THE SPICED WINE OF MY POMEGRANATE
I would cause Thee to drink of spiced wine of the juice of my
pomegranate. "—Solomon's Song 8:2.
And of his fulness have all we received, and grace for grace."—John
1:16.
The
immovable basis of communion having been laid of old in the eternal union
which subsisted between Christ and His elect, it only needed a fitting
occasion to manifest itself in active development. The Lord Jesus had for
ever delighted Himself with the sons of men, and he ever stood prepared to
reveal and communicate that delight to His people; but they were incapable
of returning His affection or enjoying His fellowship, having fallen into a
state so base and degraded, that they were dead to Him, and careless
concerning Him. It was therefore needful that something should be done for
them, and in them, before they could hold converse with Jesus, or feel
concord with Him. This preparation being a work of grace and a result of
previous union, Jesus determined that, even in the preparation for communio
n, there should be communion. If they must be washed before they could fully
converse with Him, He would commune with them in the washing; and if they
must be enriched by gifts before they could have full access to Him, He
would commune with them in the giving. He has therefore established a
fellowship in imparting His grace, and in partaking of it.
This
order of fellowship we have called "The Communion of Communication," and we
think that a few remarks will prove that we are not running beyond the
warranty of Scripture.
The
word koinonia, or communion, is frequently employed by inspired
writers in the sense of communication or contribution. When, in our English
version, we read, "For it hath pleased them of Macedonia and Achaia to make
a certain contribution for the poor saints which are at Jerusalem"
(Rom. 15:26), it is interesting to know that the word koinwnian is used, as
if to show that the generous gifts of the Church in Achaia to its sister
Church at Jerusalem was a communion. Calvin would have us notice this,
because, saith he, "The word here employed well expresses the feeling by
which it behoves us to succour the wants of our brethren, even because there
is to be a common and mutual regard on account of the union of the body." He
would not have strained the text if he had said that there was in the
contribution the very essence of communion. Gill, in his commentary upon the
above verse, most pertinently remarks, "Contribution, or communion, as the
word signifies, it being one part of the communion of churches and of saints
to relieve their poor by communicating to them." The same word is employed
in Hebrews 13:16, and is there translated by the word "communicate."
"But to do good, and to communicate, forget not: for with such sacrifices
God is well pleased." It occurs again in 2 Corinthians 9:13, "And for your
liberal distribution unto them, and unto all men;" and in numerous
other passages the careful student will observe the word in various forms,
representing the ministering of the saints to one another as an act of
fellowship. Indeed, at the Lord's supper, which is the embodiment of
communion, we have ever been wont to make a special contribution for the
poor of the flock, and we believe that in the collection there is as true
and real an element of communion as in the partaking of the bread and wine.
The giver holds fellowship with the receiver when he bestows his benefaction
for the Lord's sake, and because of the brotherhood existing between him and
his needy friends. The teacher holds communion with the young disciple when
he labours to instruct him in the faith, being moved thereto by a spirit of
Christian love. He who intercedes for a saint because he desires his
well-being as a member of the one family, enters into fellowship with his b
rother in the offering of prayer. The loving and mutual service of
church-members is fellowship of a high degree. And let us remember that the
recipient communes with the benefactor: the communion is not confined to the
giver, but the heart overflowing with liberality is met by the heart
brimming with gratitude, and the love manifested in the bestowal is
reciprocated in the acceptance. When the hand feeds the mouth or supports
the head, the divers members feel their union, and sympathize with one
another; and so is it with the various portions of the body of Christ, for
they commune in mutual acts of love.
Now,
this meaning of the word communion furnishes us with much instruction, since
it indicates the manner in which recognized fellowship with Jesus is
commenced and maintained, namely, by giving and receiving, by
communication and reception. The Lord's supper is the divinely-ordained
exhibition of communion, and therefore in it there is the breaking of bread
and the pouring forth of wine, to picture the free gift of the Saviour's
body and blood to us; and there is also the eating of the one and the
drinking of the other, to represent the reception of these priceless gifts
by us. As without bread and wine there could be no Lord's supper, so without
the gracious bequests of Jesus to us there would have been no communion
between Him and our souls: and as participation is necessary before the
elements truly represent the meaning of the Lord's ordinance, so is it
needful that we should receive His bounties, and feed upon His person,
before we can commune with Him.
