His Sent Ones.

In the fifth chapter of John, we find the Lord Jesus as the Worker. In fellowship with the Father, He must work :" My Father worketh hitherto, and I work."

There could be no rest for Him in a scene where sin had defiled and ruined every thing. His rest was above the scene, in the One who had sent Him. What a lesson this for us ! How apt we are to be restless here, instead of workers! If indeed we find fully our rest in Him who has sent us, even as He was sent (Jno. 20:21), will it not lead us in fellowship with Him in His work in this scene of sorrow? Beloved brethren, what a place of privilege is ours! "Sent ones"! Sent by Him, as He was sent:sent to be workers here, in fellowship with Him. Our rest indeed in Himself, as His rest was in the Father.

And we find He lays down the principles, if I may so call them, that governed Him in His work. He says, " I can of Mine own self do nothing :as I hear, I judge :and My judgment is just; because I seek not Mine own will, but the will of the Father which hath sent Me." (5:30.)

"I can of Mine own self do nothing." Every thing was done in communion with and dependence on the Father.

What a word for us ! How much work is, so to speak, master, because we have not learnt this lesson! But again, He says, "As I hear, I judge." His was the listening ear. As on another occasion He tells us, "I have not spoken of Myself; but the Father which sent Me, He gave Me a commandment, what I should say, and what I should speak." (Jno. 12:49.) How much of vain speaking would this save us if it were true of us! Oh for a waiting, listening ear, that seeks ever the Lord's word, and acts and judges in accordance therewith !

" My judgment is just; because I seek not Mine own will, but the will of the Father which hath sent Me." Here we find the secret of true judgment. Just in proportion as we are seeking a place for ourselves do we fail to have a just conception of things. How much failure can be attributed to this! How self-seeking so often characterizes us in the Lord's service ! May we be led, in the power of the indwelling Spirit, to surrender ourselves unreservedly to the will of our blessed Lord, so that down here, as "His sent ones," we may have His mind, and thus be a help to the Lord's people in these days.

The call to-day is for unselfishness and devotedness in the ministry of God's Word. Seeking not the applause of men, but, through good report and evil, seeking to make Christ known to others, and giving a faithful testimony for Him in these days of unfaithfulness.

To this end, beloved brethren, ought we not to make continual prayer and supplication to our God? May this coming year, if our Lord tarry, lead each one of us to seek this blessing for ourselves and for the whole Church of God. J.J.S.

Conflict With Satan, And The Panoply Of God

2. THE PANOPLY.

For this conflict we must have the panoply-the whole armor-of God. This is emphasized by repetition. (10:ii, 13.) It must be the whole armor, or we are as powerless against the adversary as if we had none. The whole man can be reached through any one part exposed. A city can be taken through a single gate unguarded. And our foe is subtle, and easily discerns what is lacking in us. Moreover, the armor itself is so made, to fit together,-one part is so necessary to another, that it cannot rightly be put on except it be all put on. How can we be girt about with truth and have no "breast-plate of righteousness" ? And so it will be found all through. No wonder! for this is just "integrity" in its true meaning,-that is, entireness. Who that is upright with God can pick and choose as to His will, what to do and what he may leave undone? Let us remember at the outset, therefore, it is the whole armor we are to put on.

The order too is important, and that will appear as we go on. The order in Scripture is far too little thought of. To take it into account would be by many considered too minute; but in fact there is nothing too minute for our attention in the Word of God; and this cannot be too seriously pressed.

The first part of the armor, then, is the girdle,-what might be scarcely thought a part of it, but according to this, the very first thing to be considered. What indeed could a soldier do with flowing garments about his feet? And here the Word of God gets its right place :truth it is that girds the loins.

"Sanctify them through the truth," is the Lord's own prayer:"Thy Word is truth." (Jno. 17:17.) In the world, men walk in a vain show, and disquiet themselves in vain:holiness is "holiness of truth." (Eph. 4:24, marg.) The Word of God brings into the soul the realities which separate from what is seen to be false and merely seductive. The things unseen, but eternal, stir and energize the heart. Torpor is gone ; earnestness and diligence possess the soul. It is kept with God, and at rest,-a rest which is full activity, and makes it untiring.

It is plain that this state of soul is a first necessity for conflict, and that the wiles of the enemy can only be met by one delivered from the illusions of that world which is his great instrument. It connects also with the second part of the armor, the breast-plate of righteousness, which is, of course, practical righteousness, a conscience void of offense, as of one walking in the truth he knows. Otherwise the truth itself becomes a reproach, and we are in danger of shipwreck as to it even:"holding faith and a good conscience," says the apostle, "which some having put away, concerning faith have made shipwreck." (i Tim. 1:19)

He who does not follow the truth he knows is sure to find, except God's mercy prevent, something that will accommodate itself, as the truth will not, to the laxity in which he indulges. The enemy here has full opportunity, and it is no wonder if the darkness should soon be proportionate to the truth once known.

The third part of the armor is, the feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace. It is peace to which the gospel introduces,-not only through the blood of Jesus having no more conscience of sins, but God known as for us ; who can be against us? Thus in all circumstances there is peace. If God rule-our Father be the Lord of heaven and earth, to receive from His hand every thing is to be delivered from unrest, from resentment even of what is meant for harm :" As for you, ye indeed thought evil against me," says Joseph to his brethren, "but God meant it for good." (Gen. 1. 20.) To what a height of serenity can such a consciousness lift the soul ! How can one desire evil upon another for what in the hand of God had been only good ?

Israel's shoes were never worn out with all the flinty rocks of the wilderness; and such peace, maintained in communion with God, is proof against all the roughness of the way. Those who enjoy this peace are indeed armed against Satan; but it is only attainable in the order in which we find it here.

Fourthly, we have, "Above all, taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked one." Some would read here, "in all things," but I believe the text is right as it stands, and that it means, not " more than all," nor " besides all," but, as Bengel reads, "over all." The shield covers even the rest of the armor, and can be moved so as to guard any threatened part. It is thus that faith is to protect all the other parts,-the faith which is not merely in the work accomplished for us, but a practical confidence in God at all times. This it is that quenches all the fiery darts of the wicked one,-the suspicions of His love and faithfulness, to a believer one would say impossible, but for bitter experience. What fiery darts are these ! and how well is he called "the wicked one" who can employ them !

Still, the head needs to be provided for, and here it is, "Receive the helmet of salvation." It is not a hope, it is a positive accomplishment. Saved we are ; and this consciousness enables one to lift up his head amid the tumult of the battle-field. We are conquerors before we enter the strife. Not that there is nothing at stake, nor that there is not real meaning and importance in the conflict. There is surely much; but salvation is not at stake :it is not for it we are contending. This we have as the fruit of Another's victory. And to mark this, it would seem, the word is changed here which has just been used for "taking the shield of faith;" it is really, "and receive the helmet of salvation." It is not an attainment, not something in which we are active, as before; it is the gift of Another, a gift of grace alone.

Then we have our offensive weapon-"the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God." There is a slight correction to be made here; it is rather, "The sword of the Spirit, which is the saying of God,"-that is, the particular text out of the Word which you want for the occasion. And this is the sword of the Spirit, not simply because the whole Word is inspired of Him, but also because you need to be under His guidance in order to find the text. How wise may a mere babe in Christ be if with God ! how dull the greatest student if without Him ! But let us not imagine that deep and accurate acquaintance with the Word is therefore of small account. It is far otherwise. Growth is by the truth, and if the truth be slighted, and we are babes when we ought to be grown men, then are we "carnal, and not spiritual" (i Cor. 3:i), and He will need to make us sensible of our folly. To expect the blessed Spirit of God to minister to spiritual sloth and indifference is presumption; and here again the order of Scripture is instructive:it is only when all the coat-armor is fastened on that the sword can be grasped; only thus will it be effective.

But used thus, what victories may we gain with it! there is nothing else, indeed, by which victory can be gained. Satan dreads no mere human reasoning, which lies, after all, under the darkness of this world-cannot escape from it:it is "armor of light" we need, and light is heavenly, as even nature witnesses. Here faith alone can enter. Mere human apprehension cannot lay hold of Christ; and to the knowledge of the new man " Christ is all." (Col. 3:2:)

Let it not be thought that I am decrying reason :it is impossible to get on a step without it. Man without reason would be below the beast-an idiot. Those who declaim against it use it (however irrationally) in their declamation. Scripture is full every where of the most sublime reasoning; nor can we apply a text without it. Only, among things unseen, reason must be the handmaid of faith, and not her mistress; it must work by the light of revelation, or have none.

And now, lastly, we have that which is not so much a part of the armor as it is the spirit in which alone it can be used; connected indeed especially with the Word of God, as that in which we draw near to God, as in the Word He draws near to us:-"praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit, and watching there unto with all perseverance and supplication for all saints." No where else, perhaps, is the language as to prayer so strong and emphatic as it is here. Well it may be, here in the presence of the enemy, where, as we were at first reminded, our strength, if we are to have strength, must be "in the Lord." The exhortation of the apostle thus ends as it begins-with Christ Himself, the one absolute necessity for the soul at every moment. The consciousness of this is safety and power :its expression is in prayer; and this spirit of prayer is what the Spirit of God produces wherever He works. Let us remark, however, that where the soul is right with God, prayer becomes proportionately intercession for the saints. Christ on high is taking that place of intercession, to be in it ourselves is to be in fellowship with Him. Where the heart entertains Him, it will entertain His people also.

The Heart Longing After The Person Of Christ.

(An Extract)

I am inclined to think that this feeling in reference to ministry is intimately connected with a deep, personal longing after more profound, rich, abiding communion with the person of Christ, by the power of the Holy Ghost. …. Nothing is of any value that does not spring from personal love to and communion with Christ Himself. We may have Scripture at our finger ends, we may be able to preach with remarkable fluency-a fluency which unpracticed spirits may easily enough mistake for power, but oh ! if our hearts are not drinking deeply at the fountain-head-if they are not enlivened and invigorated by the realization of the love of Christ, it will all end in flash and smoke. I have learnt …. to be increasingly dissatisfied with every thing, whether in myself or in others, short of abiding, real, deep, divinely inwrought communion with and conformity to the blessed Master.

" Crotchets I despise; mere opinions I dread; controversy I shrink from; all isms I esteem as utterly worthless. But …. I long to know more of His own precious person, His work, and His glory. And then, oh, to live for Him, to labor, testify, preach, and pray, and all for Christ, and by the working of His grace in our hearts.

“In This We Groan”

Who among us who believe does not prove the truth of these words? It is a bit of experience that none can escape. In our friends-those we love dearest perhaps, in our circumstances, and in our own persons, there is something to keep us constantly reminded that sin is here, and has done its deadly work, and what is crooked cannot be made straight, and what is wanting cannot be numbered. Paul carries it further still in Rom. 8:, and tells us that "the whole creation groaneth and travaileth in pain together until now." Not some of it, but the whole ; there is nothing that has sense and feeling but what has felt the damaging effect of the fall of creation's head, though the difference is immense between the physical suffering of the mere brute and that of man, with a mind and conscience beside,-a, spirit susceptible of the most intense anguish, capable of self-reproach and condemnation, and of reflection upon and anticipation of the deserts of sin. A buoyant heart may carry over for a time the terrible reality,-the multiplicity of occupations, be it with work or pleasure, may cause forgetfulness, but the time must come when every vail must be torn off, and the stern reality be known in a way there is no escape from.

Yes, "in this we groan," and creation groans, and for the unbeliever it is but the presage of an eternal night of woe. How solemn the thought! Men may live without God, but to pass into eternity without Him, this would be terrible indeed, and many in thinking of it have taken refuge in some of the forms of current unbelief with reference to the future,-setting up human judgment against what is revealed in the Word of God, in place of accepting God's simple way, so perfect and wonderful as it is.

But, "in this we groan " contemplates the Christian, of course, though the world groans too; and therefore the apostle adds to it, " Earnestly desiring to be clothed upon with our house which is from heaven." Yes, he brings in a hope,-the one only thing that really meets the difficulty, ministering a remedy divine and perfect. Hope is the anchor of the soul; it keeps it steady in the midst of storms and tempests. It puts God before the soul-the living God, the One who has brought into the scene of suffering and death a perfect and complete remedy. He alone could do it where death was at work, and if He has undertaken it, it will be done in a way to bring Him glory, and full blessing to us. It will be no patch put upon a rent, no plaster for a sore, but, the whole made new, and a body of glory given in place of the body of humiliation we now wear, and in which we groan. We have borne the image of the earthy, we shall bear the image of the heavenly; and whatever may intervene, faith bridges the whole, and looks on to that blessed moment which Scripture links with the coming again of the Lord Jesus Christ. Thus Paul comforted the saints at Thessalonica, who " were turned to God from idols, to serve the living and the true God, and to wait for His Son from heaven," about those who had fallen asleep in Jesus. He did not say, "You shall die too and join them." No, he pointed them to that moment when the Lord shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and the trump of God ; when the dead in Christ shall rise first, the living be changed, and all together be caught up to meet the Lord in the air. He pointed them to that day, that God has promised shall come,-a day known only to Him, for which saints here are taught to wait, for which those who are departed wait, and for which the Lord Jesus also waits,-the day when He shall see the fruit of the travail of His soul and be satisfied ; and if He is satisfied, how surely shall we be so too !

I do not ask, then, if you groan, dear fellow-believer ; I am sure you do, for Scripture says so, though no doubt the more we are in fellowship with God, in His thoughts and ways, so much the more shall we truly groan,-if not about ourselves, at least in witnessing what sin has done in man and brought upon a creature made in the image of God ; but now, alas! fallen so low. But may I not ask if you can add, as that which the faith of your soul has laid hold of, "earnestly desiring to be clothed upon with our house which is from heaven, that mortality may be swallowed up of life." Yes, mortality,-the liability to death-will be swallowed up of life, for those who are called up to be with Christ without seeing death. While for all, living or dead, death will be swallowed up of victory at that same moment. Are you stumbled at this ? Do you not know the Scriptures, and the power of God ? Have you let man rob you of " the blessed hope " ? Then in this, at least, you share in what has shut out from your soul the true and solid comfort God would give. But it needs the power of God assuredly-the God who brought back from the dead our Lord Jesus Christ, and whose Spirit shall "make alive our mortal bodies," working by that power by which " He shall subdue all things to Himself."

Have you, then, laid hold of that truth ? and is it to you "a blessed hope"-sustaining, comforting, when all may be most dark and trying-the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ? Are you watching, through the darkness of this world's night, for the One who alone can bring relief and remedy,-for the rejected One who is coming again-coming to reign over the scene of His rejection- to make His enemies His footstool, and to share His throne and glory with His redeemed ones?

You may say, "I do not understand prophecy." May I ask, Why not ? Are we not told to " take heed to it, as to a light that shines in a dark place"? Is the world not a dark place,-aye, growing darker every clay ? If you do not know this, you will surely despise the light that shines there; it will be unheeded by you, as perhaps it has been. Still it shines in a dark place, and it points to that one object who is the burden of the testimony of the Spirit of God in Scripture from Genesis to Revelation- Christ; and it marks out two periods and events of paramount importance:the coming of that blessed One to suffer and to die, the just One for the unjust ones, to bring us to God ; and next, to His coming to reign,-to be glorified in the scene of His rejection. How near this may be, who can tell ? Do not say, " My Lord delayeth His coming ; " still less take part with scoffers who say He will not come ; but hearken to His own word, "Surely, I come quickly." May you be able to add to this your " Amen, even so come, Lord Jesus." R.T.G.

“Things That Shall Be:”

AN EXPOSITION OF REVELATION IV.-XXII.

PART II.-THE TRUMPETS. (Chap. 8:2-11:18.)

The First Four Trumpets. (Chap. 8:2-13.)

