| AMBLESIDE ONLINE | CM SERIES HOME | CONCISE SUMMARIES | MODERN
ENGLISH PARAPHRASE |
Charlotte Mason's Original Homeschooling Series
This book was going to be scanned
and made available for the Ambleside Online curriculum. But the project
didn't get completed before we lost access to the book. This also still
needs a lot of proofreading!
THE GOSPEL STORY, PART I
by
J. Patterson Smyth
Lesson II - EARLY DAYS
St. Luke II. 40-52.
Last day we thought of the tremendous thing that had happened. The Lord
coming down to us from Heaven as a little baby Boy. Very God with the
flesh of Very Man wrapped round His Godhead, to grow up amongst us as a
man that we might in some degree understand and know and love Him and
learn the kindly heart of God towards us.
I - The Virgin Mother "Pondering in Her Heart."
Now Joseph the carpenter and the Blessed Virgin Mother are back home in
Nazareth, bringing with them the Holy Child to be reared up to manhood.
How we should love to know the story of His childhood, all the
delightful little things that mothers love to tell about their
children. But I suppose God thought it best that we should not know.
The Bible draws a veil over the incidents of His childhood and we are
only told that "the Child grew and waxed strong in spirit and the grace
of God was upon Him and daily He increased in wisdom and stature and in
favour with God and man."
I do not think His mother understood till long afterwards the Great
Mystery in which she was taking part. She knew that her child was the
destined Messiah, that God had some great purpose for His life. But she
could not have known then the tremendous fact that it was the Lord from
Heaven in human form that she was carrying in her arms. She only
learned all that later on. Else how could He be brought up as a natural
human boy? How could she have dealt with Him at all as her child? The
thought of His Divinity would have overwhelmed everything and made it
impossible to treat Him as human. The family life would have been
impossible, inconceivable. The purpose of His Incarnation would have
been frustrated that He should become like unto His brethren and grow
gradually in human thought and consciousness that He should be Very Man
as well as Very God.
No. She could not have known then. She must have been often puzzled.
The Gospels repeatedly present her as observing and marvelling and
pondering over the events of the. Childhood. They suggest a quiet,
reticent woman ,wrapped in loving reverent thought of her mysterious
Child, solemnised by the memories of His miraculous birth; seeing the
high destiny before Him but not know--ing how it should be
accomplished, and therefore often puzzled; noting intently the strange
things that were happening, trying to fit them into her ideas, thinking
and wondering and holding her peace " Mary kept all these sayings and
pondered them in her heart."
II - Children in the Market Place.
So we think of Him as a natural human boy in a natural human family in
that village borne in Nazareth by the carpenter's shop. I have been
trying to picture Him to myself in that little world. I have hanging in
my study a large photograph of Nazareth and its surroundings where I
can see the identical mountains and valleys that He saw and the very
fields where He walked and the little mountain town nestling white
against the dark hills behind.
And so one can in some degree picture His boy life.
It needs an effort to pass from thinking of the Eternal Son "whose
goings forth are from of old from everlasting" to thinking of and
trying to visualise a little Boy in Nazareth going on messages for His
mother and sweeping up the shavings in the carpenter's shop-to see Him
among the "children playing in the marketplace the games of the
unchanging child world such as our children play today. I love to think
of Him playing in the marketplace. It brings Him so close to our own
children's lives. I came one day on a delightful discovery about this.
Just as you hear the children today singing in a village street "London
Bridge is broken down" and "Round and round the mulberry bush,"
so two thousand years ago you might have heard the Nazareth children
calling to their fellows:--
We have piped and ye not rakedtoon
We have mourned and ye not arkedtoon.
And Jesus remembered that rhyme of His childhood and quoted it one day
in a solemn discourse,
"Ye are like the children crying in the marketplace
We have piped unto you and ye have not danced
We have joined unto you and ye have not wept."
You cannot make it rhyme in English or in Greek, only in the language
of the Nazareth children which at once suggests the rhyme of a
children's game. I shall never again hear village children singing in
the marketplace without thinking of that rhyme and the Child Jesus at
play.
III - The Child's Education.
One likes to think of His religious teaching--of the sacred hours when
Mary put her Child to bed, teaching Him his prayers, telling Him of the
Father, with the absorbing thought in her heart of the great destiny
before Him. How He would go to the synagogue school of the town taught
by the country rabbi. The Jews of that day set great importance on the
school where the children learned for hymns the simpler psalms, for
history the Old Testament stories of God's dealings with Israel. One
wonders what sort of man was the old country rabbi who had the teaching
of Jesus. Longfellow in the Golden Legend pictures the scene:--
Come hither, Judas Iscariot,
See if thy lesson thou hast got
From the rabbinical book or not.
And now little Jesus, the carpenter's son,
Let us see how thy task is done.
When He could read, the chief, probably the only books He had, would be
those of the sacred Scriptures where he learned the very stories that
we have of Abraham and Jacob and Joseph in Egypt and the great prophets
who taught Israel of holiness and sometimes gave them glimpses of a
great Messiah to come.
And I think all the world around, the beautiful Book of Nature would be
always teaching Him about God. One feels that a special consciousness
of the Father was always with Him. And so as I took at my Nazareth
photograph I think of the Boy wandering over those same hills and
fields seeing the Father's flowers and birds and beasts and delighting
in them and loving them and feeling that the Father in Heaven also
delighted in them and loved them. In all His references to Nature
afterwards He makes you feel this. God is behind it all, interested in
it all. God loves the little lambs sporting in the fields. God watches
the poor sheep going astray. God feeds the birds of the air which sow
not, neither do they reap. God sees the little sparrow fallen out of
the nest. He decks for His pleasure the wild flowers of the hills so
that " Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these."
What a lovely thing a child's religion might be if he could learn it
rightly as Jesus would, with the thought of the kindly Father pervading
it all. Surely Jesus was a happy child in that free, simple boyhood in
Nazareth before the consciousness of the world's pain and sin began to
press upon His heart.
IV - "When He Was Twelve Years Old."
I think we are justified in letting our thoughts dwell thus lovingly on
the childhood of Our Lord. But remember, little has been revealed.
There is only one break in the long silence as to His early days. We
read that Joseph and Mary went up every year to the Passover, and when
He was twelve years old He went up with them to the Feast (Luke ii.
41).
Surely for the Boy a time to be remembered. His first sight of sacred
Jerusalem. His solemn thoughts as He entered the stately Temple, the
House of His Father, the centre of Israel's worship all the world over,
the vast crowds, a million of Jews from every nation under Heaven come
together with one intent to worship the Father in His holy Temple. And
then the rabbis. Here was His young soul thirsting for knowledge,
starved, perhaps, by the ignorant old rabbi in Nazareth. Here were the
great teachers of the nation-the men who knew! We learn of the Boy's
intense interest in the teaching and the questions He asked, until at
last the rabbis began to notice Him and get interested in Him and
finally to wonder at His understanding and answers. I wish we knew what
He asked them. I wish we knew more about the matter altogether. But the
story has probably come through His mother and she only came in at the
close looking for her lost Child. We read that she reproached Him for
the anxiety He had caused by His absence and then we have the first
recorded words of Jesus, "Why, mother, how is it that you are
Surprised? Should you not expect to find me here occupied in the things
of my Father in the house of my Father."
"And they understood not the things which He spake tinto them. But His
mother kept all these sayings in her heart." You see she did not
understand. And the Boy had to think out His thoughts alone. The
beginning of the loneliness of Jesus.
We do not understand either. It looks as if it were a crisis in His
young life. Maybe the slumbering instinct of the Eternal was awakening
in the Child, lighting up the dim consciousness in Him already that He
was somehow different from those about Him, from the children He played
with and the parents who reared Him. If so it gives more emphasis to
the next little statement. "He went down with them and came to Nazareth
and was subject unto them." Which brings a lesson for us all. We might
well feel that such high thoughts and high happenings would make the
monotony of village life distasteful. But the Divine Child had learned
and hereby teaches us that simple obedience and dull occupations may be
still more high and holy in the sight of the Father. For Him at present
that daily life was "His Father's business." For He was only twelve and
the simple obedience of the home life was doubtless the best
preparation for His future. No unnatural stimulation should be his, no
precocious growth, no flattery or admiration. He was to grow to manhood
unnoticed, unknown. His life was to develop naturally, normally,
wholesomely.
V - The Carpenter.
So the curtain falls again upon His life. For twenty years more He
lived unknown, working as a carpenter in Joseph's workshop. We believe
that when Joseph died and the lonely widow had sobbed out her grief in
the arms of her beloved Son then He had to work on to support His
mother. "Is not this the carpenter, the Son of Mary?" We dare not try
to follow the great thoughts stirring in Him as He wrought at the bench
all day or climbed in the evening the Nazareth hills contemplating in
solitude the mystery of His future or staying as in later days on the
mountain top "continuing all night in prayer to God."
Thus we leave Him till His great call came.
Questions for Lesson II
Did Jesus remember in later life the time when He played with the
children in the marketplace?
Can you tell anything about His religious education? What could He
learn from Nature around Him?
Tell fully what happened when He was twelve years old.
Why is He called The Carpenter?
Lesson III - THE BAPTISM AND
TEMPTATION
Read St. Matt. iii. and IV. to v. 12.
I - Two Boys Growing Up.
Eighteen years have passed since the Boy Jesus returned from that
exciting week in Jerusalem with the rabbis and came back to His life
discipline in the quiet, obscure village of Nazareth. The Boy has
become a Man. Thirty years old. Working at the carpenter's bench to
support His widowed mother-reading His great Books- thinking His great
thoughts--waiting.
All these years another boy has been growing up--born the same year as
He in a clergyman's house on the wild hills of Hebron. You remember how
the Virgin Mother, after the angel's visit, hurried off to tell her
cousin Elizabeth in Hebron. Elizabeth, too, was about to become a
mother and there were strange prophecies about her unborn child, that
he should one day become a prophet in Israel, to be a herald of the
coming Messiah, to "prepare the way of the Lord."
That boy has also grown to manhood, a hermit in the wilderness, an
enthusiast with the dreamer's eyes,-in fasting and penitence seeking
self-mastery, clothing himself in hair-cloth, feeding on beggar's food
of locusts and wild honey. And all the time meditating on the
utterances of the prophets, especially on that mysterious line of
thought running like a golden thread through the web of prophecy-the
dream of a Golden Age, a Kingdom of
God, a day in the future when some great Coming One should come. At
last his time came. " Now in the fifteenth year of Tiberius Caesar . .
. the Word of God--came to John, the son of Zacharias, in the
wilderness. And he came into all the region round about Jordan
preaching the baptism of repentance as is written in the book of Isaiah
the prophet, 'The voice of one crying in the wilderness, Make ready the
way of the Lord."' In a few months the whole country is ringing with
the rumour of him. Excited voices are crying in Jerusalem itself, " We
have heard him. We have seen him. He is Elijah come back. He is
denouncing our sins. He is saying startling things about Him who is to
come!"
II - The Baptism of Jesus.
Our Lord must have felt now that He can stay no longer. His time is
come. Patiently for thirty years He has waited. Now the Divine longing
must have its way. He must go out to lift up the poor world. So one
day, in His simple dress, He suddenly appears in the crowd listening to
John at Jordan. Describe scene before Him. What was John like? The
crowd? Listening, do you think? Ah! they had to listen there. Whenever
a great soul like that, full of enthusiasm for his message, thinking
not of advancement or praise, of fine clothes, giving up everything in
his eager excitement to rouse men to righteousness-people can't help
listening. No gentle preacher was he. " Away with your hypocrisies and
shams and unrealities. For Messiah is coming whose fan is in his hand.
He shall winnow the chaff from the wheat, the shams from the realities.
And think not to say within yourselves, We have Abraham to our father,
for God is able of these stones to raise up children to Abraham. No. I
am not Messiah. I am not that prophet. I am but a voice crying in the
wilderness, "Prepare ye the way of the Lord."
All this time Jesus was in the crowd, quietly awaiting His turn,
standing in his simple country dress by the river. Now He comes down.
Did He come confessing His sins, like the rest? Why not? What did John
say? Do you think John knew Him to be the Christ? (John 1.33). But he
knew his cousin as the truest noblest heart on earth, in whom no man
had ever seen meanness, or selfishness, or any sin. So felt unworthy to
baptise Him. Now tell me of baptism, and the wonderful event, the
crowning of the King from Heaven? The heavens opened and a vision as of
a Dove lighted upon Jesus and a voice was heard from heaven, a voice
Divine, "This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased." Did the
crowd see and hear it? We don't know. Did John? (John 1:33).
Astonished, struck dumb with reverence and awe, he saw his young
carpenter cousin claimed as God. Like as if, when Peter the Great was
working in an English dock--yard in disguise, the Court of Russia
should suddenly appear and crown him amid his workmen-cornpanions. Then
John knew of a certainty that he had found the Christ.
III - "Led Up into the Wilderness."
The next chapter brings a startling change. It is just after the
Baptism. Straight from the opened heaven and the voice of the Father,
Jesus is " led up into the wilderness to be tempted of the devil." Its
prominence in the gospels makes it quite clear that this was a solemn
and most important crisis in the life of Jesus. We can only guess at
its full significance. It would seem that He was meditating on His
tremendous life-work, facing its perplexities, seeking the way out and
that Satanic agencies of awful power were struggling with Him, trying
to tempt, to mislead, to deflect Him from His course. He who became man
to found the Kingdom of God must begin by encountering and defeating as
man the powers of the Kingdom of Evil.