It
is one branch of this mutual communication which we have selected as the
subject of this address. "Looking unto Jesus," who hath delivered us from
our state of enmity, and brought us into fellowship with Himself, we pray
for the rich assistance of the Holy Spirit, that we may be refreshed in
spirit, and encouraged to draw more largely from the covenant storehouse of
Christ Jesus the Lord.
We
shall take a text, and proceed at once to our delightful task. " And of
His fulness have all we received, and grace for grace." (John 1:16.)
As
the life of grace is first begotten in us by the Lord Jesus, so is it
constantly sustained by Him. We are always drawing from this sacred
fountain, always deriving sap from this divine root; and as Jesus communes
with us in the bestowing of mercies, it is our privilege to hold fellowship
with Him in the receiving of them.
There
is this difference between Christ and ourselves, He never gives without
manifesting fellowship, but we often receive in so ill a manner that
communion is not reciprocated, and we therefore miss the heavenly
opportunity of its enjoyment. We frequently receive grace insensibly, that
is to say, the sacred oil runs through the pipe, and maintains our lamp, w
hile we are unmindful of the secret influence. We may also be the partakers
of many mercies which, through our dulness, we do not perceive to be mercies
at all; and at other times well-known blessings are recognized as such, but
we are backward in tracing them to their source in the covenant made with
Christ Jesus.
Following
out the suggestion of our explanatory preface, we can well believe that when
the poor saints received the contribution of their brethren, many of them
did in earnest acknowledge the fellowship which was illustrated in the
generous offering, but it is probable that some of them merely looked upon
the material of the gift, and failed to see the spirit moving in it. Sensual
thoughts in some of the receivers might possibly, at the season when the
contribution was distributed, have mischievously injured the exercise of
spirituality; for it is possible that, after a period of poverty, they would
be apt to give greater prominence to the fact that their need was removed
than to the sentiment of fellowship with their sympathizing brethren. They
would rather rejoice over famine averted than concerning fellowship
manifested. We doubt not that, in many instances, the mutual benefactions of
the Church fail to reveal our fellowship to our poor brethren, and produce
in them no feelings of communion with the givers.
Now
this sad fact is an illustration of the yet more lamentable statement which
we have made. We again assert that, as many of the partakers of the alms of
the Church are not alive to the communion contained therein, so the Lord's
people are never sufficiently attentive to fellowship with Jesus in
receiving His gifts, but many of them are entirely forgetful of their
privilege, and all of them are too little aware of it. Nay, worse than this,
how often doth the believer pervert the gifts of Jesus into food for his own
sin and wantonness! We are not free from the fickleness of ancient Israel,
and well might our Lord address us in the same language: "Now when I passed
by thee, and looked upon thee, behold, thy time was the time of love; and I
spread My skirt over thee, and covered thy nakedness: yea, I sware unto
thee, and entered into a covenant with Thee, saith the Lord God, and thou
becamest Mine. Then washed I thee with water; yea, I throughly washed away
thy blood from thee, and I anointed thee with oil. I clothed thee also with
broidered work, and shod thee with badgers' skin, and I girded thee about
with fine linen, and I covered thee with silk. I decked thee also with
ornaments, and I put bracelets upon thy hands, and a chain on thy neck. And
I put a jewel on thy forehead, and earrings in thine ears, and a beautiful
crown upon thine head. Thus wast thou decked with gold and silver; and thy
raiment was of fine linen, and silk, and broidered work; thou didst eat fine
flour, and honey, and oil: and thou wast exceeding beautiful, and thou didst
prosper into a kingdom. And thy renown went forth among the heathen for thy
beauty: for it was perfect through My comeliness, which I had put upon thee,
saith the Lord God. But thou didst trust in thine own beauty, and playedst
the harlot because of thy renown." (Ezek. 16:8-16.)