The last seal is loosed, and the book of Revelation lies open before us ; yet just here it is undoubtedly true that we have reached the most difficult part of the whole. As we go on, we shall find ourselves in the midst of scenes with which the Old-Testament prophets have made us in measure familiar-a part which can be compared in this very prophecy to "a little open book." In the seals, we have found also what was more simple by its very breadth and generality. We have here evidently predictions more definite, and yet the application of which may never be made known to us, as they do not seem to come into that "open book,"-do not seem to find their place where the Old Testament can shed its light in the same way upon them. Yet we are not left to that mere "private interpretation" which is forbidden us; and it is well to inquire at the beginning, what helps we have to interpretation from other parts of Scripture. The series of trumpets is septenary, as we know-just as those of the seals and vials are. Not only so, but, as already said, the 7 here becomes, by the interposed vision between the sixth and seventh, in structure, an 8. And in this, the seals are plainly similar; the vials really, though more obscurely.

This naturally invites further comparison; and then at once we perceive that the vials are certainly in other respects also a parallel to the trumpets. In the first of each, the earth is affected ; in the second, the sea; in the third, the rivers and fountains of waters; in the fourth, the sun ; in the fifth, there is darkness ; in the sixth, the river Euphrates is the scene:the general resemblance cannot be doubted.

No such resemblance can be traced if we compare the seals, however ; though the similarity of structure should yield us something. The structure itself, so definite and plainly numerical, may speak to those who have ears to hear it, and we shall seek to gain from it what we can. But there is a third witness, whose help we shall do well to avail ourselves of, and that is, the historical interpretation, which just here-strangely as it may seem-is at its plainest. There is a very striking and satisfactory agreement among those of the historical school with regard to . the fifth and sixth trumpets at least; and the harmony pleads for some substantial truth in what they agree about. We must at all events inquire as to this.

Strictly, according to the stricture, the first five verses of this chapter belong to the seventh seal; but for our purpose it is more convenient to connect them with the trumpet-series, which they introduce. The judgments following they show us to be the answer of God to the cry of His people, though in His heart for them before they cry. This is what the order plainly teaches:" And I saw the seven angels which stand before God, and seven trumpets were given unto them." Thus all is pre- . pared of God beforehand ; yet He must be inquired of, to do it for them, and therefore we have next the prayers of all the saints ascending up to God. There is now a union of all hearts together:the common distress leads to united prayer; and He who has given special assurance that He will answer the prayer of two or three that unitedly ask of Him, how can He withdraw Himself from such supplication ?
But we see another thing,-the action of the angel at the altar of incense:"And another angel came and stood at the altar, having a golden censer; and there was given unto him much incense, that he should offer it with the prayers of all saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne. And the smoke of the incense which came with the prayers of the saints ascended up before God out of the angel's hand." Thus the fragrance of Christ's acceptability gives efficacy to His people's prayers; a thing perfectly familiar to us as Christians, and which scarcely needs interpretation, but which, as pictured for us here, has this element of strangeness in it-the figure of an angel-priest. Why, if it be Christ who of necessity must take this place, why is He shown us as an angel ? " For He taketh not hold of angels, but of the seed of Abraham He taketh hold. Wherefore in all things it behoved him to be made like unto His brethren, that He might be a merciful and faithful High-Priest in things pertaining to God." (Heb. 2:16, 17.) If, then, to be the priest men need, He must be made like to men, why does He appear here as an angel, and not as a man ? There is no need for doubt that what has been answered by many is the true explanation, and that the angel-figure here speaks of personal distance still from those for whom yet He intercedes. We have many like examples in Scripture, and one which is of special interest in this connection. Those who appear in the eighteenth of Genesis as "men" to Abraham, go on to Sodom as " angels " in the nineteenth. They go there to deliver Lot, but are not able to show him the intimacy which they show to Abraham. " Just man "as he is, and " vexed with the filthy conversation of the wicked," he is yet one "saved so as through the fire." Found, not in his tent-door at Mamre, but in the "gate of Sodom," he is one of those righteous men but in an evil place, for whom Abraham intercedes with God, and when delivered, it is said of him that "God remembered Abraham, and sent Lot out of the midst of the overthrow, when He overthrew the cities in the midst of which Lot dwelt." (Gen. 19:29.)

Lot may thus fitly represent this very remnant of Israel at the last, whose prayers are here coming up before God ; who have had opportunity to have known the Church's pilgrim path, but have refused it, and to whom Christ is even yet a stranger, though interceding for them. If we remember the priestly character of the heavenly elders in the fifth chapter here, and " their vials full of odors, which are the prayers of saints " (5:8) we may see further resemblance between these pictures so far apart. And how touching is it to see how in the troubles which encompass Lot in Sodom, these angels begin to appear as "men" again ! (Gen. 19:10, 12, 16.) Sweet grace of God, shining out in the very midst of the trial from which it could not, because of our need of it, exempt us !

Thus the angel-priest, in its very incongruity of thought, exactly suits the place in which we find it. It is "the time of Jacob's trouble,"-needed, because he is yet Jacob, but out of which he shall be delivered when its work is once accomplished. (Jer. 30:7.) Thus their prayers offered are heard; and, as inheriting on the earth, the answer to them involves the purging of the earth. " And the angel took the censer, and filled it with fire of the altar, and cast it unto the earth; and there were voices and thunderings and lightnings, and an earthquake. And the seven angels which had the seven trumpets prepared themselves to sound."

This fire, because from the altar, some have difficulty in believing to be judgment. They remember how a live coal from the altar purged Isaiah's lips, and cannot see that which has fed upon the sacrifice can be any longer wrath against men. But this is easily answered ; for while, where the heart turns to God, this is certainly true, it is in no wise true for those who do not turn. For them, there is no sacrifice that avails ; rather it pleads against its rejecters :the wrath of God against sin has not been set aside, but demonstrated an awful reality by the cross; and where the precious blood has not cleansed from sin, the wrath of God rests only the more heavily on those who slight it. The signs of judgment following are therefore in perfect keeping with the fact that it is the fire of the altar that evokes them, as they are with their being the answer to the prayers of a people who cry (with the saints under the fifth seal, or with the widow to whom the Lord compares them,), "Avenge me of mine adversary." (Luke 18:3.)

Every thing finds its place when once we are in the track of the divine thoughts ; and in all this there is no difficulty when we have learnt the period to which it applies. It is a suited introduction to the trumpets which follow, and in which, according to the old institution (Num. 10:9), God Himself now declares Himself in behalf of His people, and against their enemies.

There is much more difficulty when we come to consider separately the trumpets themselves.

" And the first sounded, and there followed hail and fire, mingled with blood, and they were cast upon the earth:and the third part of the earth was burnt up, and the third part of the trees was burnt up, and all green grass was burnt up."

Hail with fire we find in other parts of Scripture, as in nature also. It is one of the most solemn figures of the divine judgment which nature furnishes. It was one of the plagues of Egypt. In the eighteenth psalm it is found connected with similar judgment. "The Lord also thundered in the heavens, and the Highest gave His voice,-hailstones and coals of fire." Electricity and hail are products of the same cause, a mass of heated air saturated with vapor, rising to a higher level, and meeting the check of a cold current. It is a product of cold, the withdrawal of heat, as darkness is the absence of light; and light and heat, cold and darkness, are akin to one another. Cold stands (with darkness) for the withdrawal of God, as fire (which is both heat and light) for the glow of His presence, which, as against sin, is wrath. And both these things can consist together, however they may seem contradictory-"hailstones and coals of fire" be poured out together. God's forsaking is in anger necessarily, and thus what would be a ministry of refreshment is turned into a storm of judgment. There is a concord of contraries against those that cast off God; as for those who love Him, all things work together for good.

The blood mingled is of course a sign of death-a violent death,-and shows the deadly character of this visitation, by which a third part of the prophetic earth is desolated, a third part of the trees burnt up, and prosperity (if the green grass implies that,) every-where destroyed.

This judgment seems to affect, therefore, especially the lower ranks of the people, though, as necessarily would be the case, many of the higher also ; but it does not affect especially those in authority. They have not escaped, as we have seen, in the general convulsion under the sixth seal; nay, the heavens fleeing away might seem to intimate that the very possibility of true government was departed. Yet this might be while in fact governments go on, and we find in what follows here that they do go on, although never really recovering themselves. Under this trumpet now begins, as it would seem, what shall really cause them to collapse. A people impoverished by that which spares the governing classes, who does not realize the danger to these of such a state of things ? And the second trumpet seems to show us in reality what we might anticipate to grow out of this.

"And the second angel sounded, and as it were a great mountain, burning with fire, was cast into the sea; and the third part of the sea became blood; and 'the third part of the creatures which were in the sea and had life died ; and the third part of the ships were destroyed."
The comparison of Babylon to such a mountain (Jer. 51:25) may put us in the track of the meaning here. It is a power mighty, firmly seated and exalted, yet full of volcanic forces in conflict, by which not only her own bowels shall be torn out, but ruin spread around. This cast into the sea of the nations,-already in commotion, as the " sea " implies-produces death and disaster beyond that of the preceding trumpet. Human life is more directly attacked by it. Such a state of eruption was in France at the end of the last century, and may well illustrate (as others have suggested) what seems intended. The fierce outburst of revolt against all forms of monarchy, the fruit of centuries of insolent tyranny under which men had been crushed, set Europe in convulsion. History is full of such portents of that which shall be, and we do well to take heed to them. Especially as the end approaches may we expect to find it so:there is growth on to and preparation for that which at last takes those who have not received the warning by surprise.

The third part of the ships being destroyed would seem naturally to imply the destruction of commerce to this extent, the intercourse between the nations necessarily affected by the reign of terror around.

(To be continued.)

Fragment

"In the midst of the wreck and ruin of the creature, can you say, notwithstanding it all, 'I have found a spring in Thee, O God, and can count on Thee to give me all blessing in Christ; not to fill me once and then all gone, but to fill me again and again'? I would have you judge yourselves about the sort of faith you have. Is it a living faith ? It is the living God upon whom His people hang, drawing daily supplies from the fullness of the living springs in Him. Ah, if you have found that God, no depths can be too deep for the heart of that living God, who meets us according to the circumstances in which we are."

The Two Nature, And What They Imply.

Jno. 3:6; Gal. 5:17.

When we speak of there being two natures in the believer, as these passages, with others, plainly teach, it is needful, in the first place, to explain the words that we are using. The more so, as the word " nature" is not of frequent use in Scripture, and such expressions as "the old nature" and "the new nature"- in frequent use among ourselves-do not occur. I am not on this account condemning the expressions. They may be useful enough, and accurate enough, without being taken literally from Scripture; and he who would exclaim against them on this account would show only narrowness and unintelligence really.

But what such persons have a right to insist upon, and what we should all be as jealous for as they, is that these expressions should really represent to us things that are in Scripture,-not fancies of our own, but truths of the Word of God. Our business, therefore, must be to explain the terms we use, and justify them by the appeal to Scripture, by showing that the things themselves are there for which we use these expressions as convenient terms.

There is no word for "nature" in the Old Testament at all. In the New, the word translated so is, in every case but one, the word, phusis, "growth." In the exceptional case, it is genesis, a word familiar to us as the title of the first book of Scripture, so called from its describing the origin or "birth" of the world. The two words in this application come nearly to the same meaning; they express the result of what we have by our origin-the qualities that are developed in us by growth.

Now, for us as Christians, there are two births, and two growths, and thus we can rightly speak of two natures,- two sets of moral qualities that belong to us :the one as born of Adam, the other as born of God. Each is dependent upon the life received, and from which it springs. We are one thing as children of men merely ; we are another as children of God. Let us look at these separately now; and first, at that which is first in order of time.

Men we are, of course, all through. Here, again, we must learn to distinguish between what we are as men by God's creation and what we are as men fallen from the uprightness in which God created us at the beginning. We must distinguish between our nature as men and our nature as fallen men. Men we are, and are ever to be ; whatever change we pass through in new birth as to spirit and soul, whatever change awaits the body at the time when the Lord shall call us to be with Himself, we shall never lose our essential identity with what God created us to be at the first. We are the same persons all through,-the same individuals. No question of life or nature, such as we are about to consider, affects the reality of our possession of what we commonly call human nature all the way through. The youth differs much from the infant; the man from the youth ; yet the same human being, the same person, passes through these different stages. The caterpillar is the same being that is at first in the egg and that finally is the butterfly; so changed as to conditions that if we had not traced its continuity through these different forms, we should regard it as three or four different creatures; and yet we have the most absolute persuasion of its identity throughout. We might distinguish between the "nature "of the egg, the caterpillar, the chrysalis, and the butterfly, and yet again affirm its insect-nature to be unchanged throughout, and its individuality to be maintained too all through. It would be even its "nature" as an insect to go through these several changes. So we must distinguish between such terms as "our human nature," "our fallen nature," " our new nature." The fall did not unmake us as men ; our new birth does not unmake us on the other side. What is essential to manhood we never lose, and our individuality too is never changed.

These distinctions are not useless, but on the contrary, most important. Did we keep them in mind, there could be no misunderstanding (such as there often is) as to the Lord assuming our nature, for instance. The words of the hymn, " He wears our nature on the throne," are objected to by some, because they do not make such simple distinctions; and on the other hand, some would press that taking of our nature into consequences as to our blessed Lord, such as every true soul would indignantly repudiate. He did take our human nature:He was in all respects true man; the consequences and conditions of the fall are as little essential to manhood as the fracture of an image is essential to the image.

Let us consider, then, briefly and simply, what is essential to man as man, in order to separate from it as far as possible what is due to the fall:human nature horn fallen nature, or what Scripture calls "the flesh." We shall find mysteries, no doubt. Mysteries surround us, into which all our researches will enable us to penetrate but a very little way. Our knowledge is very partial; our ignorance is great. And no where among created things, do we find more mystery than when we attempt to penetrate the secrets of our own being. But in keeping closely to the Word, we shall find a sure and unfailing guide here as elsewhere, and a means of testing whatever may be gathered from other sources.

Man is constituted of spirit, soul, and body. He has lost none of these by the fall; he has only these when born again and a child of God. Mind, judgment, and therefore conscience are properties of his spirit. The affections and emotions are faculties of his soul, which is also that wherein is found the link between the spirit and the body, and by which the former, while highest of all in its nature, and (rightly) controlling all, apprehends the things of sense.

Man is thus by constitution a conscious, intelligent, and moral being, but dependent, in his present state, upon his senses for the furniture even of his mind-a " living soul." as Scripture terms him, and not a pure " spirit," as the angels are. Yet, with other spirits, he is in relation to God as his God, and his Father too; only that in this last respect he has sold, like Esau, his birthright for a mess of pottage.

The fall has affected man in all his constituent parts. It has subjected the spirit to the soul, and the soul to the body. The scene in Eden, which Scripture represents to us at once so simply and so graphically, is recalled to our minds as we ponder the inspired descriptions of what man now is. The link of affection, reverence, and dependence which held him to God being broken, he is like a building in which the roof has fallen in upon the base. Named from his lowest part, into which spirit and soul have sunk, he is "flesh." Thus "flesh" is the scriptural designation of his old or fallen nature.

"And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food," – there the body, and in its lowest cravings, is first; – "and that it was pleasant to the eyes" – meeting the emotional desires of the soul; – " and a tree to be desired to make one wise," – there the spirit is, – last, but aspiring to independence of God. "Ye shall be as gods " had been the temptation. Yielding to it, his mental and moral structure had collapsed. A thing of sense rather than God he had chosen for his dependence :the things of sense became his necessity and his masters ; his wisdom, henceforth not from above, was "earthly, sensual," and so, "devilish."
And this word "sensual," which, while it may well have that meaning here, is in fact the adjective of the word "soul," is the same word as that translated " natural ". where we read, " The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God; for they are foolishness unto him; neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned" (i Cor. 2:14).