IV - "To Be Tempted of the Devil."
Evening come. Crowd departed. John has retired to his cave in awe and
wonder. And Jesus departed, too, alone. Where? Away, away out into wild
desert country. Could not rest. Great thoughts and yearnings stirring
in His soul. His whole life stirred to its foundation by this wondrous
scene. The Spirit of God pressing powerfully on Him. He must be away,
alone in communion with His Father. Away, away through the starry
night, into the trackless desert, not thinking of danger, nor of the
wild beasts, nor of hunger, nor of anything, but the great, wonderful
thoughts that are filling His soul. And while rapt in His great future,
and His communion with God, and His delight in the self--sacrifice for
men, a horrible thing happens. Evil spirits ,crowd in on Him,
struggling, tempting, tormenting, trying to lead Him wrong. That must
have been an awful forty days. So strained is He with the conflict that
He forgets to eat-for how long? People in intense mental excitement
often forget to eat.
But when excitement over, there comes terrible reaction; feels weak,
and tired, and despondent. Very hard time to resist temptation. This
time, therefore, chosen by Satan for his most powerful attacks. Why
attack Christ? If he can make Him sin, it will spoil His power. Whether
Satan came as a great black angel of evil, or whether visible at all,
we don't know. Do you remember story of his first coming to man? (Gen.
iii.). Did he ever come to you? Visible? How? Perhaps like that to
Jesus. We don't know. Perhaps the Evangelists themselves did not know.
Who must have given account of the Temptation? Why? Because no one else
knew but He. And whether the tempter visible or not, Christ says he was
the devil. Think of this when you feel him tempting you. A great, real,
wicked devil. Don't say, " I feel bad desires and thoughts," but say, "
I am tempted of the devil," like our Lord, and rise up and fight him
bravely in the strength which our Lord will give you. Remember, too,
Jesus had to fight him as a man. He had "emptied Himself." There would
have been no need to show that as God He could triumph over Satan. But
He had come down to our level as our brother, and would take no
advantage that we could not have. Like an armoured knight of old,
fighting in front of his peasant soldiers, but putting away his armour,
and shield, and horse, and fighting just as they, to inspirit them.
V - The Temptations.
What was the first temptation? Could He do it? Was it a sore
temptation? What harm would it have been? We don't quite know. Perhaps
because He was our brother, must fight like His brothers, and trust in
God. Never use for His own gain the Divine power. Would he like the
knight, when in danger, saving himself by putting on his armour, which
his poor brethren could not have. No, He would trust in God; and into
his mind at once flashed a verse, which perhaps He had learned in the
old rabbi's village school. What was it? " Man shall not," &c. Good
thing in temptation to know one's Bible.
Then Satan, seeing His trust, very cunningly tries to tempt him that
way. Second temptation? Yes. "Trust God to keep you if you throw
yourself off temple." Why should not He? Because it is only in the path
of duty we may trust God. If anything be your duty, do it, even at risk
of life, and trust God. But not if go into needless danger, doing your
own will, to win admiration or recognition from others. What text
quoted?
Third temptation? I don't quite understand how this could be a
temptation. What did Jesus care about earthly glory, and money, and
power? Perhaps this was a stupid blunder of Satan. He was very cunning
and subtle; but low, degraded souls cannot understand high and noble
souls. Very cunning, tricky, self-seeking man, who could "buy and sell"
the wisest around him, yet would be quite unable to understand an
utterly noble, unselfish man, full of enthusiasm for God and self-
sacrifice. And so would not know how to tempt such a one. Perhaps it
was that. But more probably he thought Jesus so anxious to get the
kingdoms to bless them, that He would be willing to "do evil that good
might come." Would He? What was the third answer from Scripture?
Then what happened? (v. 11). Battle over, victory won. Did it ever
happen with you? Try to make it happen, and you will learn that the
devil is a bully and a coward. Like a bully at school, squaring up to a
small boy to frighten him; but if small boy hits back, the bully runs
away. So Satan (James iv. 7). It is a great delight to drive him off,
one feels so glad, and proud, and thankful. Especially remember that
the devil leaves us. He is not omnipresent, any more than omnipotent.
Some think he is, and they lose heart in temptation, and say: " I may
as well give in now as later, for this strain of temptation will be
always pressing on me." It is not so. The time of your sharpest
temptation is " his hour and the power of darkness." Remember that.
Fight through it. And perhaps it will be days and days before a really
fierce temptation comes again. Try it next time and you will see how
beautifully all our Lord's fight was for your encouragement and
example. The devil will leave you, and in the comfort and peace you
will feet as if angels were come to minister unto you.
Questions for Lesson III
Who was John the Baptist? What was he born for?
Describe the Baptism and the wonderful thing that happened.
Why should Satan want to tempt Jesus?
Tell of the three chief temptations.
What did Jesus answer to each?
Since Jesus was God how could His temptation be any example or
encouragement to us?
Lesson IV - THE FIRST DISCIPLES
St. John 1. 35-51.
To avoid confusion here, carefully distinguish between John the Baptist
and John the young disciple. Also emphasise here that this is the first
small beginning of Jesus' Kingdom of God on earth.
I - An Old Disciple's Memories.
Here comes a delightful little story of how our Lord first met some of
the great Apostles of later days. We should never have heard of it if
one of these had not told us in his old age, long after the earlier
gospels were written. These earlier gospels only tell of the public
call of the Twelve. But one of these Twelve many years afterwards as he
read these gospels must have said to himself. Ahl they have left out
those wonderful days after the Temptation. As he read of Jesus publicly
call--ing the Twelve Apostles to their office he thinks: they have not
told of those delightful days when some of us first made His
acquaintance. So St. John, who fills up many other gaps in the gospel
story, fills this gap too.
He had intimate memories that the others had not of those precious
three years with Jesus on earth. And among all his memories one
especially stands out-the memory of a certain afternoon at four o'clock
fifty years ago--the hour when he first met his beloved Lord. That is
the red-letter day of his life, he cannot have that left out. So he
tells what he remembers.
II - An Evening Alone with Jesus.
It was just after the Temptation. Six weeks ago Jesus had been baptised
and then immediately He was led up into the Wilderness to be tempted of
the Devil. So He vanished from sight and the Baptist and the others did
not know where He had gone to.
Now the Baptist is standing by the river with some of his intimates
when suddenly down the path where he had disappeared six weeks ago
Jesus appears walking towards them, a tired man surely with the strain
of the forty days showing on Him, with the light of another world in
His eyes. Immediately the Baptist recognises Him. " Behold the Lamb of
God which taketh away the sins of the world. This is He of whom I told
you: 'I beheld the Spirit descending on Him as a Dove and I have seen
and bear witness that this is the Son of God."'
The next day John the Baptist is standing with a group of young
disciples, young fishermen who had come up from Capernauni to hear him,
and young John, the disciple who tells the story, was one of them.
Again Jesus passed on the path below. "Look," cries the Baptist,
gripping his young companion, "behold the Lamb of God! " And two young
fishermen, young John and another, started down the path shyly,
timidly, awkwardly, half hoping, half fearing that Jesus might turn and
speak to them. And He did. Kindly He asks, "Whom seek ye? " They hardly
knew what to say. "Master, where dwellest Thou?" Jesus knew the timid
thought and wish in their hearts. "Come with me and see."
It was a wonderful happening and the aged disciple looking back over
fifty years remembers the very hour of it. "It was about the tenth
hour" (four o'clock). Think what it meant to those two to spend that
evening with Jesus talking to him naturally, easily. I wonder what He
told them and what they asked Him. Maybe He told of His great plan for
His Kingdom on earth. Maybe he asked, Will you join me when I am ready?
At any rate, I am quite sure that they came back from that visit, their
pulses stirring with wonder and enthusiasm, their hearts swelling with
a great reverent affection for their new Friend.
III - How Peter Came into the Group.
One of them was John and he says that
"one of them was Andrew, Simon Peter's brother. Andrew first findeth
his own brother Simon and tells him, We have found the Christ! " That
is how the famous St. Peter, that affectionate, blundering,
great-hearted Peter, first came into the group of the disciples of
Jesus.
Don't you love to think of that aged St. John looking back on this
delightful memory? And don't you love to think of the way in which
Jesus won these young men to him-just by loving them, making friends
with Him, letting them get to know Him? One feels that there must have
been a delightful charm, a wonderful human attractiveness in Jesus. You
could not help loving Him if you knew Him on earth. I do not think any
of us could help loving Him now if we only knew Him as He is and knew
the thoughts in His heart towards us.
IV - Nathanael.
Next day Jesus is starting for Galilee. He is to stop at Cana for a
wedding. And the three young friends go with Him, for they have to go
back home to their fishing on the Lake of Galilee and they also are
invited to the wedding. On the road they meet Philip, with whom I think
the Lord is already acquainted. And when they get to Cana, Philip goes
right off to an intimate friend of his, Nathanael Bartholomew. Probably
they had often talked together of the coming Messiah.
"Nathanael! we have found Him of whom Moses and the prophets did
write."
"Who is He?" Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph." But Nathanael has
his doubts. He is a cautious man. He does not expect the Messiah to
come in this casual way. He answers in the contemptuous proverb of the
day, "Can any good thing come out of Nazareth? "
Philip will not argue with him. "Come out and meet him yourself." So
Nathanael came out. And he met Jesus on the road. And I do not think
any man of honest and good heart could ever meet Jesus without being
immediately attracted to Him. Jesus, too, was attracted by him. "Behold
an Israelite," He says, "in whom is no guile!"
"How do you know me?" asks Nathanael. "I know all about you. Before
Philip called you, when you were sitting under the fig-tree, I saw
you." Probably they talked further. At any rate Nathanael was
immnediately won to Him. "Rabbi, thou art the Son of "God. Thou art the
King of Israel! "
V - "Touch the Next Man."
So Jesus has already won four friends who were
devotedly attached to Him. He was beginning that little band of men who
should go out with Him to win the world for the Kingdom of God. Name
these four for me? Is not that a very little beginning for so great a
purpose? But that was Jesus' way of beginning.
Do you remernber in his parables how He prophesies The Kingdom of God
is like a little grain of mustard seed, smallest of all seeds, which
shall one day grow to be a great tree with the fowls of the air lodging
in the branches thereof? Show me now how this parable has to do with
this small beginning? He has not yet called them to do anything
publicly--just made friends with them on the way. One day they should
stand in the great band of the Twelve Apostles.
So Jesus and his four young friends on that country road were to be the
beginning of great things. They would do anything for Him because they
already loved and admired Him and would do so more and more as they
knew Him better. That is the way He wants us all to work for Him. Begin
by getting to know Him. Read about Him in the gospels. Hear about Him
in church. And pray to Him to draw you nearer. " Pour into our hearts
such love toward thee that we may love thee above all things."
And when we begin to know and love Him we shall soon help others. Have
we any part now in building up this Kingdom of God on earth? How? Begin
with ourselves. Learn to love Him ourselves. Then what did Andrew do?
First findeth his own brother Simon and brought him to Jesus. That is
what Jesus wants of you. You can do it without preaching--perhaps
without much talking of religion. Just be loving and attractive
yourself. Then get a quiet talk to a careless comrade. Ask him to come
to church with you next Sunday. Get him attached to his church. And you
two by reading about Jesus and praying for His help will get to love
Him more, and you two will get others, and they will get others again.
And so the Kingdom will be growing. And the dear Lord, looking down,
will be pleased with you all.
Now we leave these four with Jesus in Cana. They (text missing)
Questions for Lesson IV
Who tells the story about these young disciples? When?
Name these first friends of the Lord. How did St. Peter come in?
What duty does this suggest to us?
Lesson V - THE WEDDING IN CANA OF
GALILEE
St. John II. 1-12.
The two main thoughts to be emphasised are (1) the delightful human
attractiveness of Jesus whose presence brought happiness wherever He
came, and (2) that we are living in a world of God's miracles and
wonders of which most of the Bible miracles are only little specimens.
I - A Wedding in the Family.
We are still keeping to St. John's story in which he fills some of the
gaps left in the earlier gospels. They do not seem to have known of
this wedding. At any rate, they do not tell it.
Now do you see anything to suggest that the bride might be a relative
of Jesus? The first thing I notice is that the mother of Jesus was very
prominent at this wedding. She seems in charge of the arrangements.
Evidently it was a wedding in the family. Either the bride or
bridegroom was a near relative of Jesus. Perhaps the bride's mother was
dead and Mary took her place. Do not you like to think of that little
bride with the myrtle wreath in her hair, glad and proud because Jesus
had come to her wedding? Probably she had known Him since childhood, as
her home was only four miles away. And now on this day of her woman's
joy she wanted her Cousin whom she admired and loved as a big elder
brother and who was already being known as a great Teacher sent from
God, she wanted Him to honour her wedding and see her happiness and
bless her. Therefore, "Jesus was invited and his disciples to the
marriage."