Ought
not the mass of professors to confess the truth of this accusation? Have not
the bulk of us most sadly departed from the purity of our love? We rejoice,
however, to observe a remnant of choice spirits, who live near the Lord, and
know the sweetness of fellowship. These receive the promise and the
blessing, and so digest them that they become good blood in their veins, and
so do they feed on their Lord that they grow up into Him. Let us imitate
those elevated minds, and obtain their high delights. There is no reason why
the meanest of us should not be as David, and David as the servant of the
Lord. We may now be dwarfs, but growth is possible; let us therefore aim at
a higher stature. Let the succeeding advice be followed, and, the Holy
Spirit helping us, we shall have attained thereto.
Make
every time of need a time of embracing thy Lord. Do not leave the
mercy-seat until thou hast clasped Him in thine arms. In every time of need
He has promised to give thee grace to help, and what withholdeth thee from
obtaining sweet fellowship as a precious addition to the promised
assistance? Be not as the beggar who is content with the alms, however
grudgingly it may be cast to him; but, since thou art a near kinsman, seek a
smile and a kiss with every benison He gives thee. Is He not better than His
mercies? What are they without Him? Cry aloud unto Him, and let thy petition
reach His ears, "O my Lord, it is not enough to be a partaker of Thy
bounties, I must have Thyself also; if Thou dost not give me Thyself with
Thy favours, they are but of little use to me! O smile on me, when Thou
blessest me, for else I am still unblest! Thou puttest perfume into all the
flowers of Thy garden, and fragrance into Thy spices; if Thou withdrawest
Thyself, they are no more pleasant to me. Come, then, my Lord, and give me
Thy love with Thy grace." Take good heed, Christian, that thine own heart is
in right tune, that when the fingers of mercy touch the strings, they may
resound with full notes of communion. How sad is it to partake of favour
without rejoicing in it! Yet such is often the believer's case. The Lord
casts His lavish bounties at our doors, and we, like churls, scarcely look
out to thank Him. Our ungrateful hearts and unthankful tongues mar our
fellowship, by causing us to miss a thousand opportunities for exercising
it.
If
thou wouldst enjoy communion with the Lord Jesus in the reception of His
grace, endeavor to be always sensibly drawing supplies from Him. Make
thy needs public in the streets of thine heart, and when the supply is
granted, let all the powers of thy soul be present at the reception of it.
Let no mercy come into thine house unsung. Note in thy memory the list of
thy Master's benefits. Wherefore should the Lord's bounties be hurried away
in the dark, or buried in forgetfulness? Keep the gates of thy soul ever
open, and sit thou by the wayside to watch the treasures of grace which God
the Spirit hourly conveys into thy heart from Jehovah—Jesus, thy Lord.
Never
let an hour pass without drawing upon the bank of heaven. If all thy wants
seem satisfied, look steadfastly until the next moment brings another need,
and then delay not, but with this warrant of necessity, hasten to thy
treasury again. Thy necessities are so numerous that thou wilt never lack a
reason for applying to the fulness of Jesus; but if ever such an occasion
should arise, enlarge thine heart, and then there will be need of more love
to fill the wider space. But do not allow any supposititious riches of thine
own to suspend thy daily receivings from the Lord Jesus. You have constant
need of Him. You need His intercession, His upholding, His sanctification;
you need that He should work all your works in you, and that He should
preserve you unto the day of His appearing. There is not one moment of your
life in which you can do without Christ. Therefore be always at His door,
and the wants which you bemoan shall be remembrances to turn your heart unto
your Saviour. Thirst makes the heart pant for the waterbrooks, and pain
reminds man of the physician. Let your wants conduct you to Jesus, and may
the blessed Spirit reveal Him unto you while He lovingly affords you the
rich supplies of His love! Go, poor saint, let thy poverty be the cord to
draw thee to thy rich Brother. Rejoice in the infirmity which makes room for
grace to rest upon thee, and be glad that thou hast constant needs which
compel thee perpetually to hold fellowship with thine adorable Redeemer.