The spirit here has given up the reins to the soul ; the soul is swayed by the allurements of sense ; the body itself, unbalanced and perverted in its natural instincts and appetites, becomes in turn the tempter of the soul. The man is "sensual:" his nature is "flesh."

We must not expect to find this use of the word " flesh," however, in the Old Testament, for a reason which will easily suggest itself to one who knows the peculiar character of the Old Testament. The law being the trial of man in nature, as long as the trial was going on, the character of man could not be fully brought out. Nor is it even in those first three gospels in which Christ's presentation to man is God's last experiment with him. " Having yet, therefore, one son, his well-beloved," as the Lord Himself puts it in the parable, "he sent him last unto them, saying, 'They will reverence my son'" (Matt. 22:6). But in John's gospel, it is seen that this trial too has failed :" He was in the world, and the world was made by Him, and the world knew Him not; He came unto His own, and His own received Him not." That is the very opening chapter; and thereupon he immediately goes on to speak of "the flesh," and of new birth :" But to as many as received Him, to them gave He [not "power," but] authority to become the sons of God, even to those who believed in His name." And who were these ? " Which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God."

One passage there is in the Old Testament, in which man is characterized as "flesh," in a manner which seems to approach the style of the New. And this passage is found in almost the beginning of Genesis. Before the flood, the Lord says, " My Spirit shall not always strive with man, for that he also is flesh, but his days shall be a hundred and twenty years." Yet even here the declaration seems more to point to the frailty of a creature with whom it would be unseemly for God to be always striving. And the limitation of his days seems to coincide with this interpretation. It is like the appeal to Job,-"What is man, that Thou shouldst magnify him? and that thou shouldst set Thine heart upon him? and that Thou shouldst visit him every morning, and try him every moment ?" Or, like that in that hundred and forty-fourth psalm, so striking a contrast with the eighth,-"Lord, what is man, that Thou takest knowledge of him? or the son of man, that Thou makest account of him? Man is like to vanity :his days are as a shadow that passeth away ! Bow Thy heavens, O Lord, and come down …. Cast forth lightning, and scatter them !"

All through the Old Testament, "flesh" is thus the symbol of weakness and nothingness :a use of it which is carried on also in the New. Witness a passage which is often cited in another way, and very falsely applied :it is the tender apology of the Lord for His disciples' sleeping in the garden:"The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak." Here, the "weak" flesh is clearly not at all the old nature. It is bodily infirmity which prevents it yielding to the will of the spirit.

In the gospel of John, we find, for the first time, the " flesh " used in the other signification of an evil nature,- our sad inheritance by the fall. We hear of a "will of the flesh" from which new birth does not proceed. And in the third chapter of the gospel, the Lord enforces upon Nicodemus the absolute necessity of a new birth, from the irreclaimable character of this,-"That which is born of the flesh,"-of man characterized as this,-" is flesh ; and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit:marvel not that I said unto you, 'Ye must be born again.' "

Thus, out of man's fallen nature proceeds nothing that can be acceptable to God. Like a field unsown, the heart of man will never produce aught, so to speak, but thorns and thistles-fruit of the curse. Life of the right sort must be dropped into it in the living germ of the Word of God, as our Lord teaches in the parable, and from that alone is there fruit for Him.* *It is one of those lessons from the book of creation, of which there are so many, that wheat is only found in connection with the presence of mail -never wild.*

New life is thus introduced into the field, and while this does take up and assimilate material from the soil, and thus there now goes on an active transformation of this kind, yet how false an account would it be to give of this to make this transformation the whole thing, and ignore the new life which was effecting it! Yet in the spiritual change of new birth, people are doing exactly this. They look at the moral transformation going on, and ignore what Scripture speaks of in the most decisive way-the introduction of a positive new life from God, from which the moral change proceeds.

It is no wonder if, in trying to define this, we soon lose ourselves, and are made aware of mysteries which crowd upon us at every step. Even natural life is a mystery, which the mind of man, vainly seeking to penetrate, is trying in an exactly similar manner to deny. We are told that we may as well talk of a principle of "aquosity" in water as of a vital principle in a living thing. Yet as a cause of certain effects otherwise unaccountable, it is as vain to deny as it may be impossible to define. So spiritually we may learn lessons from experience which at least rebuke the folly of not listening to the Word. And Scripture points these out also, giving us, as needed explanation of what every child of God finds in experience, a doctrine which alone makes all intelligible, and enables us to learn and use the experience itself aright.

As for natural birth there must be, not merely certain processes, but the communication of a life-principle which produces, controls, and harmonizes these processes, so is there precisely for new birth. The voice that soon will quicken out of death natural-which all that are in the graves shall hear and shall come forth-now quickens similarly the spiritually dead,-"Verily, verily, I say unto you, The hour is coming, and now is, when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God ; and they that hear shall live:for as the Father hath life in Himself, so hath He given to the Son to have life in Himself" (Jno. 5:25, 26). Here there is a life communicated by One who has it in Himself to communicate,-a new life for those " dead ;" in whom, if there be not this first, no moral change is possible at all.

This new birth the Spirit and the Word combine to effect. A man is born of water and of the Spirit, the water here, as the symbol of purification, taking the place that the seed of the Word does in the parable elsewhere. As the apostle Peter tells us, we are " born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by the Word of God …. and this is the word which by the gospel is preached unto you " (i Pet. 1:23, 25). And so the apostle of the Gentiles explains Christ's purification of His Church to be " with the washing of water by the Word" (Eph. 5:26).

To take up again the former figure of the seed, used. by both the Lord and the apostle, the seed is the incorruptible Word which gives form and character to the life-manifestation ; but the life itself must be in the germ, or it cannot be manifested. So the word of the Lord embodies and manifests the new life we receive, but the energy of the life communicated by the Spirit works by the Word, and there is "growth"-the development of a new nature, which is characterized by its blessed and holy attributes.

Thus Scripture speaks of "the ingrafted Word" (Jas. 1:21) ; and the apostle John, similarly connecting the new nature with the Word, says, "Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for His seed remaineth in him, and he cannot sin, because he is born of God" (i Jno. 3:9). This is Peter's "incorruptible seed" of "the Word of God," but the life communicated by the Spirit, as already said, causes it to germinate; and, being "everlasting life," His seed remains.

The "nature" of the seed determines the form of life. The new nature, God's gift, is not a mixed or partially good thing. It is in itself perfect (though capable of and needing development), without mixture of evil from the very first. In the man in whom it is implanted, evil indeed exists, as thorns and thistles in the field in which wheat is sown:these things being not the imperfection of the wheat in any wise, though hindrances to the crop they are. The character of the seed we have just seen, where the apostle says that the child of God " doth not commit (or rather " practice ") sin ; for His seed remaineth in him." The new life, if obscured by the evil, is untouched by it, and in essential,-nay, victorious opposition to sin. It will vindicate its character in one born of God, and manifest him as born of God ; and where we do not see this result, we cannot recognize as a Christian the person in whom it fails, although granting the possibility of seed being in the ground that has not yet come to the surface. But "faith"-the first principle of the new nature- " worketh by love ; " and " faith," if it have not works, is dead, being alone :" "as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God." (Gal. 5:6; Jas. 2:19 ; Rom. 8:14.)

It is needful to insist on this at all times-never more needful than at the present time. It is no exaltation of faith to maintain it as justifying and saving, and yet possibly without power to produce fruit in the world, or to glorify God in a holy life. The apostle's faith was the power of a life devoted as his was,-" The life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for me" (Gal. 2:20).

Such, then, in its character, and such in its energy, is the new nature. It will be understood that the gospel has to be received, and deliverance realized, before this can be properly known ; nor do I dwell upon these now.

But such is the new nature ; and being such, it is the means of effecting that wonderful change in a man which we speak of as "conversion." As the seed converts the lifeless elements of the soul into the beauty of the living plant, so the powers and faculties of soul and spirit are brought back from death to life. The spirit, redeemed from self-idolatry, and having learned the lesson of dependence upon God which faith implies, is reinstated in its old supremacy ; the affections of the soul are taught to trail no longer upon earth, and set upon God as their only worthy object. The body, yet unredeemed, and "dead, because of sin,"-awaiting its redemption at the time of the resurrection (Rom. 8:10, II, 23),-can only as yet be "kept under, and brought into subjection" to the man new-created in Christ Jesus. (Rom. 8:13 ; i Cor. 9:27.)

But now we must again draw some very important distinctions. We speak of the old nature, or "flesh," and of the new. We speak also of the "old man" and of the "new." Is there any difference between these? and if so, what is the use of the distinction ?

A nature and a person are in many ways widely different. Unconverted and converted, the person is of course the same. It is the one who was dead in sin who is quickened and raised up ; it is the same person who was condemned and a child of wrath who is justified, sanctified, and redeemed to God. It is the person too- the "man"-to whom accountability attaches, and not to the nature. Acts belong to the individual, and not to his nature ; and in the case of man, the only rational and responsible creature of whom we have something that can be called knowledge, we know that he is responsible to walk contrary to [not indeed his nature as God first constituted him, but yet] his nature as he actually now possesses it, fallen from its primitive state.

Only, in fact, by a license of speech do we speak of nature acting. To say of a person, "nature acts in him," whether said approvingly or disapprovingly, still implies that the man himself has lost command of himself, or does not exercise it. Many a Christian thus talks of the flesh in himself or others, as if its being flesh that was exhibited explained matters sufficiently. Yet, if he thinks about it, he will realize that he uses this language to escape responsibility, so little idea has he of responsibility attaching to a nature. Yet if this excused him, it would excuse every sinner that ever lived ; and how could God judge the world? In point of fact, men do use every where the truth of their sinful nature in order to escape condemnation; whereas if they would listen to conscience, they would assuredly find that not a single sin have they ever committed which they could truthfully say their nature forced them to. It inclined, no doubt; but they should, and might, have controlled the inclination. The essence of their guilt is, that they do not.

In the day of judgment, therefore, the award will be given, not according to the nature, (in which they are alike), but to their works, in which they are not alike. God "will render to every man according to his deeds" (Rom. 2:6). And this, and this alone, will be the exact measure of guilt and responsibility.

It may be objected to all this, " How, then, can the man in the seventh of Romans, who is converted, and has a will for good, find, on the other hand, the flesh in such opposition, that what he desires, he is quite unable to perform ? How can there still be no ability, when the will is right?"

But the answer is plain, that the good he desires would not be good really if done in other than the sense of dependence upon God, which is the only right condition of the creature. The power of sin from which he has to be delivered lies in the self-complacent self-seeking which assumes the shape of holiness to a converted man. For a holiness that makes him something, he has to accept a Christ who shall draw him out of himself. The "good" (in one sense that,) which he is seeking, is really a phantom shape which God has to destroy, to give him instead the true and only God. Thus only crippled Jacob can become Israel.

" Power belongeth only unto God." True-ever true ; but were we right with Him, could it be lacking to us? Assuredly it could not. Still, then, it remains true that no one is shut up powerlessly in bondage to evil. The key of his prison-house is in his own hand.

It is the man, then, who sins, and is the sinner; it is the man who has to be forgiven and justified ; it is the man who is responsible to walk, not in the flesh, but in the Spirit. It is the same person-the same individual all through.

Yet, in another way, we may surely say as to the Christian, that the man that was and the man that is are total 'opposites. I was a sinner in my sins, freely following the evil that I loved :I am a child of God, with a new nature, new affections, and a new object. Between these two persons there is a wide interval indeed. The first is what Scripture calls "the old man, which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts"(Eph. 4:22); the second is styled " the new man, which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness" (5:24), and "renewed in knowledge, after the image of Him who created him, where …. Christ is all and in all" (Col. 3:10, 11). The first it speaks of as being "crucified with Christ," as it does of our "having put off the old man with his deeds" (Rom. 6:6; Col. 3:9.*) *Eph. 4:22 is not different from this, although the common version might make a difficulty. But the ("putting off" here, and the "putting on," ver. 24, are really in the past.* The second, similarly, it speaks of our "having put on." What we were we are not, and never can be again. But while this is happily true of us, it is also true that the " flesh "-the old nature-we have in us still, and shall have, till the body of humiliation is either dropped, or changed into the glorified likeness of the Lord's own body.

The old man is gone forever, but the flesh abides:in those who are possessors of the Spirit, still " the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh ;" and the exhortation is, not to destroy the flesh, as if that were possible, but " walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfill the lusts of the flesh" (Gal. 5:16, 17). A poor conclusion this, to many in our day! but to those who know themselves, how great a relief to find thus an explanation of what experience testifies to ! It may be, and is, a mystery how we can have at the same time in us two natures, total opposites of each other,-how Christ can dwell in us, and yet sin dwell too; but Scripture affirms it, and experience also. If it is God's mind to allow us to know thus for awhile what evil is, not by yielding to it surely, but as realizing its opposition, can He not make this experience even both to serve us and glorify Him ?

The flesh remains, and remains unchanged :" I know that in me (that is, in my flesh) dwelleth no good thing" must always be said by one who identifies himself with the flesh. " The mind of the flesh is death ; . . . because the mind of the flesh is enmity against God ; for it is not subject to the law of God, neither indeed can be " (Rom, 7:18; 8:6, 7). Thus the Word speaks of the incurable evil of the old nature, which, attaching itself, as we have seen it does, to the things of time and sense amid which we are, God's remedy for it is Christ as an object for our hearts in heaven, and His cross as that by which we are crucified to a world which the flesh lusts after, and which in its moral elements consists of "the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of life." We are not in the flesh; we are in Christ before God ; our life is hid with Christ in God. The knowledge of our portion in Him, as given us by the Spirit, divorces our hearts, and turns our eyes away from that which ministers to the evil in us. "As strangers and pilgrims," journeying on to a point which faith, not sight, beholds, we learn to, "abstain from fleshly lusts, which war against the soul" (i Pet. 2:2), and, as a consequence, to "mortify the deeds of the body" (Rom. 8:13). Our true power is in absent-mindedness,-a heart set upon that which stirs no lust, for it is our own forever, and we are invited to enjoy it.

This satisfies, and this alone. By " the exceeding great and precious promises" we "become partakers of (or rather, "in communion with,") the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust" (2 Pet. 1:4). The new life within us is strengthened and developed, and this alone can divine things work upon. Christ seen and enjoyed by faith, we grow up unto Him in all things, from the babe to the young man and to the father, when we have but to sit down, as it were, and endlessly enjoy our infinite blessing.
Before closing this brief sketch of an important subject, let us look closer at this question of growth, as the apostle puts it before us here. Growth (mental, not physical,)- the growth of a babe into a man, is a matter of education; not merely what professes to be such, but the influence upon it of surrounding circumstances which call forth the hidden energies of the mind and heart, and of examples which stimulate and encourage to imitation. God has thus, on the one hand, for us His discipline of trial; on the other, His perfect example of what He would have us grow up to. In general, men reach about the level of what is thus before them. God puts before us Christ, that we may grow up into Christ. Our occupation will tell upon us. What we give ourselves to will make its necessary mark upon us. The exhortation to us is, "Set your mind on things above, where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God."

The admonition, therefore, of the apostle to the babes and young men-to the fathers he has none-is to let nothing take away their eyes from Christ. The babes he warns as to Antichrist, not that he may perfect them in prophetical knowledge, but because in their little acquaintance as yet with the truth of what Christ is, they might be led away into some deceit of the enemy. Satan's first snare for souls is some distorting error, which shall in fact deform to us the face in which alone all the glory of God shines, or substitute for His face some witchery for the natural eye, in which the heart may be unawares entangled, supposing it to be the true and divine object before it. This is Antichrist,-not yet the full denial of the Father and the Son, of course,-and antichrists there are many.

