will He ever shine upon me? Will He ever speak
loving words to me? Will He ever let me sit at His feet? Will He ever permit
me to lean my head upon His bosom?" Come and try Him. Though you should
shake like an aspen leaf, yet come. They sometimes come best who come most
tremblingly, for when the creature is lowest then is the Creator highest,
and when in our own esteem we are less than nothing and vanity, then is
Christ the more fair and lovely in our eyes. One of the best ways of
climbing to heaven is on our hands and knees. At any rate, there is no fear
of falling when we are in that position, for—
"He that is down need fear no fall."
Let your lowliness of heart, your sense of utter nothingness, instead of
disqualifying you, be a sweet medium for leading you to receive more of
Christ. The more empty I am, the more room is there for my Master. The more
I lack, the more He will give me. The more I feel my sickness, the more
shall I adore and bless Him when He makes me whole.
You
see, the woman did really touch Christ, and so I come back to that. Whatever
infirmity there was in the touch, it was a real touch of faith. She did
reach Christ Himself. She did not touch Peter; that would have been of no
use to her, any more than it is for the parish priest to tell you that you
are regenerate when your life soon proves that you are not. She did not
touch John or James; that would have been of no more good to her than it is
for you to be touched by a bishop's hands, and to be told that you are
confirmed in the faith, when you are not even a believer, and therefore have
no faith to be confirmed in. She touched the Master Himself; and, I pray
you, do not be content unless you can do the same. Put out the hand of
faith, and touch Christ. Rest on Him. Rely on His bloody sacrifice, His
dying love, His rising power, His ascended plea; and as you rest in Him, yo
ur vital touch, however feeble, will certainly give you the blessing your
soul needs.
This
brings us to the second part of our discourse, upon which I will say only a
little.
II.
THE WOMAN IN THE CROWD DID TOUCH JESUS, AND, HAVING DONE SO, SHE RECEIVED
VIRTUE FROM HIM.
The
healing energy streamed at once through the finger of faith into the woman.
In Christ, there is healing for all spiritual diseases. There is a speedy
healing, a healing which will not take months nor years, but which is
complete in one second. There is in Christ a sufficient healing, though your
diseases should be multiplied beyond all bounds. There is in Christ an
all-conquering power to drive out every ill. Though, like this woman, you
baffle physicians, and your case is reckoned desperate beyond all parallel,
yet a touch of Christ will heal you. What a precious, glorious gospel I have
to preach to sinners! If they touch Jesus, no matter though the devil
himself were in them, that touch of faith would drive the devil out of them.
Though you were like the man into whom there had entered a legion of devils,
the word of Jesus would cast them all into the deep, and you should sit at
His feet, clothed, and in your right mind. There is no excess or
extravagance of sin which the power of Jesus Christ cannot overcome. If thou
canst believe, whatever thou mayest have been, thou shalt be saved. If thou
canst believe, though thou hast been lying in the scarlet dye till the warp
and woof of thy being are ingrained therewith, yet shall the precious blood
of Jesus make thee white as snow. Though thou art become black as hell
itself, and only fit to be cast into the pit, yet if thou trustest Jesus,
that simple faith shall give to thy soul the healing which shall make thee
fit to tread the streets of heaven, and to stand before Jehovah-Rophi's
face, magnifying the Lord that healeth thee.
And
now, child of God, I want you to learn the same lesson. Very likely, when
you came in here, you said,—"Alas! I feel very dull; my spirituality is at a
very low ebb; the place is hot, and I do not feel prepared to hear; the
spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak; I shall have no holy enjoyment
to-day!" Why not? Why, the touch of Jesus could make you live if you were
dead, and surely it will stir the life that is in you, though it may seem to
you to be expiring! Now, struggle hard, my beloved, to get at Jesus! May the
Eternal Spirit come and help you, and may you yet find that your dull, dead
times can soon become your best times. Oh! what a blessing it is that God
takes the beggar up from the dunghill! He does not raise us when He sees us
already up, but when He finds us lying on the dunghill, then He delights to
lift us up, and set us among princes. Or ever you are aware, your soul may
become like the chariots of Ammi-nadib. Up from the depths of heaviness to
the very heights of ecstatic worship you may mount as in a single moment if
you can but touch Christ crucified. View Him yonder, with streaming wounds,
with thorn-crowned head, as in all the majesty of His misery, He expires for
you!
"Alas!"
say you, "I have a thousand doubts tonight." Ah! but your doubts will soon
vanish when you draw nigh to Christ. He never doubts who feels the touch of
Christ, at least, not while the touch lasts, for observe this woman! She
felt in her body that she was made whole, and so shall you, if you will only
come into contact with the Lord. Do not wait for evidences, but come to
Christ for evidences. If you cannot even dream of a good thing in
yourselves, come to Jesus Christ as you did at the first. Come as if you
never had come at all. Come to Jesus as a sinner, and your doubts shall flee
away.