Study
thyself, seek out thy necessities, as the housewife searches for chambers
where she may bestow her summer fruits. Regard thy wants as rooms to be
filled with more of the grace of Jesus, and suffer no corner to be
unoccupied. Pant after more of Jesus. Be covetous after Him. Let all the
past incite thee to seek greater things. Sing the song of the enlarged
heart,—
"All this is not enough: methinks I grow
More greedy by fruition; what I get
Serves but to set
An edge upon my appetite;
And all Thy gifts invite
My pray'rs for more."
Cry out to the Lord Jesus to fill the dry beds of thy rivers until they
overflow, and then empty thou the channels which have hitherto been filled
with thine own self-sufficiency, and beseech Him to fill these also with His
superabundant grace. If thy heavy trials sink thee deeper in the flood of
His consolations, be glad of them; and if thy vessel shall be sunken up to
its very bulwarks, be not afraid. I would be glad to feel the mast-head of
my soul twenty fathoms beneath the surface of such an ocean; for, as
Rutherford said, "Oh, to be over the ears in this well! I would not have
Christ's love entering into me, but I would enter into it, and be swallowed
up of that love." Cultivate an insatiable hunger and a quenchless thirst for
this communion with Jesus through His communications. Let thine heart cry
for ever, "Give, give," until it is filled in Paradise.
"O'ercome with Jesu's condescending love,
Brought into fellowship with Him and His,
And feasting with Him in His house of wine,
I'm sick of love,—and yet I pant for more
Communications from my loving Lord.
Stay me with flagons full of choicest wine,
Press'd from His heart upon Mount Calvary,
To cheer and comfort my love-conquer'd soul.
*
* *Thyself I crave!
Thy presence is my life, my joy, my heav'n,
And all, without Thyself, is dead to me.
Stay me with flagons, Saviour, hear my cry,
Let promises, like apples, comfort me;
Apply atoning blood, and cov'nant love,
Until I see Thy face among the guests
Who in Thy Father's kingdom feast."
(Nymphas,
by JOSEPH IRONS.)
This is the only covetousness which is allowable: but this is not merely
beyond rebuke, it is worthy of commendation. O saints, be not straitened in
your own bowels, but enlarge your desires, and so receive more of your
Saviour's measureless fulness! I charge thee, my soul, thus to hold
continual fellowship with thy Lord, since He invites and commands thee thus
to partake of His riches.
Rejoice
thyself in benefits received. Let the satisfaction of thy spirit
overflow in streams of joy. When the believer reposes all his confidence in
Christ, and delights himself in Him, there is an exercise of communion. If
he forgetteth his psalm-book, and instead of singing is found lamenting, the
mercies of the day will bring no communion. Awake, O music! stir up thyself,
O my soul, be glad in the Lord, and exceedingly rejoice! Behold His favours,
rich, free, and continual; shall they be buried in unthankfulness? Shall
they be covered with a winding-sheet of ingratitude? No! I will praise Him.
I must extol Him. Sweet Lord Jesus, let me kiss the dust of Thy feet, let me
lose myself in thankfulness, for Thy thoughts unto me are precious, how
great is the sum of them! Lo, I embrace Thee in the arms of joy and
gratitude, and herein I find my soul drawn unto Thee!
This
is a blessed method of fellowship. It is kissing the divine lip of
benediction with the sanctified lip of affection. Oh, for more rejoicing
grace, more of the songs of the heart, more of the melody of the soul!
Seek
to recognize the source of thy mercies as lying alone in Him who is our Head.
Imitate the chicken, which, every time it drinketh of the brook, lifts up
its head to heaven, as if it would return thanks for every drop. If we have
anything that is commendable and gracious, it must come from the Holy
Spirit, and that Spirit is first bestowed on Jesus, and then through Him on
us. The oil was first poured on the head of Aaron, and thence it ran down
upon his garments. Look on the drops of grace, and remember that they distil
from the Head, Christ Jesus. All thy rays are begotten by this Sun of
Righteousness, all thy showers are poured from this heaven, all thy
fountains spring from this great and immeasurable depth. Oh, for grace to
see the hand of Jesus on every favour! So will communion be constantly and
firmly in exercise. May the great Teacher perpetually direct us to Jesus by
making the mercies of the covenant the handposts on the road which leadeth
to Him. Happy is the believer who knows how to find the secret abode of his
Beloved by tracking the footsteps of His loving providence: herein is wisdom
which the casual observer of mere second causes can never reach. Labour, O
Christian, to follow up every clue which thy Master's grace affords thee!