Oh, that Christians did more realize the immense value of truth !-the terrible and disastrous effect of error ! What presents to me, when seen aright, the blessed face of God Himself, may through Satan's artifice darken, obscure, distort this, or present to me a treacherous and destructive lure instead.

The apostle therefore warns the babes as to false Christs doctrinally. The young men are not in the same danger as to this. They are strong, and the word of God abides in them, and they have overcome the wicked one. Their danger now lies from the allurements of a world into which their very energy is carrying them. The word to these is, "Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world." For the eye affects the heart; and it is one thing to have seen by the Word that the world is under judgment, and another thing to have gone through it in detail, looking it in the face, and counting it all loss for Christ.

This the fathers have, however, done :therefore he says to them (and it is all he needs to say), " Ye have known Him that is from the beginning." It is all we gain by looking through the world ; yet it is a great gain to be able to say of it all through, " How unlike Christ it is ! " And what when we have reached this ? Has the "father" nothing more to learn? Oh, yes, he is but at the beginning. He has but now his lesson-book before him, for undistracted learning. But he needs not caution in the same way not to mix any thing with Christ, and not to take any thing else for Christ. How much toil to reach, how slow we are in reaching, so simple a conclusion ! But then the joy of eternity begins. Oh, to have Him ever before us, unfolding His glories, as He does to one whose eyes and whose heart are all for Him ! The knowledge of the new man is "Christ is all!" To the martyr, in the fire which consumed him, this knowledge broke out in the words which told of a joy beyond the torment-" NONE BUT CHRIST ! "

Seth In Place Of Abel:

THE LESSON OF THE AGES AS TO HOLINESS.

Genesis 4:-(Continued.)

At the cross, as we have already partly seen, the controversy between God and man comes out in the most open manner. The " way of Cain "is seen reproduced in that Pharisaism which was ever the most earnest opponent of the Lord, and which He on His part denounced most earnestly. " Have any of the Pharisees believed on Him?" they could ask with assurance; and on the other side He could let them know, "The publicans and harlots go into the kingdom of God before you " (Jno. 7:48 ; Matt. 21:31). Pharisaism was indeed the most successful device of Satan to hinder the acceptance of that sentence of condemnation which the prophet had long since declared to have passed upon the people,-"Then said God, 'Call his name Lo-ammi; for ye are not My people, and I will not be your God' " (Hos. 1:9). Man, in Israel, had thus been fully tried and found wanting; and the Babylonian ax had thereupon cut down the doomed tree. And although a remnant had returned again to rebuild their temple, the glory had not returned. Their true hope was only in accepting the sentence upon them, and awaiting, in Messiah, their Deliverer.

Then arose Pharisaism, with its fierce blind zeal for a law which but condemned them, and its eager claim for a righteousness which refused, in Christ the Lord, their righteousness. Their fanatical enmity slew the King of Glory, and brought His blood upon themselves and on their children.

But the cross, if on the one hand the completed testimony as to man's guilt and ruin, is on the other the removal for faith of all that hinders blessing. Christ in man's place under death and judgment owns in his behalf the righteousness of God in the penalty which He bears and bears away from him; while He, the Second Man, as the Head of a new creation, brings those connected with Him into the enjoyment of a portion of which He is worthy, and which is theirs in Him. "In Him" affirms the setting aside of the old head, and all connected with him; "if any man be in Christ, it is new creation; old things have passed away; behold, all things are become new."

But how far does this go ? Is it as sinners only we are set aside by the cross ? and is the question here only, of righteousness and acceptance with God ? It is our " old man" that is crucified with Christ, and that is just ourselves as the men we were-sinners assuredly, and only that,-and this "that the body of sin might be destroyed [annulled], that henceforth we should not serve sin." Thus there is, at least, a practical purpose in it. We are to begin here a new life as saints, not sinners. The dominion of sin is broken for us. Holiness is that to which God has called us, and we are assuredly meant to realize our calling. Holiness is not a thing imputed, as righteousness is ; and it is a condition, not merely a position.

But here, more than one road opens before us, and it is once more to be realized that God's thoughts are not our thoughts, nor His ways our ways. Thus, if there are two ways, we are prone to take our own. God's way, indeed, naturally does not present itself to us as an alternative. We do not look for the way-marks :we suppose, perhaps, that there are difficulties in the way, but not as to the way. Thus the "broad way" is still the by-path, and God's way narrow and overlooked. Man's way is self-occupation, self-satisfaction,-the method which changed an angel into a devil,-the very way by which sin came at first. God's way necessarily is the opposite, to turn man from himself, to occupy him with Another, give him an object which will draw him out of himself, satisfying him with Him who is alone competent to meet all the needs of the soul."I am crucified with Christ" is the language of one who realizes this:" nevertheless I live ;yet not I, but Christ liveth in me " (Gal. 2:20).Here is what has displaced self in its religious form as well as every other. It is Seth in the place of Abel, and the fruit of it is, no Lamech-no "strong man,"-but an Enos,-a frail one :but then the worship of the heart is God's,-"we worship God in the spirit, and glory in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh " (Phil. 3:3).

Directly athwart man's way lies the fact that still in the child of God is found an evil nature, a "sin that dwelleth in" us, a "body of death" we loathe yet cannot escape from, so that " if we say we have no sin, we lie, and do not the truth " (i Jno. 1:8). Yea, he who is admitted by God to see in paradise what could not be told by human tongue, must then have "a thorn in the flesh, the messenger of Satan to buffet" him, lest he should be exalted above measure. (2 Cor. 12:) Pride, self-exaltation, is the danger which we have most to dread, and which is ready to turn all good into corruption. Unlike all other sin, pride grows upon what is good, and thus God in His wisdom can use the very consciousness of evil which we have learned to hate, to subdue this monster evil.

Notice how, when Peter, in true love to his Master, but confident in himself, declares, "I will lay down my life for Thy sake," the Lord answers him with the forewarning of his denial of Him so soon to follow. There was no remedy but by the fall to allow him to realize his weakness that he might thus find strength, and so be able even to "strengthen his brethren." The open sin, with all its grossness, was less evil than that fatal self-confidence from which nothing but a fall such as his could awaken him.

So with a self-occupied soul under the law, as in the experience of the seventh of Romans, only the repeated check, "The good that I would I do not; the evil that I would not, that I do,"-so inexplicable as it is until we realize the divine principle,-can meet the need by blocking the road which, broad as it seems, leads to a precipice. It is God with whom we are at issue, while yet we think in our hearts we are but seeking His will. We "delight in the law of God after the inward man," and yet "find another law in our members, warring against the law of our minds, and bringing us into captivity to the law of sin which is in our members."

Here, indeed, strangely, some would settle down. " This is the path," they would argue ; " but, you see. it is blocked,-progress is impossible :here we must stay until death opens the way for us." But what, then, means the anguished cry, "Oh wretched man that I am ! who shall deliver me?" Has God indeed left His redeemed in the meantime hopelessly captive to a law of sin ? How, then, is it said, "Sin shall not have dominion over you, because ye are not under the law, but under grace"? But are we not, then, "under the law"? If for righteousness we are indeed not under it, are we not for holiness? There is, indeed, the whole question. Let us seek the answer to it.

Two things face us at the outset:first, that "the strength of sin is the law" (i Cor. 15:56); and this certainly corresponds with the experience we have, just been realizing. It is not that it is that which condemns us,-true though that is,-but that it is the strength of sin.

The second thing is, that "the law is not of faith" (Gal. 3:12); and faith is that which is the very principle of fruitfulness :it is "faith that worketh by love "(Gal. 5:6).

These things go together, and are of the deepest import as to holiness. The law, in short, occupies me with myself ; faith's object is Christ. And Christ is made of God unto us "sanctification" as much as "righteousness" (i Cor. 1:30). It is here that we have the answer to that despairing cry, "Who shall deliver me?" and learn to "thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord." Here is the method of sanctification:"We all, with open face beholding the glory of the Lord, are changed from glory to glory, even as by the Lord the Spirit" (2 Cor. 3:18). This is the method of faith ; it is Seth appointed in the place of Abel, whom Cain slew; it is the apostle's "Most gladly, therefore, will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me" (2 Cor. 12:9); it is the frail Enos instead of the strong Lamech; it is the spiritual circumcision in which we "worship God in the Spirit, and glory in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh."

How slow are we to perceive that all self-confidence is "confidence in the flesh"! When the disciples asked that question of the Lord, "Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven ?" "Jesus called a little child unto Him, and set him in the midst of them, and said, 'Verily I say unto you, Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven. Whosoever shall humble himself, therefore, as this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven." (Matt, 18:1-4.)

How this harmonizes with the whole tenor of that which we have been considering ! and how easy it would seem to make the attainment of that which is true greatness in the sight of God ! We have but to consent to be the little and feeble things we are;-we have but to find our strength .outside ourselves, in One who is almighty ;-we have but to recognize our nothingness, that Christ may be all things to us. "Christ is all:" that is. our practical theology; and who shall tell the extent or fullness of those three words?

Self-occupation, self-consciousness, self-complacency:these are the weeds that spring out of our cultivation of holiness, as still men commonly practice it, and which God's winter is required to kill. Defeat is as to these our one necessity; and if our efforts at self-culture meet but this, there is only one cause as there is one remedy. To be "changed from glory into glory" needs not effort- cannot be attained by it, but is attained by keeping in the Sun, whose rays thus glorify all they shine upon. With his soul penetrated with that glory, the apostle says, " I am crucified with Christ:nevertheless I live ; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me :and the life which I live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for me."

Conflict With Satan, And The Panoply Of God

(Eph. 6:10-20.)

I. THE CONFLICT.

It is a most significant thing indeed that that which is ordinarily conceived as Christian conflict is in Scripture scarcely noticed-never insisted on as a necessity at all, while that which is insisted on in it is, in its turn, almost unknown in its true character by the mass of Christians. With these, conflict is with the sin within them, and the Scripture-example of it is considered to be in the seventh of Romans, where we have, in fact, something very different-the struggle (an impotent struggle) of one in bonds. Here, the only effect is, to reveal the bondage, and manifest the law of sin under which he is. And when, in answer to the cry for deliverance, liberty is found, the practical rule becomes "Reckon yourselves dead indeed unto sin;" which if we do, conflict with it becomes impossible.

It is true that if we have not been reckoning ourselves thus dead,-if our eyes have wandered away from Christ, and we have become entangled with other objects, there will be doubtless a struggle to break away, if on the other hand God's chastening do not rather burst through the snare. But the path of progress is never in this direction; and if the "flesh" does ever-and it is true it does-"lust against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh," the remedy is, to "walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh " (Gal. 5:16, 17).

The strife which we must not expect to escape is this, that "we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in heavenly places." "We wrestle"-it is a matter of course-we do wrestle, all of us; and then he spreads before us the array against which we are contending. He does not make little of these foes; he would not have us make little of them. They are principalities; they are powers; they are masters of this world by means of the spiritual darkness in which it is wrapped ; they are heavenly beings, though fallen. If it is always a dangerous mistake to underrate an enemy, how dangerous must it be to do so in this case ! Here are foes who are able to bring in all the world to their aid, and who work in the dark, by "wiles" and stratagem. It is against these wiles we have to stand, in a warfare which, though it has its times of special pressure, is never relinquished. It is not enough to stand in the evil day:having done all, we must still "stand."

But to what end are these wiles directed ?-what is meant by this warfare ? To learn this, we must consider with what in this epistle these things stand connected. We are seen here to be in the heavenly places in Christ, blest with all spiritual blessings there in Him ; and the apostle invites us, in the practical acceptance of this truth, to go in by faith and take possession of our promised land. Thus our Joshua is to be our Leader, and Israel's entrance into Canaan is to be our type. It is to this that he refers when he reminds us that we wrestle not (as they did) with flesh and blood. The antitype is greater than the type, and, so far, in contrast with it. Israel found the land full of enemies, ready to resist their claim to possession ; the struggle was, to keep them out of what the divine word had given over to them. God has made heaven our own, and He calls us now, as has been said, to take possession of it; and this is what brings all the power of Satan to resist and defeat us if he can.

Well he knows, if we do not, what is involved. By faith to lay hold of our place in heaven is in effect to become heavenly-strangers and pilgrims upon earth. And this means power for walk, for separation from the world to God,-for holiness. It means the being Christians practically-the maintenance of testimony to Christ, and to His sufficiency for the soul. There is no other holiness for the Christian but a heart in heaven :there is no proper testimony to Christ but a heart where Christ is. Well the enemy may desire, then, to keep us out of this. The battle will surely be severe, unremitting, by which this is to be accomplished.

The weapons which he employs are indicated in this fact, that he is the ruler of the darkness of this world. Our inheritance is with the "saints in light." It is in the light that we are called to walk ; and thus if the eye be single, the whole body will be full of light. The darkness of this world is thus the very means wherewith to antagonize the light of heaven. Holiness is the "holiness of truth" (Eph. 4:24, marg.)', the world is where "man walketh in a vain show, and disquieteth himself in vain " (Ps. 39:6). Bring in its principles, its aims, its objects, and the truth is obscured-a dark fog rests upon the spiritual vision, the steps falter or go astray, "the whole head is sick, and the whole heart faint" (Isa. 1:5).

The book of Joshua shows clearly enough, as a type, this method of the adversary. Israel are brought into the land by the power of God, Jordan dried up before them, their Gilgal-pillar is raised on the bank, and the angel of the Lord takes His place as Captain of the Lord's host, to lead them into possession. Then, to show them how to be "strong in the Lord, and in the power of His might," Jericho falls while they but walk around it. Jericho is the world, whose judgment is indeed of God, though faith anticipates, and consents with it. It is this consent of faith which is the very secret of success in the conflict following:it is with the apostle to say, " God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, whereby the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world." (Gal. 6:14.)

It must not be thought strange that it is here, after we have left the world, and have entered, in type, into the heavenly places, that we find the judgment of the world. There is no possible right judgment of the world except as we are in faith outside it. We find there that which meets and neutralizes the power of Satan. The darkness of this world cannot envelope one who is with God on the resurrection side of it. Thus Jericho is wholly burnt with fire, as accursed, and its silver and gold come into the Lord's treasury, but not into man's ;-no man must take of it. Obedience here is a first principle for blessing.

And here begins the failure among the people of God, which makes them turn their back toward an enemy that they have presumptuously despised, and withers up a strength which is no longer in the Lord. Achan covets a goodly Babylonish garment and a wedge of gold, and hides them in the earth under his tent. And the anger of the Lord is upon Israel, who go on haughtily; not seeking counsel of God, but building themselves up upon a victory they have won, to find defeat as sure as had been the victory. How soon may the very power of God become to a people no longer walking with Him a tradition and a snare !

It is but Ai they have now to deal with,-Ai, " a heap of ruins," as the word means:they had just seen Jericho reduced to such a heap ; they were meeting, as it were, but the old defeated foe. They had to learn that, for a people declined from God, a vanquished foe may have a resurrection. The world which yesterday was under our feet may prevail against us to-day, and will, if we are no longer with God,-if seduced by something that is of the world, we have spared that which was devoted to judgment, or perverted to our own use what was devoted to the Lord.

With a faithful and omniscient God, judgment is as sure upon departure from Him as victory in going with Him. Alas that even a Joshua can fall upon His face when Israel is smitten!-as if God had failed instead of Israel! There is nothing arbitrary in His dealings with us,-no wrong in any thing His holy hand can do to us. All is good,-the buffets' of His love ; nought else. Creep nearer to His heart, and you are safe.

Be strong in the Lord, and in the power of His might,- strong against the wiles of the rulers of the darkness of this world :this is what this history keeps repeating to us.