Now should you think that Jesus with all His great thoughts and
responsibilities and the destiny of the world resting on His shoulders
would spend time coming to a little country wedding? But He came. God
is interested in our little lives. Jesus loved to make people happy.
And I think He enjoyed coming. There was a wonderful human
attractiveness in Jesus. He loved coming and the people loved to have
Him come. If we were there I think we should d it too. Maybe if we
studied the story of His life and got to know Him as these people did
we could learn to love Him now, too, as those four young disciples did.
II - Was Jesus of a Sad Countenance?
I think Jesus made happiness at that wedding and made happiness
wherever He came. I think it is a great pity that the pictures of Him
so often are of a sad countenance. I suppose it comes from Isaiah's
prophecy of "a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief." The great
painters have persistently repeated that in their pictures and so left
a wrong impression. True, "He has borne our griefs and carried our
sorrows" and was troubled about the sins of the world and died for them
at the last. But to feel for others and die for others does not destroy
the joy of a great soul. Self-sacrifice to such an one would be a joy
in itself. Ask the lad who on the battlefield faced death to bring in a
wounded comrade.
Jesus made happiness wherever He came because He was so happy Himself.
He laughed pleasantly at weddings. He loved meeting people. He is
always cheering up despondent people. Cheer up! He says, be of good
cheer. Of course He was happy. The happiest people in the world today
are the people who are doing most for others, the people who have
joyous ideas of God and perfect trust in God, people who know that they
must finally succeed, who know that death only means birth into a
fuller life and that evil is a thing which one day must vanish forever.
None of us could help being happy if we were like Him. Nay, Jesus was
not of a sad countenance. We know His personality was very attractive
and sad countenances are not very attractive. He did not like them.
"When ye fast," He says, " be not of a sad countenance."
III - Jesus Was God.
Now how does this thought bring us a happy gospel of God
for ourselves? Because Jesus was God. So you learn the kindly nature of
the Godhead. God likes weddings. God likes happiness. Watch Jesus at
this wedding-happy, human, natural, sympathising with the joy of young
lovers in their marriage--and say to yourself, that is God, that is how
God feels. God, of course, cares most of all for holiness and nobleness
of life, but God is not a sort of magnified clergyman interested only
in churches and prayers and sacraments and standing apart from us in
our lighter moments. He is interested in the birds and the flowers and
the lambs skipping in the field and the children singing in the
marketplace and the boys playing cricket and football and the mother's
thought for her baby and the shy young bride meeting her bride-groom.
God gave us music and art. God gave us humour and laughter. I think He
loves to see us merrily, innocently laughing. If God could only get us
to stop doing wrong we should have just a delightful world.
IV - About Miracles.
Now Jesus at this marriage performed the very first of His miracles.
What? Why did He do it? Explain.
I wonder if He had intended this. I do not think so. He seems to have
hesitated at first. He had to make a sudden decision. He had not yet
begun His public life. To begin miracles was a serious matter. But He
knew that His young friends would be shamed before their neigbbours for
failing in hospitality. A proud Galilean peasant family would feel it
deeply. In a moment His decision was made. A week ago He had refused to
tum stones into bread to relieve His own hunger. Now He would turn
water into wine to relieve the feelings of His humble friends. That is
God. That is what God is like.
This leads us to talk about miracles. Do you think it difficult for Our
Lord to turn water into wine? Why could He do it? Because He was God.
Did He ever do it before? Don't you think He is always doing it? Out in
California or Niagara or in the great vineyards of Central Europe what
happens every year? One day I was travelling through the Rhone valley
in Switzerland when I thought of this miracle of Cana. It was pouring
rain. The slopes of the valley were clothed with vines. The water was
falling heavily on the vineyards. And in two months more I knew the
vine-gatherers would come and find that water turned into wine. You
see? The Lord is always doing miracles much greater than those in the
Bible. We read that He once increased five barley loaves to feed five
thousand people. But He is always doing that. Out in the great prairies
of Canada and Western America the farmer puts down one bushel of wheat
upon the earth, as upon an altar of God, and then he can do no more. He
goes away and waits for God. And God lays His hand on that altar of
earth and whispers His message to that buried seed and He sends the
rain and the sun and the winds of Heaven. And, Io! in a few weeks
little living green shoots arise and when the farmer comes back at
harvest to look upon his field he finds fifty bushels of living wheat
where the one bushel was laid down!
You see God is always doing miracles. We are living in the midst of
miracles. The starry world above us at midnight. The fruits and the
flowers and the great yellow harvest to feed the world. God is always
doing wonders, and doing them for us. "Oh, that men would therefore
praise the Lord for His goodness and the wonders which He doeth for the
children of men!"
So the Lord Jesus only did on a very small scale at Cana one of the
miracles that He is always doing. And I think that little bride at Cana
was very grateful to Him.
Questions for Lesson V
Why do you think the bride at Cana was a relative of the Lord?
What awkward thing happened at the wedding? Why, do you think He did
it? Did He ever do it before?
Tell me of His making wine in Italy and multiplying grain on the
prairies.
Lesson VI - THE WRATH OF THE LAMB
St. John 11. 12-23.
I - Casting Out the Money-changers.
Soon after the wedding the Lord Jesus
went on to Capernaum with three of his young disciples who lived there
and were going home. (See Capernaum on map. I want you to take special
notice of it. For though He did not delay there now, it was afterwards
His home for more than a year, "His own city," the centre for His
Galilean ministry and the scene of the most familiar stories in the
gospels.) Thence He went on to Jerusalem to the Passover Feast as He
had probably done every year since that first Passover of His boyhood.
A remarkable thing happened at this Passover. The cleansing of the
Temple. Our Lord had great reverence for the Temple. It was the centre
of the national worship, the visible symbol of the Father's presence.
He was very jealous for its honour. And its honour was being degraded
by the covetous dealings of the High Priest and his friends. The
beautiful outer court was turned into a noisome cattle market to make
money for them. The shouts of the market, the din of the moneychangers,
the bleating of sheep and the lowing of oxen disturbed even the
devotions of the people in church. They had to have sheep and oxen for
the sacrifices, but this was not the place for them and the priests had
no business to be grasping cattle dealers. Many of the people were
disgusted and angry, but they were afraid of the priests and dared not
speak out. No reformer arose with courage to put an end to this.
Now St. John, the young fisherman, was up that week, and long
afterwards, in his old age, he remembers and tells the story. This is
the picture in his memory: The city is densely crowded. Hour after hour
the Temple is filled and emptied. New worshippers continually moving
toward the entrance. But the cattle are trampling and soiling the court
and the bargainers are shouting and disturbing the worship. No one has
the courage to complain. Suddenly there is a commotion at the gate and
all eyes are turned to see the young prophet from Galilee coming in.
Already He is being talked about a good deal in the city. He startles
them by His entrance. Not the meek and lowly Jesus of our pictures, nor
the friendly Jesus of the Cana wedding. Here is a stern, masterful man
striding in in imperious anger through the court like a master coming
to chastise misbehaving servants. Sternly He rebukes the rulers of the
Temple. "Take these things hence. Make not my Father's house a house of
merchandise!" The priests are astonished and enraged. No one has ever
dared to beard them like this. They remonstrate, but He is too angry to
listen. "Take these things hence. It is written, My house shall be
called a house of prayer, but ye have made it a den of thieves! "
Surely it made a sensation in Jerusalem. Every one was talking of it. H
ow do you think the people felt? Yes. Startled and half frightened at
the daring attack, but surely in their hearts pleased and proud that
somebody had dared where they themselves were afraid. And what do you
think the priests would feet? Aye. Hatred. The beginning of that long
fierce dislike that ultimately brought the Lord to Calvary.
THE WRATH OF THE LAMB
II - Times When Jesus Was Angry.
Now here is surely a valuable lesson about anger. Is anger usually a
good thing? Is it ever? Do you like or dislike the anger of Our Lord?
Why? Because it was righteous, unselfish anger, anger for sake of
others, for sake of God and religion. Anger in such a case is surely
right. We should think less of a man who was not angry then.
I think there is danger of misunderstanding in the usual pictures of
Our Lord with gentle loving face and the usual teaching about His
meekness and love. How? Don't you see. They make a false one-sided
picture that does not always appeal to us. We feel that love with no
capacity for hatred and anger seems a weak, colourless thing. We feel
that in a strong man's life there are times for stern anger that makes
men afraid. And we are right. For Jesus who alone exhibited perfect
manhood was again and again angry. Tell me some times when He was
angry? When a set of narrow bigots with their petty little rules tried
to keep Him from healing a suffering man on the Sabbath. "He looked
round on them with anger" (Mark iii. 5). He is angry at the thought of
one seducing one of His little ones to sin. "It were better that a
millstone were tied around his neck and that he were drowned " (Matt.
xviii. 6). He was awfully angry at the tyranny and hypocrisy of priests
that kept men back from God. "Woe unto you Scribes and Pharisees, ye
hypocrites, ye blind guides, ye whited sepulchres! Ye serpents, ye
generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of bell!" That is
the loving, lowly Jesus when His anger is stirred.
III - How His Anger Differs from Ours.
Now from the anger of Jesus learn what anger should be in a good man's
life. Much of our anger is weakness, not strength, peevishness,
ill-temper, passion that we are too weak to control. And much of our
anger is selfish because some one has hurt ourselves. And much of it is
bitter and unforgiving. Now learn three things about Our Lord's anger.
(1) He was never angry at things done to Himself. Men might reject Him,
despise Him, mock Him, spit on Him, nail Him in bitter agony to a
cross. What did He say? "Father, forgive them, they don't know what
they are doing." But let men pollute the house of God, or oppress the
weak, or seduce a young girl into ruin and sin, then His anger would be
fierce. No personal resentment. If a man smite Him on the cheek He
would turn the other. And He bids you do the same-if it be your own
cheek. But if it be the cheek of some poor helpless one that is a very
different matter.
(2) His anger is but the other side of His love. Because He loved the
oppressed, He hated the oppressor. Because He loved the ruined girl, He
would crush the seducer. Because He loved to see the people drawing
near to God, His wrath fell on the hypocrites who were keeping them
back.
(3) But especially learn this. That His wrath is always trembling on
the brink of forgiveness. His anger is against wilful, deliberate,
obstinate sin; against the hypocrite, the unloving, the obstinately
unrepentant. But the first sign of sorrow would touch him into
tenderness. To the tyrant and the hypocrite He speaks stern
de--nunciation. To the sorrowful poor sinner at the first sign of
penitence He tells stories like the Lost Sheep and the Prodigal Son.
Right anger is Divine. Wrong anger is hateful. We may be as angry as we
like if we are angry like Jesus.
Questions for Lesson VI
What took Jesus to Jerusalem at this time?
Explain what the wrong was which made Him angry. Why did not the people
stop this wrong?
How does human anger differ from that of Jesus?
Now tell me carefully the three things that made His anger a fine
thing.
Lesson VII - HOW JESUS CAME TO GALILEE
St. John III. 22-30, IV. 1-4.
The pupil
should have some idea of the sequence of events in Our Lord's life so
far as we can get it. Impress on him that the two prominent periods are
(i) The public ministry in Galilee, which lasted perhaps a year and a
half to two years, and then (2) His going up to Jerusalem to die. We
are now approaching the beginning of Galilean period. Notice this is
the period which the three first Evangelists are mainly concerned with.
All our lessons up to this are a sort of preface to this period. The
Evangelists point back to these earlier days. They start out from them.
But their main story begins here. And they indicate this by a bold
landmark. "Now when John was delivered up Jesus came to Galilee
preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom of God." (See Matt. iv. 12; Mark i.
14; Luke iv. 14, 31.) The teacher should get this clearly in his own
mind and let pupil see that a crisis in Our Lord's life is now
approaching. This lesson is to lead us into Galilee to the beginning of
this public ministry.
I - A Summer Tour in the Country.
Last lesson left our Lord where? How long
He stayed after Passover we do not know. Probably not long. The
position in Jerusalem was difficult. The authorities were against Him.
So He retired into the country with His disciples. And there for about
six or eight months it would seem He moved about amongst the farmers
and village people. I sometimes think that perhaps He was deciding
whether He would begin in Judea or in Galilee. At any rate we think of
Him and his young comrades having a pleasant summer time in the
country, tramping the country roads enjoying the brown hills and the
sound of running streams, talking to the children, greeting passersby
on the road. They would meet perhaps a blind man or leper begging and
heal him. The villagers would gather around in the evening and Jesus
would tell them His delightful parable stories lifting up their whole
thoughts of life and of God's love. And I think they could not help
loving Him and wishing to be like Him.
II - John the Baptist Again.
As we follow Him, suddenly, unexpectedly, we find ourselves in the
neighbourhood of John the Baptist, still preaching and baptising. We
thought his mission was over when he had baptised the Lord and pointed
Him out as "The Lamb of God who taketh away the sins of the world."
Well, it is soon going to be over, for King Herod and the Queen are
angry with him and prison doors will soon open for him. Already his
mission seems ending. No crowds now, no excitement about him. A few
months ago he was at the height of popularity until he paused and
pointed to One greater than himself. Gradually the crowds deserted him
as the fame of Jesus increased. And John's disciples were vexed and
jealous that their brave, silent master was being deserted. They can
keep silent no longer. "Master, He to whom you bore witness beyond
Jordan all men are following Him."