Labour
to maintain a sense of thine entire dependence upon His good will and
pleasure for the continuance of thy richest enjoyments. Never try to
live on the old manna, nor seek to find help in Egypt. All must come from
Jesus, or thou art undone for ever. Old anointings will not suffice to
impart unction to our spirit; thine head must have fresh oil poured upon it
from the golden horn of the sanctuary, or it will cease from its glory.
To-day thou mayest be upon the summit of the mount of God; but He who has
put thee there must keep thee there, or thou wilt sink far more speedily
than thou dreamest. Thy mountain only stands firm when He settles it in its
place; if He hide His face, thou wilt soon be troubled. If the Saviour
should see fit, there is not a window through which thou seest the light of
heaven which he could not darken in an instant. Joshua bade the sun stand
still, but Jesus can shroud it in total darkness. He can withdraw the joy of
thine heart, the light of thine eyes, and the strength of thy life; in His
hand thy comforts lie, and at His will they can depart from thee. Oh! how
rich the grace which supplies us so continually, and doth not refrain itself
because of our ingratitude! O Lord Jesus, we would bow at Thy feet,
conscious of our utter inability to do aught without Thee, and in every
favour which we are privileged to receive, we would adore Thy blessed name,
and acknowledge Thine unexhausted love!
When
thou hast received much, admire the all-sufficiency which still remaineth
undiminished, thus shall you commune with Christ, not only in what you
obtain from Him, but also in the superabundance which remains treasured up
in Him. Let us ever remember that giving does not impoverish our Lord. When
the clouds, those wandering cisterns of the skies, have poured floods upon
the dry ground, there remains an abundance in the storehouse of the rain: so
in Christ there is ever an unbounded supply, though the most liberal showers
of grace have fallen ever since the foundation of the earth. The sun is as
bright as ever after all his shining, and the sea is quite as full after all
the clouds have been drawn from it: so is our Lord Jesus ever the same
overflowing fountain of fulness. All this is ours, and we may make it the
subject of rejoicing fellowship. Come, believer, walk through the length and
breadth of the land, for as far as the eye can reach, the land is thine, and
far beyond the utmost range of thine observation it is thine also, the
gracious gift of thy gracious Redeemer and Friend. Is there not ample space
for fellowship here?
Regard
every spiritual mercy as an assurance of the Lord's communion with thee.
When the young man gives jewels to the virgin to whom he is affianced, she
regards them as tokens of his delight in her. Believer, do the same with the
precious presents of thy Lord. The common bounties of providence are shared
in by all men, for the good Householder provides water for His swine as well
as for His children: such things, therefore, are no proof of divine
complacency. But thou hast richer food to eat; "the children's bread" is in
thy wallet, and the heritage of the righteous is reserved for thee. Look,
then, on every motion of grace in thine heart as a pledge and sign of the
moving of thy Saviour's heart towards thee. There is His whole heart in the
bowels of every mercy which He sends thee. He has impressed a kiss of love
upon each gift, and He would have thee believe that every jewel of mercy is
a token of His boundless love. Look on thine adoption, justification, and
preservation, as sweet enticements to fellowship. Let every note of the
promise sound in thine ears like the ringing of the bells of the house of
thy Lord, inviting thee to come to the banquets of His love. Joseph sent to
his father asses laden with the good things of Egypt, and good old Jacob
doubtless regarded them as pledges of the love of his son's heart: be sure
not to think less of the kindnesses of Jesus.