Ai too is vanquished in its turn, and burnt, though with an effort which shows how the people had been weakened. And then we have, in the league with the Gibeonites, a very plain sample indeed of the wiles of the enemy; and again we find how Israel walked by their own wisdom, and "asked not counsel at the mouth of the Lord." So it ever is:they are deceived, no doubt, but why are they deceived? The results of this false step are permanent:they entangle themselves in the treacherous alliance by an oath by Jehovah, and dare not commit a breach of it. How terrible an alliance with that which is not of God, from which yet the word of God itself forbids withdrawal ! and yet how many of His people can form such associations without even a question apparently being raised in their minds !

All this enforces the original lesson. We see that the enemy's attempt is the same however various the means which he may use. Yet in all of these, it is still by the power of the world that he would keep us out of the enjoyment of our heavenly portion ; and it is for the acquisition of this that God equips and arms and sends us forth.

The question, then, becomes urgent with us, What do we know of this conflict? and that will resolve itself into another, Are we earnest enough to lay hold of what is ours within the vail? This is a wholly different one from that which asks, Are we seeking to live, as men would deem, correctly, benevolently, or even piously? All this at least can be answered with little check of conscience by those who if you speak of any possible present entering upon our heavenly inheritance, would think it impracticable mysticism. The book of Joshua has for most still no typical meaning. It is but a history of the past Heaven lies for us, as the paradise of old did for those before the flood, with its gate barred against us. Only the world is practical for the realist; and men, they will tell you, are realists to-day.

Even He in whom heaven did once come down to us has been changed, they say, since He went up to heaven again. Human they suppose He is, but in such sort only as when John saw Him in Patmos, and fell at His feet as dead. Paul too was in paradise, and could bring us back no word from there. What can we know, then ? and what does it matter, when we shall know so soon ?

Yet it is the same Paul who exhorts us, "If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth at the right hand of God;" and to " set your mind on things above, not on things on the earth" (Col. 3:i, 2, marg.). No doubt, at the best, " we see through a glass darkly," but so bright is the scene beyond, that it is only as when we must have such a darkened glass to gaze upon the sun. Bright enough Christ's glory shines there in its proper home, to produce in us the change of which the apostle speaks-"from glory to glory" (2 Cor. 3:18), where the least degree is glory. And it is this glow in the face which Satan would seek to darken with the fog of this world, and wrap the children of day in the disguise and sadness of the night. Let us struggle on,-and we are told we shall have to struggle, to get what we may of that which in its very dimmest outshines all the promise and glory of the world.

(To be continued.)

“The Fatherhood Of God, And The Brotherhood Of Man”

Worldly and worldly-minded men are fond of the above-written phrase, and frequently quote and use it as an axiomatic truth, when, except in a very broad and general sense, it is not truth at all. In the sense of Creator and creatures, it may be admitted; but even then it must be remembered that man, by sin, ruined the first creation, and alienated himself from God, and took sides with Satan against God his Creator. In this he separated himself from his Creator, and broke off relationship with Him ; so that God gave him up to his own will, and permitted him to go his own way for a long time, that thus he might satisfy himself that he could not get on without God. All this time, however, the Creator offered reconciliation to man if he would do righteousness. On this ground also man totally failed, and the just judgment of his Creator upon him was, "None righteous, -no, not one:" "there is none that seeketh after God."

But " God so loved the world, that He gave His, only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on Him should not perish, but have everlasting life." Here God comes in mercy and offers reconciliation to man ; and it is upon this ground, and upon this alone, that the relationship im-plied in the phrase written at the head of this article can be restored. "Come out from among them, and be ye separate," says God, "and I will be a Father unto you, and ye shall be My sons and daughters." Here is the Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man, and no where else does it exist but in the Lord Jesus Christ. Out of Christ, man is not and never can be in relationship with God. He is of his father the devil, and he will do the works of his father, as the Lord said to the Pharisees. "Ye mast be born again."-"They that are in the flesh cannot please God."-"The end of all flesh is come before" God. In Christ Jesus alone is life-the new life that you must be born into to come again into the relationship of children with God. The Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man is now restored in the Lord Jesus Christ. It is formed in the assembly, or Church of God, which is composed of all that are born of God, and united to Christ, the Head in heaven, by the Holy Spirit of God. "Call no man your father upon the earth ; for One is your Father, which is in heaven," "and all ye are brethren." (Matt, 23:8, 9.) J.S.P.

Colossians 2

This chapter furnishes us with some important warnings against man's interference with so wonderful a revelation as God has given. It is well for the heart to have firm hold of the grand truth that all is from God, and therefore not to be reasoned about, but received in faith; and the more unquestioning that faith, the more apprehension there will be of the mind of God. For this, we need, as in the prayer of the apostle in Eph. 1:, that God would give the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him, the eyes of the heart being enlightened, etc. Here, too, Paul expresses the desire of his heart that there might be in the saints every where this knowledge of the mystery of God, which would so satisfy the soul that its search after other things would be stopped. The common participation in these things by saints would knit their hearts together in love. It was not alone for those at Colosse the apostle desired these things, but for as many as had not seen his face in the flesh. His ministry was in the whole Church, and what he desired for one he desired for all, longing after them in the bowels of Jesus Christ.

To him a special dispensation, or stewardship, of the mystery of God was committed; and this was not alone taken up as responsibility-" Woe is me if I preach not the gospel," but his heart's affections had been won to Christ as the One who had died and risen for him, and whose love, thus shown toward him when in sin, now constrained Paul to live to Christ.

In the mystery of God are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge. If this be apprehended, man's enticing words will not beguile one. He may offer what to the unwary and uninstructed may appear fascinating, but it is only at best a poor substitute, and is introduced by the enemy in order to divert from Christ.

A little word of commendation is graciously added,- words of encouragement in the path of right for those already in danger of being warped from it. This, in the wisdom of the Spirit, was the true way to gain access to their hearts; not by blaming them for their failings, but commending their order, and the steadfastness of their faith in Christ.

But there was not lacking the exhortation to walk in Christ and not to be satisfied with present attainment, but to be gaining firmer hold of the One that they had already known. " Rooted and built up " speaks of growth in every way,-a firmer hold of the One already known through grace; such as the picture given in Phil. 3:-Christ at the right hand of God as the source of all grace and blessing, and as an object for the heart in heaven, and Christ in His lowly path down here as the One whose mind we shall thus have.

Only as we get the object right will the path be right,- all else is but fleshly effort; and however sincere the soul in its desires, it must surely succumb to the pressure from outside and within; and what is produced becomes the piety of nature, sanctified flesh, and not the manifestation of the life of Jesus in our mortal bodies. How fruitless the attempt to be any way walking as approved unto God save as we take in, in faith, this blessed object-living by faith,-"the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for me! Self-judgment may clear the eye from the mists which have obscured it, and in this we need constantly to be exercised; but only as we see Him in the unclouded light of the glory of God can there be energy communicated to maintain our ground against the enemy, or go on to perfection.

But human philosophy-the mere working of mind and imagination about moral principles, which to the pride of the heart might seem an easier or, at least, a needful way of settling many points, the faithful needed to be warned against. Tradition, law-keeping, and such-like things would approve themselves to the mind or conscience, but they were after the rudiments of the world; and when God had given up dealing with man upon that ground, they were but "beggarly elements."

By the law, God had taken up man in the flesh, and educated him in certain moral principles. If he heartily adopted these principles, and accepted them as a proper definition of human righteousness, they led to the discovery of his own incapacity to keep them, and guilty and without strength was in consequence man's proved condition by them. They became the ministry of death and condemnation. But this was not now God's way with man, still less were mere human traditions, however sanctified by the appearance of antiquity. Christ, a heavenly Christ, was now revealed-the revelation of God's perfect love to man in all his proved need, and the remedy for all the sin in which he was found, through His atoning death and sufferings, as well as now risen and glorified, was the measure of man's place and acceptance in the heavenlies. In view of Christ, how all man's traditions, and even the law, holy as it was, and God's purpose in giving it, sink into nothing in comparison !

How wonderful the statement that follows !-" For in Him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily. And ye are complete in Him, which is the Head of all principality and power." How suitable to the condition of those who were in danger of looking another way, to remind them of this! Divine fullness-the fullness of Godhead dwelling in a man! As to the cross itself, how striking the way in which it is presented ! " For in Him all the fullness was pleased to dwell; and, having made peace by the blood of His cross, by Him to reconcile all things unto itself." How well and completely must that work be done which had thus been taken up !

From ver. 10-15 is a statement of some aspects of that completeness, and it seems as if the Spirit of God anticipates all the ways in which need could be felt, and shows how fully they are met. Thus are the avenues guarded by which these human devices would gain access. The divine remedy being known, the human is not needed.

A Jew would come with his circumcision, and press it as a divine institution, and how early this was done, and how successful the snare, Galatians and other portions of the Word prove. But in Christ I have the true circumcision,-the body of the flesh put off, all that to which the law applied gone, through the death of Christ. But I have more:I have been buried with Him in baptism; yet not left in the grave either, though I, as a poor corrupt and corrupting creature, needed to be put out of sight. But faith in the working of God, who raised Christ from the dead, has linked me, identified with Him, in this new place with God.

My history closed, as to the ruin I was connected with, and a new beginning made for me-a risen man in Christ. Next, as to my condition in nature as dead in sins, I am made alive together with Him, and as to all the sins which were the expression of that state, they are all forgiven. How thorough the deliverance His love has wrought, that the conscience, free from all guilt, the heart might delight itself in God, and now no longer dead to Him, "alienated from the life of God," but alive with Christ, my privilege is, to live to Him who has thus rescued and redeemed me !

But there remain two other things, which, though they are not my personal condition, which has thus been so blessedly met, were yet opposed to me, and operated to shut me out from blessing. The first is the law, not now looked at in its rule over me and the consequent results, but as that which, given to the Jew as his distinctive privilege, if it shut him into the place of privilege, shut me, the Gentile, out. This, then, is taken out of the way, nailing it to His cross, as now fully entered into in Eph. 2:, the barrier has been removed, and no longer withstands the entrance of the Gentile into the full favor of God, and place of nearness such as was never known to a Jew or could be for a man in the flesh.

Lastly, principalities and powers, under whose dominion I was, have been triumphed over through the cross. We are delivered from the authority of darkness, and translated into the kingdom of the Son of His love. Thus every aspect of need is met. But not alone that:every blessing conferred which the blessing of God, working according to the perfection of His wisdom, could plan to give us. How wonderful His ways! Well may we say, "What hath God wrought! "

Such being our established place of blessing, the exhortations that follow are simple. I am to refuse man's ordinances, and the things whereby he would infringe my liberty, and to accept them is to deny Christianity. What have meats and drinks and holy days to do with risen heavenly life? Yet such is ours. Eternal life begun is not so limited or marked, and the body is of Christ, and belongs to a different scene from this, in which that life is now for a season displayed. Yet holy days are shadows of things to come, but for the earth, and will be kept and enjoyed by those whose calling connects them with the earth in a scene of millennial blessedness.

Neither is the intrusion of some other being, under the plea of a humility which is false, to be allowed. Those who would put angels or saints or priests between me and Him have interposed a fatal hindrance to my growth, and even secured my downfall. True humility is an accompaniment of the faith which puts God in His true place as the Giver and myself as the receiver of His benefits. And if God, acting from Himself, is pleased to bestow the highest blessings freely on the least deserving, what becomes us is to take with thankful and rejoicing hearts what He gives. When, too, we know that all comes to us as the fruit of God having been glorified by Christ, we find ourselves in happy liberty before Him, as identified, through grace, with all the sweet savor of that precious offering. But the thickness of a gold-leaf between the Head and the members is as fatal, though not as manifest, as a great chasm.

May we be kept sensible that all the fullness is in Him, and open to us continually to draw upon with the faith which honors and gives Him His true glory. Dead and risen with Him, we are cut off, on the one hand, from all the evil in which man in the flesh, religious or otherwise, is found, and, on the other, brought into that new scene where "old things have passed away, and all are become new, and all of God." Our privilege is, to live to God, and seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God ; living in the scene which rejected Him, as strangers and pilgrims and unknown, but waiting for Him who is our life to be manifested, when we shall share His joy and glory and its unending bliss forever. R.T.G.

Declension, And Its Course.

1 CORINTHIANS X.

In a day of widespread declension such as this, it may be useful to trace the steps by which a low point is reached, as the discovery of our real state and its exposure by the Word is one of the means God uses in order to extricate from it.

No one sets out on a downward path with the idea of its being that, though God may allow many warnings to come, and even the discipline of His hand to be felt, to awaken from its lethargy the soul that is indifferent. Neither can any one who is pursuing that way tell how far he will go, though of course his own purpose is, to keep within certain bounds. But the power of the enemy is such that we have no ability to stand against him, unless we are going on with God, in the strength He gives to those who are dependent on Him.

In i Cor. 10:1-13, we have the steps in the course of declension very fully pictured, and they present a striking contrast to the apostle's own way, as given at the end of the previous chapter. Some have difficulty in understanding Paul's words, because they have in some degree disconnected the life-eternal life-from the path in which those who have it should (and more or less do) walk. For some, alas! the deliverance from judgment, because of failure in responsibility as children of Adam, by the cross of Christ, it is to be feared, deliverance also from responsibility itself. But this is surely not God's way. Nay, He puts us by redemption upon higher ground than we had left, and with, as a consequence, higher responsibilities. If we are saved by grace,-" not of works, lest any man should boast,"-yet we are " created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath afore prepared that we should walk in them," and he who does not more or less walk in that path disproves his title to eternal life. It is still true that " without holiness, no man shall see the Lord," and one part of Scripture is not in conflict with another, but all is in harmony. (Comp. also 2 Tim. 2:19.)

The outward participation in the things of Christianity was no guarantee of attaining to the rest of God, and it is this that is insisted on in the first verses of chapter 10:They all stood on new ground, and partook of what was God's provision for their need,-the bread from heaven and the water out of the rock,-yet with many of them God was not well pleased, and they fell in the wilderness -they did not reach Canaan. These things are expressly said to have "happened to them for examples (types), and are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come."

The first step in the downward course is lust. If God had been retained in their thoughts, they could not have doubted that He would give all that was needful. To desire something different from what God sees good to give shows that the heart has turned from Him, and lost its confidence in His love. To desire what is according to His will is not lust, and He has not limited us as to what is really for our good. " No good thing will He withhold from them which walk uprightly." The restless craving of desire is itself a witness that we have turned away from the only One who can satisfy. " He that cometh to Me shall never hunger; and he that believeth on Me shall never thirst."

What follows next is idolatry-a god that suits the low state :with Israel, of course, the golden calf is referred to. It may be only a limitation of the God of revelation-an ideal which suits the fancy or tastes, but which is therefore only a reflex picture of the one who forms it-of myself. Hence men deified human passion, which was a large part of heathenism. But it is only a human sentiment or idea, for God can only be known through revelation, and is far from being what man's imagination would paint Him:"Thou thoughtest that I was altogether such an one as thyself." Unrestrainedness of ways is the result:" The people sat down to eat and drink, and rose up to play." "Aaron had made them naked" should probably be, "let them loose." (See 2 Chron. 28:19.) If God is turned from, how soon the heart is turned to folly ! How like the prodigal going off into the far country to indulge himself in every evil ! If piety toward God is neglected, then no amount of truth can keep us, or be a check upon the flesh.

Next, worldly alliances are formed. If we are down upon the world's level, it will soon be glad of our company, and, little by little, will take away all from us that savors of the fear of God. It is easy to acquire a liking for what conscience at first refused as evil. If it is not judged, but tolerated, however spurious the plea, it will soon be accepted, and delighted in. And it is striking that from Peor Balaam was forced to speak the highest blessing of the people, when he took up his parable the third time; and it was there the people fell into alliances with the Midianites. God's best thoughts, and grace toward them, are seen in contrast with their own low state and acts. How seductive is the world !How few of us have grace to refuse it, especially in the shape in which it pleases us !For each of us it has a different aspect, exactly adapted to our tastes, and what would be an attractive bait to one would not be to another. But "the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of life are not of the Father, but of the world," and "whosoever will be a friend of the world is the enemy of God."