Now tell me John's beautiful answer, showing his big, unselfish heart?
(v. 28,29,30). "It is all right," he says. "My day is over and I am
satisfied, for remember what I told you, that I am nobody-only the
messenger before the Christ. I am the humble friend of the Bridegroom
rejoicing in His success. He must increase. I must decrease, this my
joy therefore is fulfilled."
That is the last public word of his that is recorded. What do you think
of it? A month later he was lying in the black dungeon of Machaerus
facing death. Herod and the wicked Queen have got him at last.
III - When Galilean Ministry Began.
There he lay, eating out his brave heart, till that horrible night when
they cut off his head in the prison. But that story comes later on. Now
I want you to see that just at this time comes a new crisis in the life
of Our Lord. He is going out into the open to preach His Kingdom of
God, to begin His public ministry in Galilee. (Read Matt. iv. 12; Mark
i. 14; Luke iv. 14-31.) "When John was delivered up Jesus went north to
Galilee preaching the Kingdom of God."
So we see him and his young disciples leaving their summer tour and
striking northward to Galilee (see map). I think when they reached the
Galilean border at the cross-roads He bade good-bye to His companions.
They had to go eastward, home to their fishing on the Lake of Galilee.
He was going westward, perhaps home to Nazareth. But He probably told
them that He was coming after them soon. And they waited. The waiting
was good for them. I picture them daily at their fishing looking for
His coming, talking and thinking of Him and learning to love Him more
and miss His presence and so growing more fitted for their future with
Him.
IV - The Nobleman's Son.
And Jesus went away probably by Himself. We do not know what wonderful
things may have happened on that journey. There was no one to tell. You
know there is a great deal of His life left unrecorded. Don't you wish
we knew it all?
St. John has just one little story of this time. Jesus had come to
Cana-probably stayed with--whom do you think? What two people did He
know there? One day while in Cana with Nathanael and the little bride a
hurried message came. A nobleman or.courtier of Herod had his little
boy dying twenty miles away in Capernaum. He had ridden post-haste to
Cana. " O Sir, come down ere my child die!" Jesus could not resist
that. "Go thy way, thy son liveth." Next morning as his reeking horses
were approaching Capernaum he met the joyful messenger from his wife. "
Tell me," he asks, " when did he begin to recover?" "Yesterday, sir, at
the seventh hour the fever left him." And the officer knew that at that
very hour Jesus had said, "Thy son liveth." And he believed and all his
house.
V - How Jesus Came to His New Home.
So Jesus had made another friend in Capernaum where he was going to
live; where his young disciples were awaiting Him. Soon that family had
a chance of thanking Him in person. For some days later Jesus is
walking down the Lake road as it leaves Cana. An opening in the hills
shows Him the Lake lying below and Chorazin and Bethsaida and Capernaum
clustered on its western shore. Probably some of His young fisher
friends came to meet Him on the road and I can imagine the Capernaum
people staring and gathering in groups as they watched their neighbours
coming with the stranger Rabbi. And there is a tax-gatherer named
Matthew, whom we shall hear of again perhaps, watching them from his
office by the road. At any rate long afterwards he saw the importance
of this coming. I want you to see how enthusiastically he wrote of it
in his book. Read for me St. Matt. iv. 15, 16 telling of the great day
when Jesus came to Galilee.
Questions for Lesson VII
This lesson begins an important new period in Our Lord's life. Explain.
What are the two great divisions of His life story? Tell me about that
pleasant summer tour in the country.
What stopped it?
Tell story of nobleman's son.
Make a word picture of the day when Jesus came to Capernaum.
II - THE GALILEAN MINISTRY
Emphasise here that we have come to a new period in our Lord's
life--the
Galilean ministry--a period of one to two years. Teach the Life in
orderly sequence of events as they happened. So many people have in
their minds just the disconnected happenings and teachings all mixed
up. Our Lord's public life divides into two main parts: (1) "In the
Highlands of Galilee " which occupies this whole volume, (II) "The Road
to Jerusalem" which occupies next volume. Get pupils to have a clear
connected view of the whole life in order.
Lesson VIII - THE CALL OF THE FOUR
FISHERMEN
St. Mark 1. 14-21.
I - Capemaum.
Where did we leave Jesus in last lesson? Just arrived in Capernaum. In
which province of Palestine? Yes, Galilee (see map). Galilee was north,
Judea was south. Pretty much like Scotland and England in old days.
North was the highland province, like Scotland with its mountains and
rivers and its brave highland people fighting for freedom. South was
Judea, where, in the capital, Jerusalem, was a more civilised people
but a more cowardly people submitting easily to the yoke of the Roman
Empire. They rather looked down on the rough country folk of the North.
But the brave men of the North rather looked down on them. There was
jealousy and ill feeling between them.
Now see the map in this book and find Capernaum. It is important in
Jesus' life.
Name the four towns where lie lived? Bethlehem, where He was born;
Nazareth, where He was reared up; Jerusalem, where He died, and
Capernaum, the centre of His Galilean ministry, "His own city" it is
called, the scene of the most familiar stories in the gospels.
Look at the Lake of Galilee where so many things happened and then
place Capernaum. Looking up from a boat on the Lake you would see on
the hill the Roman castle which the people hated as the stronghold of
their oppressors. But the centurion or captain there was a friendly
man. "He loveth our nation and hath built us our synagogue." The rich
people living on the hill. Down near the shore the shops and the
fishermen and a crowd of boats with tough brown sails lying in the
little harbour and outside. And the great white Roman roads ran near
Capernaurn. The Romans built them and took taxes to pay for them as
travellers passed, and beside the town, just where it touches the Lake
on one of these roads, was the Roman custom-house, where one Matthew,
whom we know, sat at the receipt of custom.
Down near the strand is Simon Peter's house where he lives with his
family and his wife's mother and his young brother, Andrew. This house
is very important to us for in one of its rooms Jesus lodged whenever
He was in Capernaum.
Now get Capernaum clearly in your mind and then read the well-known
verse expressing Jesus' disappointment when He was going away from it
later on. "Woe unto thee, Chorazin! Woe unto thee, Bethsaida! And thou,
Capernaum, exalted up to Heaven shall be cast down," &c. (Matt. xi.
21).
II - The Call of the Four.
Now you have some notion of His Galilean home when Jesus came to
Capernaurn. Here lived four young fishermen whom we have met before.
You remember (Lesson IV). Tell me of their first meeting with Jesus.
He was going to preach in Capernaum on the Sabbath. But I think that
the week before He was going about with His young fisher friends. One
night they had gone out fishing, a bad, stormy night, no fish to be
got. Next morning Jesus out early on strand. He saw what? Torn nets,
boats dirty, full of sand and the fishermen gone out of them mending
their nets. Did He care for their disappointment? What did He bid them
do? I suppose they did not see much good in trying again, but it was
enough that He had said it. Now what happened? Nets bursting with
multitude of fishes! What did Peter feel? Astonished--knew it was a
miracle. They were amazed. They would be more amazed still some day.
For as yet they had not begun to learn the greater miracle that He who
had just filled their nets by the magic of His word was He who created
the fishes of the sea and whatsoever walketh in the paths of the sea.
It took some time before they learned that Jesus was God.
"Depart from me for I am a sinful man, 0 Lord I" Did he wish Jesus to
go? No, but his own unworthiness oppresses him; he feels unfit to be
with Him. Now tell me the Lord's reply. "Don't be afraid, from
henceforth thou shalt catch men." Meaning of this? Yes. That was what
the Lord was out for. Catching men and women and children into his
lovely Kingdom of God to make them holy and happy and helpful to the
world and then at death to move them to a higher Kingdom.
The Lord was on the lookout for helpers in His mission. He did not
choose rabbis or rich or learned men. We do not know why. Somehow He
saw in these young fishers the sort of men He wanted. And He was
hinting here that He would call them away to be with Him and help Him
to found His Kingdom. But this was no fit moment to say all this. The
boats had to be cleaned. The great haul of fish had to be packed in
boxes for the fish dealers in Tiberius and Jerusalem. So it was later,
when the work was done, that Jesus said to Simon and Andrew, his
brother, "Come ye after me and I will make you to become fishers of
men." Then He said the same at the other boat to James and John who
were with old Zebedee, their father, mending the nets.
Now they are not to be mere friends or disciples any longer. They are
to go out as comrades and helpers in His great work. You might call
this the beginning of the Christian church. Think how small-just five
men walking up the strand in an obscure fishing village. But look at
that church now spreading through the world. How is it like parable of
the little seed growing into a great tree?
Don't forget that that Kingdom of God is still built and every one of
you is expected to help. How to begin? With yourself first. Get near to
your Lord. Then do things to help. Get a comrade who does not go to
church or try to help some one going wrong. Jesus will call that
building His Kingdom.
Questions for Lesson VIII
Describe and compare Galilee and Judea.
Try to picture Capernaum as Jesus knew it.
Tell of fishers' disappointment and the miracle. How much did this Call
of the Four mean? Anything like it in our lives?
What four towns were prominent in life of Our Lord.
Lesson IX - THE FIRST SABBATH IN
CAPERNAUM
Read St. Mark 1. 21 to end.
I - Going to Church in Capernaum.
Now comes a picture how the Lord spent His Sabbaths. I think this was
His first Sabbath in Capernaum, His first appearance in church, His
first public declaration in Galilee about His Kingdom of God.
Try to make the picture in your minds. Nine o'clock in the morning
usual hour of service. There are the little crowds of village people on
every path that led to the Centurion's new white synagogue on the hill.
Rather like any country town today, except in the bright-coloured dress
of the people. The farmers and fisherfolk coming with their families.
Old Zebedee is there, awkward in his Sabbath clothes, with his wife and
his big sons, James and John. Andrew is walking with Peter and I think
the Master is with them. And Jairus, the ruler of the synagogue from
the upper town, and "the nobleman whose son was sick in Capernaum." You
remember? (Lesson VII.) And surely with him the mother of that child to
see and hear Him who had saved her boy. Streets crowded, bright with
colour. Synagogue will be crowded. For they know the Stranger is sure
to be in church and they expect the ruler of synagogue will ask Him to
preach.
II - The Sermon.
Now they are in church. Scholars know the usual prayers of the
synagogue. The First Prayer is said. The Second Prayer. The Jewish
creed. The six Benedictions. Then comes "the reading of the Church
lessons." Here I see the Minister approaching the painted Ark and take
out The Roll of the Law and The Roll of the Prophets. Then he looks at
the Visitor in Peter's seat. "Sir, if you have any word of exhortation
for the people, say on."
So Jesus rises in that crowded church. He begins by reading the Lesson
from the Scriptures. Then He preached. I wish we had that sermon.
Surely about the tender fatherhood of God and His love for the people.
And about the Kingdom of God which He was founding on earth. We only
know that the people were deeply interested and astonished "that He
taught as one having authority, not as the Scribes."
III - The Lunatic.
But He never got that sermon finished. What happened? Wild disturbance
in church, the women frightened, the people springing to their feet. A
lunatic, a demoniac, a man with an evil spirit controlling his poor
clouded brain. The excitement of the church and the preaching was too
much for him. "Ea! Ea! what have we to do with thee, Jesus of Nazareth.
I know thee, the Holy Son of God."
We do not quite understand. It suggests that evil spirits, as well as
good, are around us. That an evil spirit had got hold of this poor
creature and spoke through him. I do not know enough to explain. It is
all puzzling. The calm, pitying eyes of Jesus are upon the poor madman.
Then came His word of stern authority: " Hold thy peace! Come out of
him! " And in a moment the poor man was healed. And the astonished
people talked excitedly as they came home from church, saying--What did
they say? (v. 27).
IV - Peter's Wife's Mother.
But the Sabbath was not over yet. After service Jesus is going home to
Peter's house and some others are invited to the "Sunday dinner." Who?
(v. 29). Was Sunday dinner ready? What was wrong? I think Peter's
wife's mother was the housekeeper. The "Great Fever," the scourge of
that low lakeside, had stricken her and the whole house was upset. What
did the Lord do? So those who had just come astonished from church were
still more astonished. And two sufferers that day were happier for
Jesus being there. Remember how Jesus' whole life was spent in making
people happier and better.
V - "At Even Ere the Sun Was Set."
And still the day is not over. Cannot you imagine the excitement of
that little town, all day talking of the demoniac man and of the other
miracle. And the hope in some of their hearts because Jesus was there
and because they had many others sick and suffering. But they had to
keep quiet at home until sunset which was the end of the Sabbath. Rules
were very strict about this. But as evening came the people in Peter's
house could hear hurried footsteps and eager talking and the sounds of
a gathering crowd and when they looked out they saw--what? "The whole
town gathered together at the door." All over the strand, down to the
waterside among the boats and the brown fishing nets drying on the
shore were sick people on their mats and mothers with pining babies and
a father leading his blind boy and affectionate poor people of all
sorts longing to get their friends cured.
And Jesus looking from the door. Did He care? What sort ot persons care
most for others' troubles? The kindest people surely. They actually
suffer in their sympathy. And surely Jesus would suffer much more. For
Jesus is God. And nobody cares so deeply as God. All through the
gospels that lesson is emphasised, the tender human sympathy of Jesus
for individual suffering people. Is not it nice to think of it when you
are suffering or sick? Here is a lovely precept for your life
"Kindness in another's trouble, Courage in your own."