"Ay!"
saith another, "but my sins come to my remembrance, my sins since
conversion." Well, return to Jesus, when your guilt seems to return. The
fountain is still open, and that fountain, you will remember, is not only
open for sinners, but for saints; for what saith the Scripture—"There shall
be a fountain opened for the house of David and for the inhabitants of
Jerusalem,"—that is, for you, churchmembers, for you, believers in
Jesus? The fountain is still open. Come, beloved, come to Jesus anew, and
whatever be your sins, or doubts, or heaviness, they shall all depart as
soon as you can touch your Lord.
III.
And now the last point is—and I will not detain you long upon it—IF SOMEBODY
SHALL TOUCH JESUS, THE LORD WILL KNOW IT.
I
do not know your names; a great number of you are perfect strangers to me.
It matters nothing; your name is "somebody", and Christ will know you. You
are a total stranger, perhaps, to everybody in this place; but if you get a
blessing, there will be two who will know it,—you will, and Christ will. Oh!
if you should look to Jesus this day, it may not be registered in our
church-book, and we may not hear of it; but still it will be registered in
the courts of heaven, and they will set all the bells of the New Jerusalem
a-ringing, and all the harps of angels will take a fresh lease of music as
soon as they know that you are born again.
"With joy the Father doth approve
The fruit of His eternal love;
The Son with joy looks down and sees
The purchase of His agonies;
The Spirit takes delight to view
The holy soul He formed anew;
And saints and angels join to sing
The growing empire of their King."
"Somebody!" I do not know the woman's name; I do not know who the man is,
but—"Somebody!"—God's electing love rests on thee, Christ's redeeming blood
was shed for thee, the Spirit has wrought a work in thee, or thou wouldst
not have touched Jesus; and all this Jesus knows.
It
is a consoling thought that Christ not only knows the great children in the
family, but He also knows the little ones. This stands fast: "The Lord
knoweth them that are His," whether they are only brought to know Him now,
or whether they have known Him for fifty years. "The Lord knoweth them that
are His," and if I am a part of Christ's body, I may be but the foot, but
the Lord knows the foot; and the head and the heart in heaven feel acutely
when the foot on earth is bruised. If you have touched Jesus, I tell you
that amidst the glories of angels, and the everlasting hallelujahs of all
the blood-bought, He has found time to hear your sigh, to receive your
faith, and to give you an answer of peace. All the way from heaven to earth
there has rushed a mighty stream of healing virtue, which has come from
Christ to you. Since you have touched Him, the healing virtue has touched
you.
Now,
as Jesus knows of your salvation, He wishes other people to know of it,
and that is why He has put it into my heart to say,—Somebody has touched the
Lord. Where is that somebody? Somebody, where are you? Somebody, where are
you? You have touched Christ, though with a feeble finger, and you are
saved. Let us know it. It is due to us to let us know. You cannot guess what
joy it gives us when we hear of sick ones being healed by our Master. Some
of you, perhaps, have known the Lord for months, and you have not yet come
forward to make an avowal of it; we beg you to do so. You may come forward
tremblingly, as this woman did; you may perhaps say, "I do not know what I
should tell you." Well, you must tell us what she told the Lord; she told
Him all the truth. We do not want anything else. We do not desire any sham
experience. We do not want you to manufacture feelings like somebody else's
that you have read of in a book. Come and tell us what you have felt. We
shall not ask you to tell us what you have not felt, or what you do not
know. But, if you have touched Christ, and you have been healed, I ask it,
and I think I may ask it as your duty, as well as a favour to us, to come
and tell us what the Lord hath done for your soul.
And
you, believers, when you come to the Lord's table, if you draw near to
Christ, and have a sweet season, tell it to your brethren. Just as when
Benjamin's brethren went down to Egypt to buy corn, they left Benjamin at
home, but they took a sack for Benjamin, so you ought always to take a word
home for the sick wife at home, or the child who cannot come out. Take home
food for those of the family who cannot come for it. God grant that you may
have always something sweet to tell of what you have experimentally known of
precious truth, for while the sermon may have been sweet in itself, it comes
with a double power when you can add, "and there was a savour about it which
I enjoyed, and which made my heart leap for joy"!
Whoever
you may be, my dear friend, though you may be nothing but a poor "somebody",
yet if you have touched Christ, tell others about it, in order that they may
come and touch Him, too; and the Lord bless you, for Christ's sake! Amen.
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