We then have Christ despised-the manna esteemed as light food. If I share the world's tastes, I shall not see much in the lowliness of Christ to attract me, and the connection between despising the manna and the fiery serpents is important. If He is rejected, the work of death goes on unhindered. It is sin become exceedingly sinful, manifestly by the rejection of Him who came to relieve from it, and death working unhindered in those that despised Him who came in lowly grace to seek and save the lost.

Finally, the dissatisfaction of heart is openly expressed in their murmuring, which brought the judgment of God; no doubt, a reference to Num. 13:, 14:,-their refusal of the pleasant land, and in heart turning back to Egypt. It was this that brought the full sentence upon them of exclusion from the land which they had openly refused. How solemn the warning! How it should stimulate us to diligence and carefulness to watch against the coming in of what would, if its results were fully known, end in entire separation from God ! And "let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall." Self-confidence is a very different thing from confidence in God, though it may carry one on a good way without the discovery being made of what it really is. "We are kept by the power of God, through faith, unto salvation." But this is the confidence of one who, knowing his own weakness, has learned to trust Him, and everything else must fail and break down. How beautiful the encouragement given to one beset with the very wilderness-trials which the enemy would use to discourage and drive from God into the meshes of his own net !

Do not think your trials are greater than others, true as it is that "the heart knoweth its own bitterness." "No temptation hath taken you but such as is common to man; but God is faithful." What a word – "But God is faithful"! Yea, think of Him who is still interested in your welfare, and who, though He may try your faith for your good, will never forsake. Only wait on Him, as One who is entitled to the confidence of your heart, and who will make a way to escape, that you may bo able to bear it, and will give you that for which to praise Him when His delivering hand is seen. To have these exercises is true gain, as to be without them would indeed be loss ; and those who seek to fortify themselves against the trials by their own inventions will find how much they have lost in the weakening of their faith and the consequent obscurity of all that is most precious. To leave the path of faith because of its exercises, to seek one that seems smoother, is to insure one's own downfall, and the missing of even that we aimed at. R.T.G.

“Righteousness, Faith” (2 Tim. 2:22.)

The order of Scripture is every where most important, and no where more so than in its practical exhortations. We can only read the Word of God aright as we have faith in its absolute perfection, and therefore study it in its connection as well as in its separate sentences. It is not a mosaic of beautiful but unconnected utterances,-even the book of Proverbs is not that, and Scripture in general is not a book of Proverbs either. Nor is it like a creed, or a text-book of theology, or a code of laws, or a digest of practical rules. It differs from all these as a field of living plants from the botanist's herbarium. The latter may have its uses, but it is dry and artificial evidently. The truth as given in Scripture is instinct with life, and clothed with the inimitable freshness and beauty which belong to it. To tear it from its connection is to deprive it of its vitality.

The connection is always practical:it is the highway by which you must travel if you would reach the point to which it leads you ; you can view it, no doubt, from other points, but you cannot reach it,-and that is what is to be your constant aim.

So, then, with the passage before us. To " follow faith," we must "follow righteousness," and it is the relation of these to one another that I would dwell on a little now.

It is, of course, in the adoption of it for ourselves, and not in the exaction of it from others, that we are called to "follow righteousness." This should be plain; and yet it may not be needless to remind ourselves of it. There are those who imagine what the apostle exhorts the Corinthians to-"Why do ye not rather take wrong? why do ye not rather suffer yourselves to be defrauded ?"-to be really inconsistent with the following of righteousness. They think that we are called to maintain righteousness upon the earth, and that we are therefore morally bound to make war upon unrighteousness ; whereas it is grace of which we are the witnesses, as having received grace. Yet this also may be [not carried too far,-that is impossible, but] misunderstood and abused therefore.

Suppose I hid a thief from the officers that were in pursuit of him, or refused to give him up into their hands, this would not be grace, but a perversion of it. It would be unrighteousness indeed on my own part, for I should be interfering with that which God has established for the restraint of evil. Nor have I liberty to show grace, nor would this be grace, where another's rights are concerned and not my own. In my own case alone can I show it or talk of it aright.

But in my own case I am to be the witness of it, as the Lord's words as to the non-resistance of evil so emphatically enjoin :words indeed so little akin to the spirit of the world in which we are, that if we drink into this at all, we shall not be able to understand them. The maintenance of rights has all the logic of common sense in its support, and except we are ready to maintain them, we shall be counted cravens, and recreants to the truth. The Lord, indeed, has said, " If My kingdom were of this world, then should My servants fight" (Jno. 18:36), and the mass have decided that His kingdom is of this world.

But of this it is not my purpose now to speak. I only notice it, that none may infer a contradiction between following righteousness and showing grace. Guarding this point, then, it is of the utmost importance to see that in our personal conduct, in what we do, and in what we go with, righteousness is the very first necessity. No question can be rightly allowed to precede it or to interfere with it. What is not righteousness is not of God, and to sanction it as of Him in any conceivable case is nothing else than blasphemy against His name and nature. It involves, in fact, that " Let us do evil that good may come," of which the apostle says, as to those who say it, "their condemnation is just" (Rom. 3:8).

"Righteousness" defines, then, for the Christian a circle beyond which he cannot go-a boundary-line he dare not transgress. He must therefore know precisely the limit, and in no case move until he is sure that he is within the limit. Here is need for continual exercise, for the line is not always perceptible at first sight, and to be unexercised is the sure way to transgress it. Nay, more :he who is careless is already in spirit a transgressor.

God has denounced an emphatic "woe unto them that call evil good and good evil, that put darkness for light and light for darkness, that put bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter!" (Isa. 5:20.) There must be no blurring of the moral boundary-lines. And here, therefore, is the first question always for us. We may not put "faith" before "righteousness." We may not argue, "This is of God, and therefore it is good." We must argue the other way,-"This is good, and therefore it is of God." "God is light," and "light is that which doth make manifest" (Eph. 5:13). Thus, only as walking in the light, and with our eye single to take it in, can we walk without stumbling.

But, alas ! how common a thing it is to allow ourselves in that of which the character is all uncertain to us ! How many think it enough to stop where they are convicted of evil, rather than require to see first before they move that what they do is good ! Such souls are not in the presence of God, and cannot therefore attain to any clear vision. It is already "evil" to walk in the darkness, and the rule is first "Cease to do evil," and then " Learn to do well."

We have further to consider, before we can pass on from this, that righteousness always has respect also to our position and relationships :it is to act in consistency with these. Thus, to show grace is for a Christian only righteousness. " Thou wicked servant, I forgave thee all that debt because thou desiredst me :shouldst not thou also have had compassion on thy fellow-servant, even as I had pity on thee ?" The manifestation of grace is not something over and above what is required of us,-something which (because it is grace,) we can refuse without unrighteousness. Righteousness embraces the whole sphere of conduct, for "to him that knoweth to do good and doeth it not, to him it is sin" (Jas. 4:17). How solemn, how penetrating, are such words as these ! There is no "work of supererogation," as the papists say. Purchased with the precious blood of Christ, we are His in all things, His absolutely. The "consecration" of ourselves to God, of which so many are speaking now, is nothing else than that sanctification by the blood of Christ supposes, of which the epistle to the Hebrews speaks. His we are by that blood shed for us, and to take our own way in any thing is simply to deny in that respect His title. Yet how many indeed think it the liberty of grace to be free to please themselves in some particulars !-as if it were " liberty " to mire ourselves in the ditch instead of walking on the well-made road, or to serve a weak and foolish tyrant rather than the wisest, noblest, meekest, of masters.

" Consecrated " we are, every one of us:"called saints," -that is, saints by calling ; sanctified in Christ Jesus. Only let us walk as saints.

"Righteousness," then, is the first thing to follow; but it is not all,-it is only the first thing. This secured, we are next to follow "faith."

And this contracts materially the road we travel. It is in this that we first perceive that it is indeed a " narrow way." So narrow, indeed, that, in whatever situation we may be, there is but one spot upon which we can rightly put our foot next,-one, and one only. There is no choice, in that sense, permitted us.

" Faith" supposes more than a mere rule of conduct, however perfect. Faith is in a person; not a rule (though there may be a rule), but a ruler. " I commend you to the word of His grace," says the apostle to the Ephesians (Acts 20:32). Is that all? No, but "to God and the word of His grace." There is a living God whose eye is upon us, whose heart goes with us, whose hand holds us. Ah, if there were not such, we should indeed be orphans! As with Israel in the wilderness, where there was "no WAV." the way was marked out for them by the pillar of cloud and fire, which showed the presence of Jehovah with them,-this was but the vailed presence of One who for faith is found without a vail by the Christian now. These things happened unto them for types (i Cor. 10:ii), and are written for our admonition. The glorious presence that goes with us is the Antitype, and faith is more to us than was the sight of the eyes to them.

Faith, then, for us puts under a living Leader, from whose love we cannot for a moment withdraw ourselves. His eye ever upon us, His heart ever occupied with us, there cannot be a step that we can take in which He is uninterested or has not a mind for us. Perfect wisdom has employed itself about the path we tread, and it is for us to consult that unerring wisdom, and to govern ourselves according to the will of Him who is both Master and Lord. The path is indeed narrow, but who could wish it wider-some room for our own wills to act, some room in which our ignorance may display itself, and in which our folly and frailty may work disaster for us ? How blessed to be saved from this! How great the grace that will thus patiently instruct us ! " He wakeneth morning by morning, He wakeneth mine ear to hear as the learner." (Isa. 1. 4-Heb.) This is the language prophetically ascribed to our blessed Lord Himself. Himself the perfect example of faith, He has gone before us in this path in which we follow Him,-a path thus doubly endeared to us, by its own intrinsic blessedness and by our fellowship with Him in it.

It is in following "faith" that we find our true individuality before God, for faith is of necessity individual. How earnestly the apostle insists upon this ! To induce another to do so innocent a thing as to eat meats, to the Christian perfectly clean, but where he could not eat in faith, was in his mind to "destroy" him:"Destroy not him with thy meat for whom Christ died" (Rom. 14:15). "For meat destroy not the work of God. . . . He that doubteth is condemned if he eat, because he eateth not of faith, for whatsoever is not of faith is sin " (10:20, 23).

Thus the doing of what in itself was no evil-of what in another might be an act of Christian liberty-yet without faith would be only sin, and an act of real self-destruction. That the mercy of God might avert this in any particular case alters nothing as to the essential character or inherent tendency of the thing in itself, and this is what the Spirit of God by the apostle would press upon us. How often in a presumptuous way we bring in God's care for His own, and His eternal purposes of love toward them, to blind ourselves as to the character of our own ! But if I put poison upon a man's plate, I am responsible to the full extent of all that would naturally be the result of it, I should be a murderer, though he were never murdered. Oh that the Word of God may have thus its edge for us ! " Destroy not him with thy meat for whom Christ died " !
What a view of our responsibilities does this open up to us! and what a sense should it give us of the necessity of faith in every step that we take in our path down here ! "Whatsoever is not of faith is sin." If, then, as is most certain, God our Father has so deep concern for us as to make our every step a matter of importance and interest to Him,-if He has His own mind for us in all things, His way for us to walk in,-then what a necessity there is for us to seek and learn that mind ! and what disaster must result from inattention as to it! Is not here the secret of many otherwise inexplicable failures where the end sought seems right enough, and the way to the end also to be irreproachable ? Is it not the secret that it was but poor halting reason that we followed,-that we mistook the road because the torch-light that we walked by did not throw its light far enough for guidance, and we waited not for heaven's illumination? "Are there not twelve hours in the day ? If any man walk in the day, he stumbleth not, because he seeth the light of this world ; but if a man walk in the night, he stumbleth, because there is no light in him." (Jno. 11:9, 10.)

Will any call it legality, or tedious strictness, to have to walk in the full light of the day alone,-to have need ever of a Father's counsel,-to be made to seek ever a wisdom higher than one's own, and to be subject to a will that rules all things, and that carries with it unfailing power and victory ? How strange that we should count as liberty the license to go astray-to bring down upon ourselves sorrow and suffering, and regret that cannot recall the past, or undo what is once done, or avail to turn away the inevitable consequences !

We do, indeed, perhaps recognize in matters of greater importance the need of knowing and following the divine will. But life is made up mainly of smaller matters. From how much, then, of our lives we must banish God ! and as we look not for His will to declare itself, so, naturally enough, we have no eyes to see it when it does most plainly do so. The joy and sweetness, the ineffable delight of a walk with God, are concentrated upon a few days of our life's course, in which we rather met than "walked with" Him. And then what mistakes we make as to what is of importance ! how little we realize, often, what are the controlling points of our own history! we enter all unconsciously upon what we should look back upon with the keenest emotion. Only, then, in cleaving closely to our Guide and Guardian can we be a moment safe. In this sense, truly "happy is the man that feareth alway."

Here, too, we have need to remember that "there is a way that seemeth right to a man, and the end thereof are the ways of death" (Prov. 14:12). Alas ! how often are we seduced by the right seeming of a way, which has only against it that which is its sufficient condemnation-that it is our "own way"! How many a man is busy with things in themselves most excellent, and yet wholly out of his place and astray ! Man may do nothing but praise him, and his own conscience also approve him, and yet he may be thus astray. The light is not in us :in the light of God alone we see light.

I leave this now with the one remark that nothing, therefore, must be allowed to interfere with this maintenance of our individuality before God. All that would conflict with it condemns itself as evil by the very fact. The Lord has bought us for Himself. He is "both Master (or Teacher) and Lord." We may help each other in ascertaining His will, but no more. "One is your Master, even Christ, and all ye are brethren." (Matt. 23:8.)

Seth In Place Of Abel:

THE LESSON OF THE AGES AS TO HOLINESS .
Genesis 4:

From the beginning of the world this history comes to us, a sample and a parable of its whole history since. It is a chapter, with all the gloom of it, of priceless value. No where does Scripture in its mere chronicle-character show itself more prophetic. No where do we see more plainly, as taught of Him who only can show it to us, the end from the beginning. No where is it more apparent that with Him what seems defeat is victory,-that He is " King of the ages," and all things perforce serve Him. Thus it reverses the prophet's experience for us:that which is bitter in the mouth, as we first taste it, is sweet in the belly, as it is well digested. Blessed be God that He is God !

The history is a type,-not merely a single, but a double one. It is fulfilled in the world at large. It is fulfilled in the lesser world of our own bosoms. The one fulfillment underlies the other. The lesson is one:the testimony is double. Each confirms the other; and for this reason we shall da well to look at both.

The seed of the woman shall bruise the serpent's head. Faith says this, and it says true:God has pledged His word for it. But because it is still faith that says it, this is even yet among the things unseen. What is seen is the other side of the prophecy,-the heel of the woman's seed bruised by the serpent. The cross is more than the central fact of history; it is, as to its human side, but the epitome of it,-its meaning concentrated and emphasized in one tremendous deed. The conflict between good and evil has been long protracted, and its issue, so far as the eye can take note of it, has been by no means victory for the good. Nor, so long as " man's day " lasts, does Scripture give any expectation of it. The coming of the Prince of Peace alone can bring peace. Until then, His own words remain applicable, " I came not to send peace, but a sword." Thus, when He asks, and the nations are given Him for His inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for His possession, His power must act in putting down the opposition :" Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron; Thou shalt dash them in pieces like a potter's vessel" (Ps. 2:8, 9). And this power His people too shall share with Him. (Rev. 2:26, 27.)

Till then, their portion is with Him the cross :"heirs of God, and joint-heirs with Jesus Christ; if so be that we suffer with Him, that we may be also glorified together." (Rom. 8:17.)