Study
to know the value of His favours. They are no ordinary things, no paste
jewels, no mosaic gold: they are every one of them so costly, that, had all
heaven been drained of treasure, apart from the precious offering of the
Redeemer, it could not have purchased so much as the least of His benefits.
When thou seest thy pardon, consider how great a boon is contained in it!
Bethink thee that hell had been thine eternal portion unless Christ had
plucked thee from the burning! When thou art enabled to see thyself as
clothed in the imputed righteousness of Jesus, admire the profusion of preci
ous things of which thy robe is made. Think how many times the Man of
sorrows wearied Himself at that loom of obedience in which He wove that
matchless garment; and reckon, if thou canst, how many worlds of merit were
cast into the fabric at every throw of the shuttle! Remember that all the
angels in heaven could not have afforded Him a single thread which would
have been rich enough to weave into the texture of His perfect
righteousness. Consider the cost of thy maintenance for an hour; remember
that thy wants are so large, that all the granaries of grace that all the
saints could fill, could not feed thee for a moment.
What
an expensive dependent thou art! King Solomon made marvellous provision for
his household (1 Kings 4:22), but all his beeves and fine flour would be as
the drop of the bucket compared with thy daily wants. Rivers of oil, and ten
thousand rams or fed beasts, would not provide enough to supply the
necessities of thy hungering soul. Thy least spiritual want demands infinity
to satisfy it, and what must be the amazing aggregate of thy perpetually
repeated draughts upon thy Lord! Arise, then, and bless thy loving Immanuel
for the invaluable riches with which He has endowed thee. See what a dowry
thy Bridegroom has brought to His poor, penniless spouse. He knows the value
of the blessings which He brings thee, for He has paid for them out of His
heart's richest blood; be not thou so ungenerous as to pass them over as if
they were but of little worth. Poor men know more of the value of money than
those who have always revelled in abundance of wealth. Ought not thy former
poverty to teach thee the preciousness of the grace which Jesus gives thee?
For remember, there was a time when thou wouldst have given a thousand
worlds, if they had been thine, in order to procure the very least of His
abundant mercies.
Remember
how impossible it would have been for thee to receive a single spiritual
blessing unless thou hadst been in Jesus. On none of Adam's race can the
love of God be fixed, unless they are seen to be in union with His Son. No
exception has ever been made to the universal curse on those of the first
Adam's seed who have no interest in the second Adam. Christ is the only Zoar
in which God's Lots can find a shelter from the destruction of Sodom. Out of
Him, the withering blast of the fiery furnace of God's wrath consumes every
green herb, and it is only in Him that the soul can live. As when the
prairie is on fire, men see the heavens wrapped in sheets of flame, and in
hot haste they fly before the devouring element. They have but one hope.
There is in the distance a lake of water. They reach it, they plunge into
it, and are safe. Although the skies are molten with the heat, the sun
darkened with the smoke, and the earth utterly consumed in the fire, they
know that they are secure while the cooling flood embraces them. Christ
Jesus is the only escape for a sinner pursued by the fiery wrath of God, and
we would have the believer remember this. Our own works could never shelter
us, for they have proved but refuges of lies. Had they been a thousand times
more and better, they would have been but as the spider's web, too flail to
hang eternal interests upon. There was but one name, one sacrifice, one
blood, by which we could escape. All other attempts at salvation were a
grievous failure. For, "though a man could scourge out of his body rivers of
blood, and in neglect of himself could outlast Moses or Elias; though he
could wear out his knees with prayer, and had his eyes nailed on heaven;
though he could build hospitals for all the poor on earth, and exhaust the
mines of India in alms; though he could walk like an angel of light, and
with the glittering of an outward holiness dazzle the eyes of all beholders;
nay (if it were possible to be conceived) though he should live for a
thousand years in a perfect and perpetual observation of the whole law of
God, if the only exception to his perfection were the very least deviation
from the law, yet such a man as this could no more appear before the
tribunal of God's justice, than stubble before a consuming fire." How, then,
with thine innumerable sins, couldst thou escape the damnation of hell, much
less become the recipient of bounties so rich and large? Blessed window of
heaven, sweet Lord Jesus, let Thy Church for ever adore Thee, as the only
channel by which mercies can flow to her. My soul, give Him continual
praise, for without Him thou hadst been poorer than a beggar. Be thou
mindful, O heir of heaven, that thou couldst not have had one ray of hope,
or one word of comfort, if thou hadst not been in union with Christ Jesus!