That is what the Life of Jesus teaches.
But there is more than that. We are taught that He healed people at the
cost of strain and loss to Himself. He was never sick so far as we
know. His body was stored with perfect vigour and health. And of this
He gave. "Somebody has touched me," He said, when a woman
surreptitiously touched Him and was healed. "Somebody has touched me
for I perceive that strength has gone out from me." That means that by
giving of His own strength and health He gave strength and health to
others. So St. Matthew in telling this same story gives a beautiful new
meaning to the prophecy of Isaiah. "He hath borne our griefs and
carried our sorrows." St. Matthew puts it thus: "He took our
infirmities and bore our sickness." I think he meant that He took them
on Himself and at His own cost healed them.
All that is exhausting. So the Lord must have been very tired as he lay
down to sleep in Peter's room with the pleasant feeling that He had
left so many happier and better. But He had a deeper need than bodily
rest. So, "a great while before day," Peter hears him stealing out of
the house to pray. He never could do without that, keeping in close
communion with the Father. And He is very earnest in telling us to do
the same. We should all be so much happier and better by keeping daily
in touch with God.
Questions for Lesson IX
Picture the people going to church that morning.
What was their church service like?
What struck the people about the sermon? Tell of the interruption.
What happened "at evening ere the sun was set "? Why did they delay
till evening?
Did the Lord sleep late next morning? Why?
Lesson X - REJECTED IN HIS HOME TOWN
Read St. Luke IV. 16-31; Mark VI. 1-7.
I place this incident here as the most likely place. Some writers
differ. Some think it was before He came to Capernaum. And St. Luke
seems to agree with them. But the other evangelists do not. And Jesus'
own words at Nazareth seem to settle the question, "Ye will say to me,
Whatsoever things we have heard of in Capernaum do also here."
I - Back Home.
When Peter found the Lord that morning in prayer on the
hillside we read that the Lord planned to go out on a tour of teaching
in the villages. I place this visit to Nazareth in this tour though
there are differences of opinion about it. The story is told as a
separate incident without any mark of time. But it is hard to place it
anywhere else. It cannot have been before He came to Capernatim. Why?
(see v. 23).
So one evening in his wanderings He came to His old home to "Nazareth
where He had been brought up." How interesting to go back to the old
home town; the village street where He had played with the other
children; the old rabbi's school; the well whence He had carried water
for His mother and His carpenter's shop, now closed, and the old
farmers He had worked for and the old friends who had been kind to Him
and the fields and hills where He had roamed thinking out His great
thoughts. And, above all, His mother, if she was still there in the
little house by the carpenter's shop. I suppose old friends came to
visit Him, who was now becoming famous, and acquaintances greeted Him
respectfully in the street.
II - In the Nazareth Synagogue.
But we are chiefly interested now in His
going to church on the Sabbath and what happened there. Just as in the
Capernaum synagogue in last lesson we see the crowded church, the
people so conscious of their Visitor, the ruler of the synagogue
inviting Him to read the I-esson for the Day and preach. What a
glorious lesson He had to read, what Isaiah had said long ago about the
coming Messiah. Read it again. "The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,"
&c. (v. 17-20). Then He sat down to preach. Very short sermon. But
surely very startling. Repeat it. "This day is this Scripture fulfilled
in your ears!" Of course He said much more, but that was the subject.
Perhaps as on a later day (Luke xxiv. 27) He interpreted to them in all
the Scriptures the things concerning Himself. At any rate it was the
most startling, exciting sermon ever heard in Nazareth. For it was a
distinct assertion that He was the Messiah whom Israel had dreamed of
through the centuries and a proclaiming of the sweet sympathy and
graciousness of His Messianic mission. There were troubled people there
and sinful and sorrowing people and people who had friends sick and
suffering. How delightful, if it were true, to believe in this lovely
message from God. Touched and impressed for the moment they wondered at
the gracious words which proceeded out of His mouth.
But they could not believe it. It was too good to be true. Many feel
like that today about God's tender fatherhood and His love and care and
forgiveness. Too good to be true. Is that so? No. Nothing is too good
to be true if it is told of God. For no one loves as God loves and when
we get to Heaven we shall find that our wildest dreams of His goodness
are far away below the truth.
They doubted. And then nasty, snobbish feelings arose in some of them
because the preacher who claimed to be the Messiah was one of their old
villagers, one of their old s, a common man like themselves or lower.
Why some of them had hired Him to make chairs and cattle yokes a few
years ago. Listen to them. "Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary?
Are not His sisters with us plain people like ourselves." And they were
offended at Him.
It was an awful pity. But it was quite natural. Just what would happen
in any country town today. So we must not blame them too much for that.
I do not think Jesus did. Jesus was very reasonable, even with people's
faults and weaknesses. He almost made an excuse for them. "A prophet
has no honour in his own country," He said. Is not it lovely to think
of Jesus understanding and making excuses for us, trying to make the
best of us and see the best in us. He always did that. You remember His
dying prayer on the Cross for the mocking multitude. "Father, forgive
them, they are all excited now, they do not know what they are doing."
But still it was very wicked of them. For it was Jesus, so winsome and
attractive and loving, who had preached to them, and I think true
hearts could not help being attracted and loving Him. And they went
beyond doubting. They got in a rage with Him. They seized Him and
turned Him out of the church and wanted to throw him off the precipice
outside. No good people would do that, especially to one like Him.
So He had to go away saddened and disappointed, cut to the heart by His
old friends and comrades just as He is often saddened and disappointed
by us. But He is too noble to resent or bear grudges. He has no
illusions as to the sort of people we are. Spite of it all He wants to
bless us if we do not prevent Him, if we do not throw away our
opportunity. Nazareth threw away its opportunity. Jesus had to go from
them. And so far as we know Nazareth never saw Him again.
Do any of us behave like that toward Him now? These people rejected Him
because they were "used to Him," familiar with Him as one of themselves
in the past years and therefore thought less of Him. Now that despised
carpenter is known as the Son of God come down to earth--but His gospel
is so farniliar--we have got so "used to it" that we pay less attention
to it. And so this touching message of God's tenderness and care, of
the Christ dying for us on the Cross and planning His splendid
adventure for us here and hereafter, is taken lightly and neglected and
our dear Lord has to look down saddened and disappointed as in those
far-off days in Nazareth. Can't we think it over for ourselves and pray
for grace not to disappoint Him as they did?
III - Because He Was God.
One thing more. If you were in the Nazareth synagogue that day could
you imagine anything more hopeless than that that young carpenter cast
out by his people should go out to revolutionise the whole world--that
He should be worshipped all over the earth today as God! That after two
thousand years of men studying and testing and examining His life, He
should be increasingly prayed to and adored. That the few words which
He spake and the story of a few months of His life should be the
greatest uplifting power that the world hits ever known. That when they
had crucified Him he should rise from the dead and bid men follow Him
here in their life on earth and then follow Him into the great
adventure of the Hereafter. How could such impossible things happen?
What do you think. There is only one answer: BECAUSE HE WAS GOD.
Questions for Lesson X
Jesus went on a preaching tour. Why go to Nazareth? Tell me the picture
in your minds of His homecoming.
What is a synagogue?
Repeat the grand text of His sermon.
Why did the sermon startle them?
What else irritated them?
What in this story makes one feel that JESUS WAS GOD?
Lesson XI - THE MAN WHO CAME THROUGH
THE ROOF
Read St. Mark 11. 1-13.
I - "Thy Sins Be Forgiven Thee!"
We do not know any more about His tour through the villages. Only that
after it He returned to Capernaum and it was noised abroad that "He was
home " (v. 1, R.V. margin). You see, Capernaum is now regarded as
home."
So the crowds began to gather again. Crowds following. Diseased and
deformed people brought to be healed. I am afraid they cared more for
that than about hearing His gospel. This would disappoint Him, but He
was very good to them and healed their sick.
Now I am thinking of a poor, lonely, paralysed man in his bed. I
suspect he had brought the sickness on him through an evil life. And he
was miserable about it all. Now a few old comrades rush into his room.
"Jesus is home! He has cured worse cases than yours. He is most kindly
when men are most miserable. Come on. Let us carry you. Who knows what
may happen!" So these good fellows carry him off down the street,
across the strand, to the house where Jesus was teaching. I think He
was on verandah of house, preaching to crowd down in courtyard.
Disappointment waited these men. What? Crowds, crowds. They could not
bring their friend even near the door. But they would not be put off. A
bright thought occurred to them. What? "We cannot get near this house
at all. Let us climb up on the roof next door. Then we can climb over
the little parapet on to this roof; and then what?" Capital idea! Not
the first time that fisherman had used his wits to get out of an
awkward place!
Now look inside. Crowd in the courtyard. Jesus on verandah, seated.
Suddenly noise above; light shining in; trap-door removed; tiles
stripped off. And in a moment four brown sailor faces, smiling with
delight at their clever idea; four cords tied in sailors' knots at
corners of the mattress, and down, swinging through the roof, comes the
poor frightened paralytic, down to the very feet of the Lord. I can
imagine His good-natured smile at the kindly trick. He loved to see
people trusting Him, and to see them determined not to be put off.
Could He see into these men's hearts? (v. 2). Saw the love and the
unselfishness, but, above all, the faith--i.e., the trust in Him. He
delights in being trusted.
But now see the man on ground looking up with dawning hope. What does
he expect to hear Christ say? "Be healed." Does He say it? What does He
say? (v. 5). Does not it seem strange to you? Do you think it
disappointed the man? Not altogether, I think. Christ read his heart,
as well as his friends' hearts. What did He read there? His illness
probably result of his own sin; and, I think, in his lonely
helplessness and depression he had become sorrowful and penitent. Is
this only a guess of mine? How do I know it? Because I know Jesus would
not have offered that precious gift of pardon to one careless and
impenitent. He read the man's heart. And there is a great lesson here.
He gave what He knew to be the greatest gift, the greatest need for
man. We think sickness and pain the worst things. God says no--sin is
the worst. To be pardoned and made holy is God's highest gift. And this
poor man, I think, had begun dimly to see this.
But story not over yet. There were other hearts that He could read? (v.
3). Did they speak out their suspicions? But He knew them. These are
the bigoted, uncharitable people who are always looking for faults.
They were not touched by the pity on Christ's face, nor the trembling
hope of the poor paralytic. The beauty of high character and the
sorrows of troubled hearts are not nearly as prominent to this class of
men as some fault that they can find out. And so, instead of thinking
"He is kind and loving," they only think "He is blaspheming." (Read
Mark ii. 7.) But were they not right about power of forgiving sins?
Yes, though their feelings were uncharitable. None but God can forgive.
Did Jesus then apologise for His words? Not a bit of it. He accepts
their challenge at once. True, none else but God has power to forgive.
"But I, the Son of Man, have power." Therefore, what follows? Tell me
proof He gave them. And the man took up his bed--i.e., mat or mattress.
I hope you did not think it a big four-post bedstead! What impression
made on the people?
II - Lessons of the Story.
Now what do you think we can learn from this
story? Think it out yourselves.
(1) The tender kindliness of Jesus smiling with amused pleasure at the
friendship and the clever trick of these good fellows and then giving
His whole attention to that poor man as if no one else in the world
wanted Him. I like to think of Jesus being amused. God made smiles and
laughter and I am sure there are smiles and laughter and humour in
heaven. And we believe Jesus gives each of us as close attention when
we come as if no one else existed.
(2) Jesus dealt with the man's soul first. We would think the first
thing was to heal his body. But Jesus knew his misery and remorse for
his sin. And in any case He thought it more important to touch His soul
by teaching God's love and the forgiveness of sin. We say, It is a
blessed thing to bring happiness and comfort. Yes, says Jesus, but it
is a more blessed thing to bring them God. We say, It is a great thing
to build good healthy houses in the slums. Yes, says Jesus, but it is
still greater to build noble souls to live in them.
(3) His anger at the bitterness and unloving hearts of the Pharisees
who were vexed. To Him the greatest sin is the sin of an unloving
heart.
Questions for Lesson XI
Tell briefly of man coming through the roof. Two things were troubling
him.
Which did Jesus deal with first? How? And why?
Who objected and why?
Now did He answer them?
What is the worst sin in His sight?
Lesson XII - ST. MATTHEW AND HIS
BANQUET
Read Matt. IX. 9-14; Mark 11. 14-22;
Luke V. 24-39.
I - The Call of St. Matthew.
One day we are told "Jesus was teaching by the shore and as He returned
He saw Levi, the son of Alphaeus, sitting at the receipt of custom and
He said unto Him, Follow Me, and he arose and followed Him."
Rather a puzzling story. Why? (1) That Jesus should call a man of this
class to be one of His helpers. Publican means tax-collector. Of course
every government must collect taxes to carry on its work. We do not
much object to tax- collectors. But suppose we were conquered by
Germany or some other nation and felt the oppression sorely and that
some of our own people offered to go and collect the taxes from their
countrymen to help the oppressing nation. Would a good patriot Jew do
it? Only a lower type who would do anything for money. But worse than
this. The taxes were farmed out to the collector. He paid a large sum
to government for the taxes of a district and then wrung more out of
the people for his profit and used the power of the oppressing Roman
nation to force people to pay. Should we like these men? They were
rich, but despised and hated. No decent Jew would speak to them.