God's present triumph over evil is thus in using it as the necessary discipline of His people, and in making it work out, spite of itself, His work:" Surely the wrath of man shall praise Thee; the remainder of wrath shalt Thou restrain" (Ps. 76:10). Thus we may look evil in the face and fear not,-nay, rejoice to see in it all, as in the cross itself, God's mastery over it. What will not turn to praise, He suffers not to be. What is, is to glorify Him.

Abel is in this history a type of Him whose blood "speaks better things."In its efficacy Godward, it is seen in that sacrifice by which God declares him righteous, "testifying of his gifts" (Heb. 11:4). In its human side, it is seen in his own death at his brother's hand, as Christ received His at the hands of Israel, His kindred after the flesh. Cain is indeed the perfect type and pattern of those Pharisees who were ever His bitter antagonists:religious after his fashion, and by his very religion proving himself far from God,-a worshiper, and his brother's murderer. And this "way of Cain " the Jews have walked in to this day, like him, outcast from God, fugitives and vagabonds upon the earth, with the mark upon them which still manifests them as preserved of God, spite of their sin and its penalty. How strikingly in these national judgments is the handwriting of God "writ large" for man to read! and how inexcusable if he does not read it!

The world has got rid of Christ, and to-day it rejects Him still. Not Israel only; but in Christendom His rejection is as plain, and more terrible. They may keep His birthday, and build a pile over His sepulcher, and so did Israel, on the Lord's day, build the sepulchers of the prophets whom their fathers slew, and were witnesses to themselves, as He assures them, that they were the children of those who slew the prophets.

Meanwhile the progress is undoubted :the " many inventions" abound by which man's nakedness is successfully covered, and the cities of the land of Nod show by their adornment that the wanderers there mean to stay. Lamech, the " strong man," a title in frequent use to-day, is the common father of all these men of genius, and he, with the inspiration of a poet, prophesies, taking for his text Cain's security, to argue for himself greater security than Cain's. How unmistakable a picture of our civilized world to-day!

But then God comes in again, and Seth is appointed in the place of Abel whom Cain slew. And in the genealogy that follows, Cain and his descendants have no place. Enosh is born-" frail man "-the antipodes of the strong one, Lamech; but then men begin to call on the name of the Lord. The weakness of man, demonstrated and confessed, exalts God who is now so necessary to him; and man also finds his place of blessing in dependence, where it ever is.

This goes beyond present history, but prophecy is clear as to its fulfillment. It speaks of a day of manifestation, a day of the Lord, which shall be upon all the pride of man, bringing down all that is high, in order to exalt the lowly. "And then," saith God, "will I turn to the peoples a pure language, that they may all call upon the name of the Lord, to serve Him with one consent … I will also leave in the midst of them (Israel) an afflicted and poor people, and they shall trust in the name of the Lord." But when is this ? and when shall a Seth mighty to accomplish this replace in the history of the earth the murdered Abel ? Only Christ glorified can replace Christ crucified; and then it is that the humble Enosh shall displace the haughty Lamech. So the prophet goes to declare,-" Sing, O daughter of Zion! shout, O Israel! be glad and rejoice with all the heart, O daughter of Jerusalem ! The Lord hath taken away thy judgment; He hath cast out thine enemy:the King of Israel, even the Lord, is in the midst of thee; thou shalt not see evil any more." (Zeph. 3:).

Here, assuredly, is the true Seth, and the day to which the history in its typical character points us on. This is what alone fulfills for the earth the promise of woman's Seed in its reality. The serpent's head is now bruised.

All this, in its underlying principles, witnesses plainly to that lesson which we now go on to learn from it in its individual application. It is indeed the lesson of the ages; a lesson beginning before the ages, and the wisdom gained by which shall last eternally.
In the individual application, the same struggle between good and evil is revealed as taking place in the world within us as we have seen to take place in the world without us. " That which is first is natural, and after-ward that which is spiritual." Cain, therefore, is the first-born, and not Abel. The names too are significant. "Cain" is "acquisition," "possession," and he lays hold of the earth to retain it. " Abel " is "vapor," "vanity," significant to us at least in connection with the brevity of his life. Personally righteous, and though dead yet speaking, he seems to accomplish nothing, and leaves the evil in triumphant power. It is just the experience of the seventh of Romans-a hopeless incapacity for good in one who wills what is good:"the good that I would I do not; the evil that I would not, that I do."

Nor only so:he uses the strong word "death," as descriptive of his condition. Identifying himself with the good within, with that which desires and seeks this, he describes his state thus:"Sin revived, and I died. And the commandment which was ordained to life, I found to be unto death. For sin, taking occasion by the commandment, deceived me, and by it slew me. Here is the interpretation of what is most perplexing in the type before us. We naturally ask, " How can that die in us which is of God and good? and how can the defeat of the desire for good be a lesson of holiness ?" Yet to how many traveling in this path would it be a ray from heaven indeed, could they believe it! Let us, then, seek earnestly to apprehend this strange experience, and see if in it God is not leading the blind by a way they know not to the very haven where they would be.

Before man was created, sin had been in heaven. The conflict between good and evil did not begin on earth. Strange enough, and terrible to realize, that beings created upright, in a scene where all bore witness to the goodness and love of God, could without temptation fall from purity, and become all that is expressed for us in the word "devils"! " How could it be?" we ask. Scripture may not afford us all the light we would desire upon such a question, but some light it assuredly does give, and that which is most needful for us. It assures us that the "condemnation of the devil" was for pride (i Tim. 3:6):"not a novice, lest being lifted up with pride, he fall into the condemnation of the devil." The "lifting up" of the creature is its fall. Forgetting its absolute dependence is the sure and speedy way to ruin. "Pride goeth before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall."

The process is given us in the twenty-eighth chapter of Ezekiel, in which we have, as it would seem, under the vail of the " king of Tyre," Satan himself before us. "Prince of this world," the Lord calls him; and in Revelation he is pictured as the "dragon," with the seven heads and ten horns of the empire, the power of which he wields. Thus the king of Tyre might well represent him in Ezekiel. And much of what is said seems in no way else really explicable.

" Son of man, take up a lamentation upon the king of Tyrus, and say unto him, 'Thus saith the Lord God, Thou sealest up the sum, full of wisdom and perfect in beauty. Thou hast been in Eden, the garden of God; every precious stone was thy covering . . . thou wast perfect in thy ways from the day thou wast created until iniquity was found in thee. Thy heart was lifted up because of thy beauty; thou hast corrupted thy wisdom by reason of thy brightness.' "

We are indeed, in a world like this, familiar enough with such a process. The startling thing is, to find it as the account of sin in its beginning in a creature of whom God could speak in such a way. It is an intelligible account, however, of how when there was yet no evil, the contemplation and consciousness of what was good could become evil, the germ of all that has developed since. Here is the germ. Let us mark and lay it to heart, for we shall find here what will explain the mystery of God's ways with man ever since. A wonder of wonders it is that inasmuch as the consciousness of good has been to the creature the cause of evil, God will now in His sovereign wisdom make the consciousness of evil the cause of good! Simple this is too; but how great in its simplicity. The thought of it at once brings conviction into the soul, that so it is, and so it must be. And how important that we should realize it. Already upon this experience of the seventh of Romans a bright ray of light has fallen.

The next thing after the fall of the angels, so far as our knowledge reaches, comes the creation of man. And how clearly now we see that if Satan had fallen through pride, God would hide pride from this new creature of His. A spiritual being he must be, and in the image of God thus, His offspring. Only so could he respond aright unto God that made him. Only thus in any proper way could He be his God. Yet He does not now make another angel. He does not merely repeat Himself. Angels have fallen, and through pride. God takes up the dust of the ground, and wraps in it – one may almost say, hides-the spirit of man. All that materialism builds itself upon is just the evidence of this. Though the breath of the Almighty is breathed into him, he is yet a "living soul;" and the beast too is a living soul. He acquires his wisdom by the organs of sense; his mind grows with his body:there is ordained to him a long helpless infancy, beyond even the beasts. He needs food, and is constantly reminded of his necessity. He needs help, and it is not good for him to be alone. No independence can be permitted him; and yet every want is met in so tender a way,-every avenue of sense is so made to him an occasion of delight, that every where he is assured of One who cares for him,-to whom he is constant debtor. As independence to him would be plain ruin, so dependence is endeared to him in every possible way.

Evil is yet barred out from him:he knows as yet nothing of it. Though it exists, God does not suffer it to show itself as evil till he invites it in. The question by which the woman falls is as innocent as she is, and from a beast, -what is below her, not above. The prohibition of the tree, which the devil uses, is good also as a warning of their dependence, and the penalty as guarding the prohibition. Who would lose all this blessing to gain none could say what ?could there be indeed a gain?

Yet man falls, as we well know, and with the lust of the flesh and of the eyes, the pride of life gains possession of him. On the other hand, with sin, death enters into the world,-the great leveler of the pride of man. His eyes open upon his nakedness. Conscience becomes his accuser .In the sweat of his brow he must eat his bread, gathering it from the midst of the thorns and thistles, which are the sign of the curse. And when a man comes into the world, it must be amid travail and sorrow.

Thus his history begins, and for four thousand years 4 afterward, until the coming of the Deliverer, there is but one long sorrow-one tale of sin and misery.

The "due time" for Christ to die is when, after all this, man is still without strength and ungodly. (Rom. 5:6.) It is his trial-time, the period of his education under the school-master, and the one lesson to be learned is of spiritual nothingness. His sin is kept ever before him. "None righteous,-no, not one;" "none that doeth good, -no, not one;" and this applied to all,-Jew and Gentile, saint and sinner a like. In the book of Job, the best man upon earth,-a saint, surely,-is taken up to bear witness of this. His efforts to wash himself white are impressively told, and how God plunges him in the ditch so that his own clothes abhor him. It is a saint who learns the lesson:so it is a lesson for saints. And all the way through the centuries the burden is repeated, "There is not a just man upon earth that doeth good, and sinneth not" (Eccles. 7:20). "Who can say, I have made my heart clean, I am pure from my sin ?" (Prov. 20:9.)

All the way through those ages, it is with the evidences of man's sin that God fights sin. To abase him, this is to exalt him. To wean him from himself, this is to make God his joy, his strength, his riches. " He that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord." God educates him in the knowledge of sin. His history begins as it ends, and ends as it begins-with failure. It seems the celebration of the triumph of Cain ; the strong men are of his line :that which is of God takes no root in the earth ; a Nebuchadnezzar is king of kings ; a little remnant return from the captivity in Babylon, only to exhibit their poverty, and to fail as thoroughly as before. There is no hope but in Another:when we are yet without strength, Christ dies for the ungodly.

(To be continued.)

Glories.

There will be a scene of glories when the kingdom comes. We commonly speak of " glory " as if it stood in that connection only. But this is wrong. Glory then will be displayed, it is true ; glory will then be in the circumstances of the scene. But a much more wonderful form of glory is known already – and that is, in the gospel. There God Himself is displayed ; a more wondrous object than all circumstances. The glory of the gospel is moral, I grant, not material or circumstantial. But it is glory of the profoundest character. There, again I say, God Himself is displayed. The just God and yet the Savior is seen there. Righteousness and peace shine there in each other's company – a result which none but God Himself, and in the way of the cross, could ever have reached.

The gospel calls on sinners to breathe the atmosphere, as I may say, of salvation, to have communion with God in love, and to maintain it in liberty and assurance – and there is a glory in such thoughts and truths as these which indeed excelleth.

Satan interfered or meddled with the work of God, and ruined it in its creature-condition. God at once interfered or meddled with Satan's work, and eternally overthrew it, bringing meat out of the eater, and sweetness out of the strong.

The three earliest receivers of God's gospel – Adam, Eve, and Abel – strikingly illustrate souls that apprehend the glory of the gospel in different features of it.

Adam was blessedly, wondrously emboldened by it, so that at the bidding of it, he came forth at once from his guilty covert and entered the presence of God again, naked as he was. And his boldness was warranted, for he was welcomed there. Eve exulted in it. She sang over it. "I have gotten a man from the Lord," said she -in the joy of the promise that had been made her touching her Seed.

Abel offered the " fat" with the victim. He entered with happiest, brightest intelligence into the promise, and saw that the Giver of it would find His own blessed delight in it,-that the gospel, while it saved the sinner, was- the joy as well as the glory of God. The fat on the altar expressed this.

And such apprehensions of Christ as these-the faith that gives boldness-the:faith that inspires with joy-the faith that penetrates the cross-are full of power in the soul.-(From "Short Meditations," by J. G. Bellett.)

To Correspondents.

Q. 21.- " Can you give any light upon 1 Cor. 1:18 – 'But unto us who are being saved, it is the power of God' ? (R.V.) King James's version gives "are saved," My Greek New Testament confirms the rendering of the Revised Version. Will you please give what you consider authority? Does not the rendering of the Revised Version clash with the truth of a known present salvation?"

Ans. – There is no doubt about the reading:all manuscripts agree. It is the present participle passive, and may well be rendered as the Revised Version, though the American revisers put it in the margin, and restore the old translation in the text. There is really no question ,of doctrine, however, as, being in the plural, it simply speaks of the successive salvation of the individuals of this" class, – " To us who are being saved [one after another]." This, of course, in no wise denies the completeness of the salvation to one who has received it, but only affirms that the salvation of men at large is not complete. Grace is adding to their number day by day.

At the same time, it is true also that, as to the individual, his" salvation is not in every sense complete. Prom guilt and condemnation it is, but there is a salvation which we work out day by day (Phil. 2:12, 13), as well as one we shall receive when the Lord comes (1 Pet. i, 5).

Fragment

Is it the real purpose of your soul to get on, to advance in the divine life, to grow in personal holiness? Then beware how you continue, for a single hour, in what soils your hands and wounds your conscience, grieves the Holy Ghost and mars your communion.

No worldly gain, no earthly advantage, could compensate for the loss of a pure conscience, an uncondemning heart, and the light of your Father's countenance.

As in nature, the more we exercise the better the appetite ; so in grace, the more our renewed faculties are called into play, the more we feel the need of feeding each day upon Christ.

SUFFERING first, and then glory, mark the due path or history of the saint. This has been illustrated from old time. Joseph, Moses, and David may be remembered in connection with this truth. But it is the common history, in a great moral sense the necessary history, of those who adhere to God, in a system or world that has departed from him, and set up its own thoughts. For such must ever be stemming a contrary current.

The moment of deepest depression has commonly been the eve of deliverance.

From The World To God.

I am not."Oh words unwelcome
To the lips of men:"
I am not."Oh words that lead us
Back to God again !

Speech of him who knows the pathway
To that refuge sweet,
Where is covert from the tempest,
Shadow from the heat.

Speech of heaven, from wise men hidden,
Unto children taught;
Few the words of that great lesson,
Only " I am not."

Heart of man, another language
Is thy native speech,
Spoken by a thousand races,
All alike in each.

"I am,":-rich or wise or holy-
"Thus and thus am I; "
For " I am " men live and labor,
For "I am " they die.

For " I am" men dare and suffer,
Count all loss as gain,
Toil and weariness and bondage,
Sin and grief and pain.

In the blessed gospel read we
How a rich man bade
Christ the Lord and His disciples
To a feast he made.

Well, it was to feed the prophet!
Thus the rich man thought;
But amidst his wealth and bounty
Lacked he, " I am not."

Then there came a sinful woman,
Eyes with weeping dim- "
I am not," her heart was saying-
She had looked on Him.
He beheld her, broken-hearted,
Ruined, and undone,
Yet enthroned above the angels
Brighter than the sun

All the while in dust before Him
Did her heart adore, "
I am not, but Thou art only,
Thou art evermore."

For His heart to hers had spoken,
To His wandering lamb,
In the speech of Love Eternal
He had said, "I AM."

Now she thirsts no more forever,
All she would is given,
None on earth hath she beside Him,
None beside in heaven.