The crumbs which fall from thy table are more than grace itself would have
given thee, hadst thou not been in Jesus beloved and approved.
All
thou hast, thou hast in Him: in Him chosen, in Him redeemed, in Him
justified, in Him accepted. Thou art risen in Him, but without Him thou
hadst died the second death. Thou art in Him raised up to the heavenly
places, but out of Him thou wouldst have been damned eternally. Bless Him,
then. Ask the angels to bless Him. Rouse all ages to a harmony of praise for
His condescending love in taking poor guilty nothings into oneness with His
all-adorable person. This is a blessed means of promoting communion, if the
sacred Comforter is pleased to take of the things of Christ, and reveal them
to us as ours, but only ours as we are in Him. Thrice-blessed Jesus, let us
never forget that we are members of Thy mystical body, and that it is for
this reason that we are blessed and preserved.
Meditate
upon thee gracious acts which procured thy blessings. Consider the
ponderous labours which thy Lord endured for thee, and the stupendous
sufferings by which He purchased the mercies which He bestows. What human
tongue can speak forth the unutterable misery of His heart, or describe so
much as one of the agonies which crowded upon His soul? How much less shall
any finite comprehension arrive at an idea of the vast total of His woe! But
all His sorrows were necessary for thy benefit, and without them not one of
thine unnumbered mercies could have been bestowed. Be not unmindful that—
"There's ne'er a gift His hand bestows,
But cost His heart a groan."
Look upon the frozen ground of Gethsemane, and behold the bloody sweat which
stained the soil! Turn to the hall of Gabbatha, and see the victim of
justice pursued by His clamorous foes! Enter the guard-room of the
Praetorians, and view the spitting, and the plucking of the hair! and then
conclude your review upon Golgotha, the mount of doom, where death
consummated His tortures; and if, by divine assistance thou art enabled to
enter, in some humble measure, into the depths of thy Lord's sufferings,
thou wilt be the better prepared to hold fellowship with Him when next thou
receivest His priceless gifts. In proportion to thy sense of their
costliness will be thy capacity for enjoying the love which is centred in
them.
Above
all, and chief of all, never forget that Christ is thine. Amid the
profusion of His gifts, never forget that the chief gift is Himself, and do
not forget that, after all, His gifts are but Himself. He clothes thee, but
it is with Himself, with His own spotless righteousness and character. He
washes thee, but His innermost self, His own heart's blood, is the stream
with which the fountain overflows. He feeds thee with the bread of heaven,
but be not unmindful that the bread is Himself, His own body which He gives
to be the food of souls. Never be satisfied with a less communication than a
whole Christ. A wife will not be put off with maintenance, jewels, and a
ttire, all these will be nothing to her unless she can call her husband's
heart and person her own. It was the Paschal lamb upon which the ancient
Israelite did feast on that night that was never to be forgotten. So do thou
feast on Jesus, and on nothing less than Jesus, for less than this will be
food too light for thy soul's satisfaction. Oh, be careful to eat His flesh
and drink His blood, and so receive Him into thyself in a real and spiritual
manner, for nothing short of this will be an evidence of eternal life in thy
soul!
What
more shall we add to the rules which we have here delivered? There remains
but one great exhortation, which must not be omitted. Seek the abundant
assistance of the Holy Spirit to enable you to put into practice the
things which we have said, for without His aid, all that we have spoken will
but be tantalizing the lame with rules to walk, or the dying with
regulations for the preservation of health. O thou Divine Spirit, while we
enjoy the grace of Jesus, lead us into the secret abode of our Lord, that we
may sup with Him, and He with us, and grant unto us hourly grace that we may
continue in the company of our Lord from the rising to the setting of the
sun! Amen.
Till He Come
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