(2) But it looks also strange that Jesus should suddenly call any man,
especially one of this class and that such a man should promptly
respond. For Jesus was very particular about the men He chose as
Apostles and turned down several men who offered. There was that Scribe
who offered himself (Matt. viii. 19). "I will follow thee whithersoever
thou goest." One would think an honoured Scribe would be a valuable
helper. And the rich young man who went away sorrowful (Luke xviii.
23). Jesus, beholding him, loved him. But He put a severe test on him.
"Sell all that thou hast and give to the poor." So the rich young man
dropped out. The Lord certainly did not choose His Apostles lightly.
Why then 'this publican?' Can you guess the answer?
II - Preparation for the Call.
I am sure He did not call Matthew till he was fit to be called. There
must have been much previous between them. I notice that he is called
the son of Alphaeus. And three other Apostles were sons of Alphaeus,
probably the same man. If so, Matthew was their brother though they
would be ashamed to acknowledge him, and probably also a family
connection of Jesus. It is not unlikely that he knew Jesus in boyhood
and lost sight of Him when he disgraced his family by becoming a
publican, and that Jesus renewed the acquaintance when He found him in
the Capernaum custom house. Matthew could not help liking Him, the only
one of his connections who would speak to him at all. I think he was
always ashamed of his trade when Jesus came into his office. And the
more he saw of Jesus the more ashamed he grew and the more desirous to
win Jesus' approval. I imagine the soul of the man growing through the
silent influence of Jesus. Jesus used to preach on the shore near his
office and I think I can see him often listening on the outskirts of
the crowd and wishing to be better and perhaps sometimes telling Jesus
of his thoughts.
I am only guessing. But I am quite sure that something like this
happened, else Jesus would never have appointed him. So one day Jesus
came to the office and called him and Matthew, in his surprise and
delight, immediately "left all and followed Him." He was a penitent
man, ashamed of his old life. Probably because of him Jesus was called
by his enemies "a friend of publicans," and poor Matthew never forgot
it and humbly writes himself down in his own gospel as "Matthew the
publican" (Matt. x. 3). Now are you surprised at Jesus choosing him?
III - Eating with Publicans and Sinners.
Then Matthew did rather a brave thing. He gave a great farewell dinner
to the staff in his office and to all the publicans around to celebrate
this change in his life. Why was it brave? He was not ashamed to tell
his comrades that he was a converted man and that the holy Jesus meant
so much to him. They might sneer at this, but his religion made him
brave enough to risk it. And it did not make him feel too conceited and
superior to associate with his old comrades whom all others would be
ashamed of. Don't you think Matthew must have been rather a fine type
of man in spite of his ugly trade?
He had a large costly house, for "multitudes" came to his banquet (Luke
v. 29). Evidently he had riches and gave it all up to follow in poverty
a Master who had nothing and not even where to lay Hi§ head (Matt.
Vilii. 20). And I think he must have known the heart of Jesus well else
he would not have dared invite Him to dine with his despised comrades.
I am sure they had a pleasant dinner and felt proud of being there. And
I am sure Jesus did not despise them or treat them with patronising
condescension that might hurt. He treated every man respectfully. For
every man is of infinite value in the sight of God. And I am sure every
man at Matthew's feast that day felt himself a better man for having
been there with Jesus.
When you think of this, always remember that Jesus was God and all His
kindly relations with men reveal to us what the heart of God is like.
That is what draws us to Him. We do not know if any were definitely
converted at that dinner, but one likes to see in the after days how
often "the publicans and sinners drew near to Him to hear Him." And we
shalt bear later of another rich publican down at Jericho in the custom
house who probably heard all about this dinner and the attitude of
Jesus and climbed up into a tree to get a sight of Him who was kindly
and respectful even to publicans and sinners. Jesus did not make light
of their faults and sins. But He had the habit of always looking for
the good in men rather than the evil and by means of that little good
in them He would attract them to Himself. Why, do you think, are many
not attracted to Jesus? Just because they do not know Him. I think if
He were known as He really is and as those poor publicans knew Him, He
would draw all men unto Him.
IV - Why Jesus Liked Being with Them.
Of course the Scribes and Pharisees and respectable people were
fiercely angry. Next day they attacked the disciples. What did they
ask? "Why eateth your Master with publicans and sinners?" It seemed to
them a most shameful thing, degrading to Jesus. Why should He keep such
company? What did Jesus reply? (Matt. ix. 12). What did He mean? That
the physician likes to go to the people that want him most. These poor
despised sinners have no one to warn or comfort or help them. You
contented people don't want me. They are sick in their souls and they
often feel it. And then they need some one like me. And I like to be
with them. They are God's poor sinful children astray in the woods and
I want to show them the path home.
A year later as He went up to Jerusalem to die, a similar thing
happened as He passed through Jericho. There another rich publican
sought Him and gave a dinner in His honour and the Jericho people were
similarly angry with Him. And there, to explain the tender fatherhood
of God over such poor sinners, He told them the three loveliest stories
in the whole gospels. What were they? (Luke xv.).
Questions for Lesson XII
Explain Jewish contempt for publicans.
Two things seem strange in this call of St. Matthew. What would explain
them?
What offended the Pharisees?
Another publican later on with whom a similar thing happened. Who?
In this latter case He gives a beautiful answer.
Lesson XIII - THE BUSY STRENUOUS LIFE
OF JESUS
St. Mark IV and V. (These are too
long to read. Let the class keep Bible open as they
follow the lesson.)
Teacher say to class: Not quite satisfied with teaching up to this for
(1st) we haven't yet touched the central point of subject; the teaching
of the Kingdom of God which meant so much to Jesus and ought to have
been at the back of our thoughts all along--but we are not quite ready
for this yet.
And (2nd) we seem rather thinking of Jesus as dealing with separate
individual cases, not realising the vast crowds always about Him and
the busy, strenuous life which He lived. This we are now to deal with.
I - Multitudes.
Making pictures in our mind of Jesus in Galilee we must always keep the
multitudes around Him--crowds of simple, earnest people--listening,
liking, applauding. Evidently he was immensely popular. We read: "The
multitudes thronged Him." "All men are seeking Thee." "All the city was
gathered together at the door." "They cametoHimfromeveryquarter." "The
people hung on Him-- listening." "His mother and brethren could not
come at Him-for the crowds." Crowds, enthusiastic crowds, pressing on
Him all the time. "So many coming and going there was no leisure so
much as to eat." And these were not merely curious crowds but crowds
that were fond of Him.
And this not merely in the early Galilee days. Right to the end He was
the popular hero. The people championed Him. He was always safe when
they were about. When His enemies would seize Him "they feared the
people," they said. "Not on the Feast Day--lest there be an uproar of
the people." They had to get Judas to betray Him "in the absence of the
multitude. They had to arrest Him at night when the people were in bed.
And even if a little priest-ridden crowd yelled "Crucify Him " at His
trial, the big crowds at Calvary, "when they saw what was done, beat
their breasts and returned."
They couldn't help liking Him, He was so human, so friendly, so
pleasant, and He was one of themselves, a man of the people, who could
sympathise with them as no one else could. No man in those crowds was
poorer or had worked harder than He. And He had a genius for looking
for the best in men though He knew the worst. That always draws out the
best in men. Now remember that this was God in human form who so
attracted them. Maybe God would attract us all if we got to know Him as
they did.
II - A Specimen Day.
Now to find out about His strenuous life. Pick out one day as a
specimen. Keep Bibles open at St. Mark iv. and v. The time is a Spring
morning about March, A.D. 28. The scene opens (ch. iv. 1-10) with a
very great multitude pressing on Him so that He had to push off the
shore in His boat to teach them. He is telling the parable of The
Sower, and the three sorts of ground--the stony, the thorny, and the
good soil--the human hearts in which He Himself was sowing the seed of
the Kingdom. It was hard work teaching. They were stupid people. Not
even His close disciples understood at first. We shall discuss this
parable later on, we only mention it now.
Next we find Him "when He was alone," probably after the mid-day
dinner, expounding this parable to his disciples (vv. 10-20). St.
Matthew suggests another great crowd in the afternoon--probably that
was the time of the kindred parables of the lamp and the mustard-seed
and the grain growing secretly. Probably there were questions asked and
answered and miracles of healing as He moved amongst the people.
Evidently there was excitement in the air that day. We find men
crowding forward offering to be His helpers. A scribe said: "I will
follow Thee wherever Thou goest." Another said: "I will follow You when
my father has died." He tested and turned them down. They were not
sufficiently in earnest. So passed that long, hot afternoon.
III - Evening.
Now it was late evening and He was growing tired '(vv. 25-31).
There bad been a good deal of strain that day. He looked on the cool
waters of the lake. "Bring round the boat, He said, let us go to the
other side, so they took Him as He was into the boat and the disciples
followed with Him." Probably they didn't like the look of the sky as
they started but the Master wished it and He was tired. It was a long
sail of seven miles in the teeth of the wind. Lying in the
stern-sheets, very weary, He soon fell asleep, and as He slept the
spray was wetting Him and the storm was rising and clouds were
gathering black over the farther shore.
Soon a fierce storm broke and the strong fishing smack was tossing like
a paper boat and they had no time to run for shelter. They were in
serious peril. Never before had they to cry to a land's man as the boat
began to sink: "Lord, save us, we perish!" Already they were learning
to turn to Him in every trouble. They were learning their life lesson.
Then He awoke and rebuked the winds and said unto the sea: "Peace, be
still," and there was a great calm! and the men marvelled. "What manner
of man was this that even the winds and sea obeyed Him!"
IV - The Madman of Gadara.
That tempest during the night had driven the boat to the southern end
of the lake. The land of the half--heathen Gadarenes (ch. v. 1-20). In
the morning twilight they landed near the old cemetery, following their
Master with a solemn awe. Immediately a new fright is on them. Horrible
cries amongst the rocks and graves and a big murderous lunatic, stark
naked, clashing his broken chains, was charging down on them. They
recognise him at once as the "madman of Gadara," the terror of the
whole country side, a man with an unclean spirit,--who had his dwelling
in the tombs and no man could any more bind him, no not with chains,
because the chains had been rent asunder by him, and no man had any
strength to tame him. And always night and day in the tombs and in the
mountains he was crying out and cutting himself with stones."
Suddenly the furious creature stopped when he saw Jesus and threw
himself at his feet; perhaps some momentary glimpse of sanity drove him
there for protection. But it passed in a moment. Some evil spirit power
regained possession of his mind. "What have I to do with thee, Jesus,
Thou son of the Most High! I adjure Thee by God torment me not!"
Why do you think Jesus asked his name? To make him pull himself
together and to recollect himself. In vain. "My name is Legion for we
are many." The strong man armed was keeping his palace. But a stronger
than he had come on him and overcame him. "Come out of the man, thou
unclean spirit," and in a mooment the poor demented creature had come
to himself, become his own man again, standing in a sane world with a
brotherly hand upon his shoulder. Men had tried man's way of taming
him, Jesus had tried God's.
V - Back to Capemaum.
Now they are sailing back to Capernaum again; an excited crowd is
awaiting Him on the landing stage. There is a man pressing through the
crowd to find Him. A man who had been all night waiting. "Oh, Master,
my little daughter! She is at the point of death. But come and lay Thy
hand upon her and she shall live!" Jesus knew him, Jairus the ruler of
the synagogue, and probably knew the child. He started to go with him.
But something happened on the way which made them pause in spite of
Jairus' impatience? World very full of trouble. When you try to relieve
one case, you find many more. Poor woman had been ill since the very
year that Jairus' daughter was born. How do you know? Picture the scene
carefully, and point out--(I) That Jesus felt the power go out of him,
and therefore probably had to perform His miracles of healing at loss
and strain to Himself (see last Lesson). (2) That it has a spiritual
meaning. Crowd in Church today; all seem thronging and pressing about
Christ. But do all touch Him like this woman, so as to get power and
healing from Him? No; only those who, with earnestness and trust, reach
out to Him. (3) That Christ accepts very stupid, ignorant faith. She
thought superstitiously that the power might be in His clothes. Yet He
did not reject her, but taught her to know Him better. Tell story of
"Daft Jamie," a poor, half-idiot boy in Scotland, too stupid to be let
go to Holy Communion. But he longed to go and at last the kind minister
allowed him. Poor boy was full of joy and excitement all day. " Oh, I
hae seen the bonnie Man!" Next morning he was found dead in his bed. In
the night-time he had passed away in his joy, and gone to see "the
bonnie Man " for ever and ever.
Poor Jairus! Can't you imagine his agony of mind at this delay, and how
he would turn away from the woman to watch with feverish eagerness the
windows of his house on the hillside? "Oh! My littlegirl will die
before He comes! " And even as he thinks of it, he hears galloping
hoofs, and sees his servant approach. One glance at the man's face is
enough. "Too late! Your little daughter is dead. No use troubling the
Rabbi now!" Poor Jairus! But Jesus' ear was quick to hear that message,
and his eye meets the poor father's glance. "Don't be frightened; only
trust me still!" Hard to trust now. Christ had healed sickness, but
never raised the dead before. Half-frightened, half-hoping, the poor
father went on. Then, with father, and mother, and three disciples
(which?), He goes into the little girl's shaded room, where she lay,
all silent and still, in her little bed, with the curtains drawn tight
around it. What was the matter? Dead? What did he call it? Why? Because
since His Coming, death is softened into sleep for all who love Him.
They shall waken when He comes back. So Christians try to put away ugly
old name (John xi. II; I Thess. iv. 14), and put the word "sleep" on
their tombs, instead of "death." " She only sleeps", said the Lord, and
went to awake her. How? By strenuous, repeated effort, like Elisha? (2
Kings iv. 34). By praying, like Peter, that God would raise her? (Acts
ix. 40, 41). No. In calm, quiet power, just touched her hand and
wakened her--perhaps in the very words by which her mother wakened her
every morning, "Wake .up, my little girl." "My little girl." He was so
fond of these pet expressions of affection. Twice already in this
chapter? (vv. 2,22). " Cheer up, my son--my daughter." And now, "My
little girl." The words must have stuck in Peter's memory always; and
long years afterwards, when telling the story to St. Mark, he
remembered the very word Talitha, the diminutive of endearment in the
popular language used by the Lord. 'Talitha cumi' (Mark v. 41).
From this one day you can judge how strenuous His life was. It was a
tired, happy Jesus that laid down in Peter's little room that night;
surely with the pleasant thought of the poor lunatic and the little
girl's mother, and all the poor sufferers that He had made happy that
day. That is what makes the happiness of God. That is the God with whom
we have to do with in the struggle of life, in its pain and sorrow, in
the hour of death and in the day of judgment. Thanks be to God.
Questions for Lesson XIII
Show the great popularity of Jesus in these early Galilean days.
Did
they keep on caring right to the end? Prove this.
Now trace for me this
specimen strenuous day: Morning, afternoon, evening, midnight, and next
morning.
Lesson XIV - HOW TO KEEP SUNDAY
St. Matt. XII. to v. 38.
The chief lesson to be learned today is the way to think of our
Sundays. Although the Jewish Sabbath does not quite correspond to the
Christian Sunday, yet our Lord's teaching about the right spirit of
keeping the Sabbath expresses exactly the way in which we should think
of Sunday. But there is a further lesson too. The sin of an unloving
heart. This lesson marks the beginning of troubles in the Lord's life.
The bigoted Jerusalem Jews had come down. They were angry at His mixing
with publicans and sinners and choosing a publican as one of His band.
Now they were spiteful about the Sabbath. The unloving heart spoils
happiness everywhere. Never again now to the close of His life shall He
have back again those happy first days in Capernaum.
I - Going to Church Through the Fields.
The Lord Jesus was very careful about attending the public worship of
the Church. Even though the clergy were often bad, and careless, and
hypocritical, yet the Church was the Church, and no fault in the
individual minister could excuse any man for neglecting his
opportunities of the regular worship of God. Remember this when you
grow up. You may move to a parish where, for some reason, you may not
be attracted by the clergyman. That sometimes may happen through the
fault of the clergyman. It very much oftener happens through people
unreasonably taking up prejudices, and not trying to think the best and
make the best of him. It is so easy to be sharp and censorious towards
one's pastor, easy to misunderstand a man, and put unfair constructions
on some word, or act, or manner. But the important lesson here is that
the Jewish clergy, and scribes, and teachers as a body were really bad,
cruel, and hypocritical, and hostile to Christ; and yet He and His
disciples went regularly to church to be ministered to by these men.
Even after the chief priests had crucified Him, still the Apostles went
regularly to the Temple worship, and kept the regular hours of prayer.
We hear of them at worship at. the third hour, the sixth hour, the
ninth hour. They had their Temple prayer-book and their synagogue
prayer-book, with fixed services of prayers, and psalms, and lessons
from the Scripture; and no fault in the minister could spoil those for
them.
Going to church, did they go by the road or through the fields? What
happened on the way? just think of the poverty of Jesus when His
disciples were so hungry going through the fields. Was He Himself
hungry? Be sure He did not eat food if there was not enough for them.
Besides, by comparing His case with that of David (v. 3), He seems to
suggest that "He was hungered, as well as they that were with Him." Did
you ever pluck ripe wheat-ears, and rub them on your hands? Did it seem
like work, like Sabbath-breaking? Yet some silly people in our Lord's
day thought so. Straight behind the disciples were the spiteful
Pharisces from Jerusalem, spying on them. They were glad to see them
break one of their wretched little Sabbath rules, which said that to
pluck an ear of corn was to reap, to rub it was to thresh; and so, they
said, the disciples were reaping and threshing on the Sabbath Day! What
a silly, stupid thing to say. Had God given an order against reaping
and threshing on the Sabbath? Why? In order that the poor, tired
workers should be happy and restful, and that no cruel master should
work them on the day of rest. It was a kindly, loving order of God. Was
it kindly and loving when enforced by these Pharisees? What should they
have rather done? Pitied the men for being hungry, and asked them to
come and eat with them. Ah! that was not their way of showing religion.
That was Christ's way. They would much rather try to find fault, and
pretend it was for the sake of religion.
What two examples does Jesus quote? First means that any mere
ceremonial law about worship must give place to urgent bodily
necessity. The great law of Right and Wrong must not be broken for any
necessity. It is better to die than to do wrong. But a mere rule about
worship is on a different level. But what means second example? What
has it to do with the case? (See vv. 6-8.) "I am God, where I stand is
a Temple-is holy ground. These poor followers of mine, acting in my
service, are as guiltless as the priests in the Temple on the Sabbath.
And if ye were kind and merciful men, ye would not have condemned the
guiltless."
II - In Church.
So they went on to church. And the Pharisees went too, and sat in their
places at the top, and watched with scowling faces as Jesus entered
with His disciples. What had these Pharisees gone to church for? To
pray to be made loving, and kind, and good? Not a bit of it. (See Mark
iii. 2.) To watch Him. What wicked, spiteful men! Did not like Christ,
because He was so real and true; He hated cant and hypocrisy, and
sternly rebuked them for it, even before the people. So they lay in
wait, and set traps for Him. I suspect this whole affair in the
synagogue was a trap laid by them; that they had put that man there to
induce Jesus to break their rules, and then watched to try if they
could catch Him. Reading the accounts in the different gospels leaves
that impression.
What ailed the man? (v. 10). One of the old lost gospels says he was a
stone- mason, and had told the Lord that he could not earn bread for
his family. Picture--village church-man on seat--arm hanging dead--his
eager eyes fixed on Jesus. Jesus' pitying eyes on him. Now see the
Pharisees whispering and watching. Oh, this wicked Sabbath-breaker!
going to heal a man on Sabbath! Hear them call out to stop Him. "Is it
lawful to heal," &c. (v. 10). His reply (Mark iii. 4). Is it better
on Sabbath to do good, as I am doing, or to do harm by neglecting to
relieve misery? Then He appeals to their compassion. H ow? (v. I I ).
Yes. "You surely would pull out the sheep. Would you do less for a poor
human being? Wherefore it is lawful to do good on the Sabbath Day." All
this time the poor man waiting with his dead arm by his side. What
next? Could he stretch it forth? Was it not dead? Yes; but when Christ
told him, the poor fellow tried to do it, and with the effort to obey
came the power. So with us-- weak, powerless--can't love God, can't
conquer sin, can't be truly faithful. But let us say, " Lord, I can't
love Thee much; I can't serve Thee as I should; I can't be good as I
ought; but, Lord, I'll try! " and with the effort to obey will come the
power.
Do you think the poor stone-mason was glad? And the people? And the
Lord? Were the Pharisees? What did they do? Went out to make plans
against Him, and so went on and on in this wicked spitefulness, till
they brought the Lord at last to the Cross on Calvary.
III - How to Think of Sunday.
Was it right for the Pharisees to be careful about keeping Sabbath?
Yes; but they were so silly about it, and so spiteful, they forgot
God's loving purpose for it. They would make Sabbath a torment. Did God
give Sabbath to be a torment to people? What does the Lord tell the
Phatisees about it? (Mark ii. 27). Made for man, i.e., for man's
blessing and happiness. Does God like to see happy faces on Sunday?
Like to see us out in fresh air, enjoying this beautiful world? Yes, we
are His children, and He made Sunday for our happiness, and recreation,
and rest. No Latin, or sums, or hard school-lessons today for boys and
girls. No work for tired men and women. What an awful world if no
Sundays! God says to us every Saturday night, "Come ye apart and rest
awhile. I want you to rest and be happy." "This is the day that the
Lord hath made: let us rejoice and be glad in it." Is it not good of
our Father in Heaven? What a shame to make it gloomy! But something
else needed besides rest? We have another part of us besides bodies?
Souls. And God, who wants us to be happy, knows that a good, noble,
beautiful life will best make us so. He says, "If My children only
think of rest and amusement, they may forget about goodness and about
My love for them, and so lose their highest happiness. The busy men and
women may forget Me in the hurry of their work; so I want to remind
them about Me every Sunday, and keep them near to me." Emphasise the
two sides. (1) The rest and recreation for the body. (2) Helps and
reminders for the soul. And all for the purpose of our good, to make us
happy, and holy, and loving to God and man.
Now, the Pharisees forgot the happy meaning of Sabbath. Thought of as
of a taskmaster's order to his slaves: "'Don't do this, don't do that
on Sabbath, or else I will punish you." Our Lord was vexed at the way
they were spoiling God's beautiful gift, and so He often, in order to
teach them, intentionally broke through their silly rules,
intentionally worked miracles on Sabbath-broke the Sabbath, they would
say. It is a great loss and pity when boys and girls and men and women
are taught to think of Sunday as the Pharisees did. As if God's purpose
were to worry and restrict you, and forbid all the things you like, and
make you feet that it is only unpleasant things that are religious. I
am so afraid of your taking up the silly notion that Sunday is an
irksome thing, and that it would be nicer for every one to be free to
do what he liked.
IV - Danger of Losing Sunday.
If you examine the different passages in the Bible, even about the old
Jewish Sabbath, you will find that the two chief directions about it
were:
1. "Thou shalt rest from thy work on this day."
2. "Thou shalt rejoice and be glad in it."
True, they were not allowed to do as they pleased about it. Many would
prefer working and making their servants work; many cried, When will
the Sabbath be gone? that they might buy and sell, and get gain
(Amos--viii. 5, &c.), and wring the last drops of sweat out of
those who served them. But God allowed no evasion--"Thou shalt do no
manner of work. . . . nor thy manservant, nor thy maidservant, nor thy
cattle," etc. Can't you see what a kindly rule it was--how many a poor
Jewish labourer, with weary limbs and aching head, learned to thank
God, and rejoice in His rest, that no greedy, tyrannous master could
deprive him of.
And can't you see what a great and blessed thing it is still, even for
this lower advantage of bodily rest--how, in the terrible strain and
competition of these days, we ought to thank God for His law of Sunday.
What fools people are when they talk of Sunday as a restriction placed
on them. I wonder how children would like doing school-work just the
same Sunday and week-day. Well, men and women will come to have to do
their work every day alike if Sunday is lost to them. They ought to
guard it rather as a precious heritage. I see great danger of losing it
altogether in these days. It is a good thing to get people out into the
country, and let them enjoy nature. But I see more and more, under the
excuse of this, how men are being deprived of their Sunday rest. I see
shops getting to be opened more than they used. I know men that do not
get one Sunday off work in a year. I see tram- drivers and railway-rnen
moving into slavery where seven days' work will be exacted for six
days' pay. And, in the fear of all this, we want you young people to
see God's good purpose in the Day of Rest, and fight hard that your
country should not lose it.
I need not remind you that there is even a more important thing than
bodily rest--that our lives should be made noble, and peaceful, and
true, and good. For this we must have religion. For religion we must
have our Sundays.
Remember, then, that the Sabbath was made for man--for man's body, his
soul, his happiness, his peace--and never think of Sunday except as a
great blessing from God.
So these unloving people spoiled the happiness of Jesus and so began
the cruel road that was at last to lead Him to Calvary.
Lesson XV - THE KINGDOM OF GOD
St. Mark 1. 14-16 and IV. 26-33.
The object of the teacher in this Lesson should be to leave a clear,
definite impression as to the meaning of "the Kingdom of God." It is
most important to get true views about this-to get rid of the selfish
thought that Christ lived and died only that I, and certain who believe
as I do, should go to Heaven when we die. Teach them of Christ's
beautiful ideal--try to rouse their enthusiasm for it-to send them out
with an impression of what Christ intended the Church to be. Probably
the Lesson here is too long. But with deep, prayerful study of the
subject, the teacher who is in earnest can leave the desired impression
with fewer words.
I - His Vision of the Future.
(I) THE KINGDOM OF GOD. I want to start with a question which will need
all your thinking to answer. What was the favourite, the constant,
subject of our Lord's preaching? Almost all teachers who are capable of
excitement and enthusiasm about their work, have some special pet
subject--Temperance or Missions, or Housing of Poor, &c., about
which they get most enthusiastic, always wanting to talk about it,
always wanting to rouse us about it; every conversation, every sermon,
of theirs will somehow lead up to it. People say--Well, that man has
Temperance, Missions, &c., on the brain. He can't talk of anything
else!
We may reverently say our Lord, too, had one pet subject, one pet
enthusiasm, the centre of all His teaching. Every sermon, every
parable, referred to it. His whole life was the picture, the model, the
revelation of it. It was the vision that filled up all His hopes, all
His outlook into the future. What was it? Think. Try again. His very
first sermon in these portions that you have read was about it. What
was it? Yes. THE KINGDOM OF GOD. In Concordance you find it nearly 100
times mentioned: e.g., Mark i. 15; Luke iv. 43; viii., ix. 1, &c.,
&c.
Again, see parables--Kingdom of God like leaven--hid treasure--seed
sown in a field, &c., &c. Main thought in them is the Kingdom
of God. (Take trouble to learn and to impress on class that the Divine
Reformer, like all the greatest of human reforrners, was pre-eminently
possessed with one great idea, and that idea was the Kingdom of God.)
II - What Did He Mean?
(2) WHAT DID HE MEAN BY IT? You say He meant Heaven--a happy land to go
to when we die? No, He did not. Most certainly He did not. At least,
going to Heaven was only a part-the far-off part of His plan. Whatever
He meant, it was clearly something that first of all concerned this
earth, that had to begin, and grow, and spread for a blessing on earth.
Remember parables about it. What was it like? Little mustard seed
growing to a great tree-little bit of leaven spreading through a lot of
flour-a little corn of wheat springing up, first the blade, then the
ear, &c. Would that mean Heaven? No. It was a little something that
He was planting in the world that should spread and grow till it grew
to be a great thing--till it leavened all around it. Can you not yet
guess what He meant?
Well, let me try to picture what I think was the vision rising in His
mind when He thought with glad hope and enthusiasm about the success of
His plan. I can imagine that I see it before me. Try and make the
picture in your minds as I go on. He sees before Him a sweet, fair
vision-a band of boys and girls, and men and women, of true, noble,
generous, Christ-like hearts; the sort of people that you can't help
loving and admiring; the sort of people that make life so happy and
lovely for all around them. Do you know any person like that? It is a
small band at first-small, like a grain of mustard seed-only about
twenty or thirty, but growing, growing, as the ages go on, till it
overspreads the face of the earth. He sees in the vision how everything
bad and miserable vanishes before them--all greediness, and lying, and
bullying, and spite, and drunkenness, and impurity--all selfishness and
cruelty--all poverty, and misery, and pain. They are such brave,
generous boys, such tender, unselfish girls--such noble, self-
sacrificing men and women, in some degree like the Lord Himself. They
care for nothing but what is good and true. They fear nothing but
grieving their Lord. Their chief thought is the service of the
Kingdom--making all life around them happy, and holy, and beautiful.
Would not it be lovely to see a great growing band like that,
increasing every day? Would not they make this a happy, holy, beautiful
world? Would not they watch over the sick? help the drunkard? and
comfort the sorrowful? Do you think the mean, sneaking sort of boys
would dare to be mean and sneaking? Would not the spiteful and
untruthful, and selfish girls be utterly ashamed of themselves? Would
not many people want to join the ranks of this Kingdom of God, if they
saw it so grand, so beautiful, spreading over the earth? Well, that is,
I think, the vision of our Lord. That is what He meant by the Kingdom
of God. Which should begin where? On earth. And go on whither? To
Heaven.
For years He had brooded on that vision on the hills of Nazareth. It
grew as He made chairs and cattle-yokes for the people. Was it not a
lovely vision! If that vision should materialise earth would be singing
unto the Lord a new song, and when their life here was over, the
members of His kingdom should pass within the Veil to be a Kingdom of
God in the Unseen Land. Now do you understand what He wanted to plant
on this earth? His Kingdom of God.
III - "As It Is in Heaven."
Was it a mere dreamer's vision? Does it exist anywhere? See what He
bids us pray for in His prayer of the Kingdom:
THY KINGDOM COME: THY WILL BE DONE ON EARTH as it is in heaven.
Therefore that Kingdom exists somewhere now. Where? He has brought His
picture of it from the Home Above, the picture of His Kingdom as it
already exists in Heaven. He was only founding a colony on earth of the
already existing Kingdom in Heaven. That Kingdom there was behind the
enterprise, throwing out its new colony into a new region as the great
Roman Empire used to do. Therefore the whole Spiritual Universe, the
God of that Universe, the Angels and Archangels and all the Company of
Heaven are responsible for it. So one day in spite of all drawbacks it
must inevitably succeed.
Sometimes people lose heart and think that religion is failing, that
the Kingdom is set back, but it is like when on the sea-shore you watch
the tide now advancing a little, now receding. But always inevitably
the tide comes in! So with the Kingdom. God is behind it. The tide is
coming in. One day in spite of all reverses, "The Kingdom of this world
shall become the Kingdom of the Lord and of His Christ and He shall
reign for ever and ever."
The Kingdom and the Church.
Where is that Kingdom to be found on earth today? It is represented by
the Church, the great Church of God throughout the world. Is it
satisfactory, like the Kingdom above? No, for it has had to be planted
amongst faulty, imperfect people down here. Is it one unbroken Kingdom
asHe intended? No,through fault and peevishness of men it is divided up
into different bodies who refuse to worship together. Are all the
members earnest about it? No. That is what spoils it and disappoints
our Lord. That is what brings shame upon His Church. The Kingdom of God
is the Church. But all its members are not in earnest now, as they were
then. Can't you fancy how disappointed the Lord is as He looks upon the
careless boys and girls and men and women, who don't care at all to do
the blessed work of His Kingdom. What a pain to His heart. He has let
you in through baptism. He wants you to have all the gladness and
blessing of working in His Kingdom, and making Him pleased, and making
His poor children on earth happy and good. You are members of the
Kingdom of God.
Story-Frederick the Great examining school on the three great Kingdoms
of Nature--Animal, Vegetable, and Mineral. "Now, what Kingdom does this
belong to?" (holding up watch). "The Mineral Kingdom." " And this
flower?" "The Vegetable Kingdom." "And now, what Kingdom do I belong
to?" he asked. Expected answer, "The Animal Kingdom." But the children
were puzzled. At last a little girl timidly held up her hand. "Well, my
little maid?" "The Kingdom of God, your Majesty." And, amid solemn
silence, the great King bowed his head. "Pray God that I may be
worthy," said he.
How can you be worthy? How can you escape disappointing our Lord? Get
the strength for the Kingdom's work through prayer, through your Bible,
through His great sacrament of Holy Communion for the strengthening and
refreshing of our souls. You never can do His work faithfully without
those helps. Try hard not to neglect them; not to get up late and run
down to breakfast without prayer. Pray to the Lord, whom so many are
disappointing: "Lord! I want not to disappoint Thee. I want to be a
faithful member of the Kingdom of God."
Questions for Chapter XV
What was the chief subject of Our Lord's teaching? Did He mean Heaven?
What did He mean? Show this.
Does it exist in perfection anywhere? Prove this from Lord's Prayer.
What do you think of the Christian church on earth as compared with the
vision He had in mind?
Lesson XVI - THE FOUNDING OF THE
KINGDOM
St. Luke VI. 12-26; St. Malt. V. 1-10.
I - Trusting the Kingdom to Men.
We have now learnt something about the Kingdom. Now how did He begin to
found His Kingdom? By getting soldiers, and cannons, and swords to
fight, as earthly kings do? No. His Kingdom not like that. You know now
what He wanted done in the world; how would you begin if you wanted it
done? He began by preaching about it, then by gathering together a few
earnest, unselfish men and inspiring them with His own eagerness and
enthusiasm for serving others. Tell me the first of His new members
(St. Luke vi. 14). Were they strangers to Him? (John i. 40, &c.).
He had already made friends with them; they knew Him, and were in
sympathy with Him, and were probably expecting this call some day to
start at making the new Kingdom to bless the world. Very few. How was
it like leaven, and corn, and grain of mustard seed? But more and more
disciples came as they heard Him, and saw the wonderful miracles. Tell
me some of the miracles? At last time came for a solemn founding of the
new Kingdom (Luke vi. 12-26). Did He mean to accomplish it all himself?
No. He was leaving the world soon. Marvellous to say, He was going to
entrust it to men. " I will trust them," He said, "they will rise to
the trust, and I will be watching over them to the end of the world."
It was a splendid venture of God's generous faith in humanity which had
so often disappointed Him. Don't you wish we were more worthy of His
trust?
II - The Choosing of the Leaders.
Now it is the eve of the great Day and He had retired into the
mountain, as was His custom--for prayer. He could not do without that.
He knew what it meant to Him, this talking to the Father. And He knew
what it would mean to us all through the ages. Therefore He keeps
telling us to try it always. There on that mountain side, all night
long, alone under the starry sky, He kept praying to His Father, and
thinking of His glorious plan for the world. All night long alone, and
then in the early morning, with the earnest light in His eyes, and
great solemn purpose in His heart, He came down to a level place on the
mountain-side. Crowds waiting, disciples waiting quietly, solemnly, as
He came. Then He told the whole band of disciples that He was about to
choose twelve Apostles out of them to be the chief helpers in the new
Kingdom. Imagine the breathless waiting to see whom He would choose.
Imagine school captain of football team choosing players for a big
match. Only this match was to be against the devil, and all the misery
and sin of life. One by one he called the names, each wondering who
would be called next. Peter! Andrew! John 1 James! &c. One by one
they rose and came. How solemnly the crowd would watch. One of the
greatest days in the history of the world.
That simple ceremony on the hill that morning was one of the great
events of history, the beginning of a little society, the Christian
Church, which should go out through all the ages proclaiming His
Kingdom, the planting of a seedling in which He saw far off a great
spreading tree with the fowls of the air lodging in its branches.
III - The Ideals of the Kingdom.
Then as the disciples waited in silent expectation "He opened His mouth
and taught them" the ideals of the Kingdom (St. Matt. v. 1-12). The
Kingdom of God was no new idea to the Jews. In ancient days it was
their proudest boast that God was King in Israel. And their prophets
always persistently pointed to a Golden Age, when there should be a
Kingdom of God again. But naturally the people read their own low
thoughts into it. That coming day was to be a Day of Holiness, it is
true, but prominent in their thoughts was " Der Tag"--The Day--
somewhat in the German sense. A Day when Messiah should lead Israel to
victory, when the nations who oppressed them should bow beneath their
feet, and Israel should rule gloriously. They already believed Jesus
was the Messiah, and now He was going to speak to them of the Kingdom
of God.
Then Jesus opened His mouth and taught them--not of triumph and
revenge, and wealth and self-assertion. That was not His idea of a
happy world.
"Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Blessed are the mourners, for they shall be comforted. Blessed are the
meek, for they shall inherit the earth.
Blessed are they that hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they
shall be filled.
Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God," &e.
IV - Depicting Christian Character.
So Jesus proclaimed His Kingdom and its ideals. Remember similar
scene in Old Testament. There God awful in lightnings and thunders.
Here God in form of man, sitting as comrade beside them. Note the
kindly form of the laws: all blessings. Note, too, that they are, not a
command to do something, but a description of character, which should
be the character of the members of His new Kingdom. Note also that it
is not each precept alone, but all together, that form that character.
Therefore we must think of them connectedly. Now listen to the Laws of
the Kingdom for the Apostles and disciples, and you and me, and all
Christians.
1. POOR IN SPIRIT, i.e., feeling oneself poor, in want, needing help
from God, deserving nothing. Remember any examples? (Luke xviii. 13;
Rom. vii. 24). Who will feel that most? Those who are trying hardest to
be good. They must feet their spiritual poverty, and our Lord says that
is a blessed thing. So with you. If you feel like that, it is much
better than to feel proud and self-reliant about your Christian fight.
2. THEY THAT MOURN.-Does it mean mere mourning of any kind for more
money, and more amusement, and more fame, &c.? No. Though every
sorrow brought to Christ will be comforted in some way, yet here we
must take it in connection with the "poor in spirit." It means that for
the man who feels that need and demerit, it is a blessed thing to think
about it and mourn for it. Every true boy or girl or man or woman who
really sees the difference between what he should be and what he is,
must surely mourn for it. That is blessed, says the Lord. What is His
promise? That is the one sort of mourning of which we may be quite sure
"he shall be comforted." But it is possible to bide it from ourselves,
and not think or mourn about it. Too busy with lessons, and work, and
play, &c. That is a pity. "He who lacks time to mourn lacks time to
mend. Eternity mourns that."
3. THE MEEK.-This is the hardest part to teach boys. Boys don't like
meekness. They sneer at a meek, chicken--hearted boy, always cowardly
and cringing. Does our Lord mean that? Is it wrong to be angry with a
cruel wrong-doer? Is it wrong to thrash a big bully for ill--treating a
little chap? Certainly not. That is Christ's will for you, if you can't
stop him otherwise. Think of His own awful anger if one injured one of
the "little ones" (St. Matt. xxiii. 1, &c.). But then, what about
"meek"? It is the f eeling that follows on the f eelings in (1) and
(2). He who knows himself, and how little he deserves, will not be
always standing on his dignity, and making the most of himself, and
flaring up at every fancied insult to himself. Meekness means absence
of self-assertion. Stand up for weaker ones, and fight for them if
necessary, but not for yourself. Our Lord dislikes your c