Oh, how fair that heavenly portion,
That eternal lot; Christ, and Christ alone, forever-
Ever, " I am not"

Henry Suso

David Numbering The People.

A Lecture by W. C. Johnston, Thursday, July II, 1889. (1 Chron. 21:; 2 Sam. 21:1, &100:; 24:1.)

We learn from these last passages what helps us to understand the state of things brought before us in i Chron. 21:From one point of view, you might say, David, and what he does, are chiefly in question. As we look again, in the light of the other scriptures, Israel is brought before us, and God is taking notice of the moral, state of the nation. Next, we find this thought coming out, that the circumstances give Satan a place and an opportunity. Look, then, first at the thought that it is the whole moral condition of the nation as discerned by God. It may find its expression in the conduct of the king, but putting that and the state of the people together, you then find that God permits Satan, as in the case of Job, to help to bring about the recovery and blessing on which the heart of God was set. But only to a certain extent can Satan accomplish the work, and when his part is accomplished, God can come in and do His own blessed work. In Job's case, you find Satan permitted to go a certain length, but ere the soul of Job can be reached, and God's thoughts for him brought home to him in power, so that he bows, taking his true place, God has to come in and reveal Himself. Now, as with the individual, we may find the same with the nation. We may also think of what the Spirit of God has given us here as some of the things which happened unto Israel, and are types for us, and that they are written for our learning.

Here, then, look at the previous chapter for a moment. (i Chron. 20:) "It came to pass, that after the year was expired, at the time that kings go out to battle, Joab led forth the power of the army, and wasted the country of the children of Ammon," etc.; and, after the victories rehearsed, in the last verse we may read, just to sum up, "These were born unto the giant in Gath; and they fell by the hand of David and by the hand of his servants." Why these triumphs come specially before us is, to see how we may discern the moral state of the people, and learn by what was then made manifest what may be instructive to ourselves, as these things were written for our learning. Just as we see in the Lord Himself, Satan soon has his place; and in the three things with which he tempts the Lord, we may say you get under so many heads all possible temptations of Satan. As it might be rendered, "When the devil had ended every temptation, he departed," etc. You may find, then, in the temptation of the Lord, briefly summed up, every possible way in which Satan may reach the people of God. By looking at such principles, we may be instructed as to how he may be permitted to reach God's people now, and how God's Word may meet us, and teach us through such trials, and bring us nigh in heart to Himself. We find, first, for instance, that with Satan there is that which is personal; he appeals to self in his first attack upon the Lord. He puts what comes home to the individual in a selfish way. Next, you find, if you take Luke's order, that it is what is held up in the way of worldly glory. Next, you find what is brought up in connection with the Scriptures, or the things of God, the spiritual temptation. Now take these principles and see how frequently they come up in the history of God's ways, and how they may throw light upon what is before us at this time. For instance, Israel in Egypt has to find out that Satan is acting by violence and power. There, you may find him so engaged at the beginning; but after they had been all these years in the wilderness, when on the plains of Moab, and about to enter the land, you find the same enemy with the same malice. But he has an entirely different method of attack, and through what takes place by Balaam, you find his subtlety is brought to bear so that God's purposes in connection with the people of Israel may be frustrated. He is the same enemy, only he is attacking" the people in another way. And we are told by the Spirit that we should not be ignorant of his devices, so that if now amongst the saints of God there may not be what there was in the days of persecution by the rack, the fire, or the sword; you may not have the wrath of the enemy, as in the martyr's pile, or the other forms of violence which came upon saints in earlier days; but what have we? The same enemy, ceaselessly acting in his malicious way to frustrate God's purposes in connection with the blessing of His people.

You may find this principle illustrated in David's history. Take his earlier career, when he and his followers are hunted like outlaws, you may find Satan's efforts to set aside God's appointed king. That could not be and has not been done. The king has been set upon the throne, and has prospered. Here, as we see, in one short chapter, you have a wonderful epitome of his triumphs. Has Satan missed what is going on? By no means. Now, then, he will attack David and Israel in another way. This surely gives the key to what we find here. There is a proud thought in the heart of the king, and he must number the people over whom he reigns. Ah ! what do we find there ? " Pride goeth before destruction, and a haughty spirit before a fall." When David is hunted by Saul, and can scarcely find sustenance, he is depending on God. Satan fails to overcome this one taken up by and cast upon God. But now that he has prospered, and you find this epitome of history,- this indication of triumph and glory, Satan seizes the opportunity and insinuates pride into the heart of the king. There, surely, you had a clue to much that follows. But, as we saw from Samuel, the Spirit of God does not make it all turn upon David's state. God has been looking on the whole nation; He connects the king with the moral state of the people of Israel. Satan may be allowed to come in, but it is with God's permission, that God's purpose as to really lifting up the people morally should be brought about. That is surely what God desires even in chastisement.

Now, lest we should just miss the point, see at once the application of the principle. It is not at a time, possibly, when things are low, or when persecution is rife, that Satan succeeds. There may be prosperity in the highest and truest sense, and that may just be his opportunity. Indeed, as the extreme of man's need leaves room for God, the extreme of man's blessing may leave room for Satan. You may see it, if you definitely single out what most of us will admit as having taken place during the last fifty years. I refer to the blessed and marvelous work of God's Spirit in recovering truths which had been lost. Just as the book was covered up by debris in Josiah's days, and, on being found, was the means of blessing, so precious truths connected with the Spirit, the Church of God, and the coming of the Lord had been covered for centuries, and have been recovered during the last half century so "that souls have been blessed as has scarcely been known since Pentecost. Now see the parallel. When David has prospered, and you have victory, and he is at the very pinnacle of his fame, then Satan gets in his proud thought, and this terrible havoc comes upon the nation. Has it not been so with us ? Has there not been pride in connection with recovered truth ? Has there not been pride as to the position into which God has brought some of His saints ? That will be admitted. And thus you find that there has been a lowering of the tone,-making much of the blessing, and hence ceasing in proportion to make every thing of the Blesser. There we find, as in David's case, surely, Satan has been watching the success, and all in which the saints of God have been truly rejoicing. And hence you find, surely, that there has been a puffing up:the pride of heart about place, about truth, the looking down on many of the dear children of God, and making much of the few to whom these things have been brought in power. Who would undervalue what the Spirit of God has wrought? Who would make light of what many of the saints of God have been led into in connection with what we are accustomed rightly to call recovered truth ? Well, the enemy has not missed what has been going on. Just as when David was, you might say, in the zenith of his fame, there was an opportunity for Satan that he never found when David was like a fugitive before Saul. So, when the saints of God have been lifted up and occupied with these things until the truth has been more largely before their hearts than the One of whom it speaks, Satan has found the opportunity for accomplishing his purpose of frustrating the blessing, marring and spoiling, as he ever delights to do, that which God is seeking to bring about in connection with His people.

Sufficient may thus have been said to show what seems to me a parallel, and gives us instructive lessons. I might have taken up lower ground, and begun with such as have not been delivered from Satan's bondage, and brought into the liberty of the children of God. Others, perhaps, may feel it laid on their hearts to touch that, so I keep to this which is now before me; that here is prosperity,-great blessing,-and the blessing is what they are occupied with, until they really lose sight of the Blesser, and the moral state, not only of the king, but of the whole nation, has become what they themselves little understand. Yet God is looking on, and is not going to leave His people under Satan's power, nor to the consequences of their own failure. He will permit even Satan to have for a little, so to speak, his own way. Then out of that, God will bring what will glorify Himself and magnify His name in unfolding blessing they never knew before. It is, if one might roughly illustrate it, that God permits the devil to have a long start in the race. You always find with God that He can take plenty of time. He is characterized by having patience. Only wait and watch, and notwithstanding Satan's long start, he will be defeated; God will bring about His own purpose, and, according to His heart, bless His people. Thus, then, it would seem that Satan is permitted to bring this about, by insinuating the proud thought which leads the king to give the order to number the people. Surely we need not dwell on this to show the analogy in the way in which pride grew up among saints recently in connection with truth and position. And does it need argument or proof to press it home that Satan has seized the opportunity, and sadly succeeded, as in David's day, in working such havoc among the people of God ? Certainly not.

But now we find Joab introduced. There is nothing to show us any thing of spirituality about that man; yet see this, " The king's word was abominable to Joab." How I have been struck with that! David had spiritual intelligence, and knew so much in communion with God, but when he is out of communion, and lowering down until he is in Satan's power, so to speak, he will do without compunction what a merely shrewd natural man could see at a glance to be a huge mistake. And do we not see the principle illustrated ? Saints of God who have known His ways-not merely His acts-and who in communion with Him have certainly gained much of the knowledge of His mind, but let them lose that communion, and get occupied with the blessing, and the heart away from Himself as the Blesser, and you find things done, and that in spite of remonstrances, that worldly men can at once say, "That is a huge mistake-it is folly." How humbling that the man of God, taught in His Word and in His ways, in getting out of communion, may make blunders that the man that never knew God's mind and ways can at once discern to be folly, and use remonstrance concerning such conduct! Joab wishes the people to be a thousand times more than they are, but he sees that there is something wrong, and does not fail to express it. I need not dwell on that, as having been so illustrated among saints recently; but how humbling to us, and how instructive, if the thought reaches us in God's presence, that we need to be kept there ! because if we have judged ourselves, and in any measure learned how unfit we are to govern ourselves, having taken God's Spirit to be our guide, when we lose that guidance, we are more helpless and ready to do things that are contrary to God's mind than mere men of the world who never knew His mind at all. Then, without dwelling on it in detail, but trying to strike principles that may be thought out and brought home to our consciences, that the youngest and the oldest alike may feel the need of dependence, and see how readily the most instructed may do, when out of communion, what worldly men would deem at once to be altogether wrong. Surely we learn this from Joab's thoughts about numbering the people.

We next get what God thought about it. It displeases Him, and there is the point. He sees it, and sees it in the right light; and it is indeed a great offense. Yet having fallen into this, does He leave David and his people there ? No. The prophet is brought on to the scene. Oh, how wonderful and how gracious ! Instead of leaving David to His own ways, or leaving the people and the king under Satan's spell, God brings in His prophet, though the message he may bring may be one of judgment. There is no going back from judgment in such a case as this. Declension has gone too far for recovery to be wrought otherwise. The choice of these three things is put before David :famine, war, or the sword of the Lord. Then he wakes up to see where he is and what he has done. " I have sinned."

"Well," you say, "won't that turn back God's hand in judgment? "

No. Where there is a judging of a man's self, and a getting to God before God judges him, you may avert the calamity; but where self-judgment is only produced by the direct hand of God, you find the consequences in God's government roll on. Achan may say-can say with sincere sorrow, "I have sinned;" but this is after he has been singled out, and he is already under the hand of God for judgment. On the other hand, mark you, if we would judge ourselves, that would be entirely averted. Where there is real self-judgment, all such consequences may in a great measure be averted. "If we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged." When self-judgment begins with the one who has failed, turning to God, oh, how much may be averted ! rather than, on the other hand, it should reach that point where God takes up the controversy, and begins to act in discipline amongst His people. Thus we find, then, there was no setting aside of the judgment. The choice of three things is given. There grace begins to act, and David at least comes to this conclusion that he will fall into the hands of God. He sees how infinitely better it is to be cast on the mercy of God than to be left under the power of his enemies. So the instructed soul would say, "Let me fall into the hand of the Lord."

Without dwelling further, then, on that, I notice next that this goes on, and such a vast multitude are swept away by the judgment of God. How it breaks down the king ! how it humbles the elders! You find both in sackcloth. Had it been a controversy with David alone, you need not bring in the elders; but when it is a question of the nation, the moral state of all is detected, and is now to be judged. All, in some measure, are to feel it. This also comes out in the end, "The Lord was entreated for the land, and the plague was stayed from Israel." (2 Sam. 24:25.) Hence we see that in God's dealings with His saints there has to be the going through such a matter individually. In difficulties it might seem wise and well to reach the mass, and lead them aright without letting them go into questions raised. Have you ever thought it to be a solemn thing to lead saints right when they have no exercise of conscience ? It may be apparently a very great triumph, and the servant of God may try to do it; but if you look beneath, in God's dealings with His people, He leads them by their consciences; and where there is this question of their moral state individually involved, the conscience must be aroused, and personally there has to be brokenness and true self-judgment before God. Otherwise, they may have the knot cut for them, and you defeat, or rather postpone, God's purpose in discipline. The end will not be reached:there will be more trouble.
But here, the king takes it to himself, as if he had done it all. "And what," he says, "have these sheep done?" And doubtless the elders took it to themselves, and the people, more or less, must have been made to feel that God had a controversy with all. The principle is true and important at any rate, and we do well to notice it and lay it to heart, if out of failure God is to bring blessing. Where there is to be this recovery, and a lifting up to a higher moral platform, there will be individual exercise of conscience, so that one and all have to be exercised, that each may go through the trouble with God. Whether it is the case of a sinner being saved, or whether it is the restoring of a saint that has wandered, is it not true that we have to be alone? Read the gospel of John, and you will find how frequently we get a soul alone with God. He singles them out one by one. You may take up a Nathanael, Nicodemus,. the woman at the well, the man that was born blind, or the cases of Thomas or Peter,-take up the wonderful variety thus presented, and isn't that thought brought out that each must be alone ? If it is a question of salvation, that is found to have its place, and if with saints it is a question of restoration, again you have to be alone. And some of us have seen that; for even the husband did not tell all to the wife, nor the wife to the husband, the daughter to the father, nor the father to the son. And how beautiful it is when God's Spirit thus comes in and works brokenness, and isolates every soul alone with God, and each is there judging himself and his ways ! You are not far from a real lifting up when thus you get really broken down; for after all, as it has been said, the way up is down; and it can never be more true than when spiritual pride has been the cause of God's hand being laid on His people in chastisement. Surely it is for the saints individually; not to blame this one and that one, or this company or that, but to discern what the state of all has been, and take one's place as having to do with it individually; and by so getting before God, you will find the word for the occasion. You will realize a lifting up that is real; indeed, that is what you find in the chapter; and now the angel is made to stay his hand as he comes to Jerusalem. Always in the midst of judgment God remembers mercy. His people can never get so far down but they may be lifted up; if they will only take their true place and cry to God where they are, God can meet them there. If it is the prophet in the belly of the fish, as in the belly of hell, when his heart turns to the Lord, when he thinks of Him, and when he says, " Salvation is of the Lord," how soon there is deliverance and a fresh start in work ! he is to go again and preach the word that he was bidden. How mercy to saints individually and as companies is brought out by discerning such dealings! and how we, where we are, may, by looking at these things, learn something more of His blessed ways, and after we have suffered awhile, He may stablish, strengthen, and settle us.

Then you find the prophet sent, and there is now instruction to build the altar and offer sacrifice. Here is to me the point that was specially pressing upon me. David is brought to find the threshing-floor Ornan; Even Satan's work only helps on this consummation. And here you see the large-heartedness of Oman; how readily, how generously, he would have given all! but David is in some
measure recovered, and in having to do with God he will not take the place, nor the oxen, nor the instruments, for nothing. He is back now to the sense of having to do with God, and he knows what is due to Him, and every thing will be received at its full value. There you will find tokens, surely, of restoration. And now the altar is reared, the sacrifice offered, and what next? Fire from heaven:God answers by fire. Again, on the ground of sacrifice, the king and people are brought morally near to God, and Satan is completely defeated. He had thought to take them further and further away, but God uses Satan's action to bring them back, so that morally they are nearer than when Satan began his work of malice. And now see, what place is this ? Oman's threshing-floor, you say. What does David now find when he is in God's presence? He finds, surely, for the first time, the right place for the altar in Israel. Oh, what an immense thought if we could reach it, if God would give it to our souls in power! Think of David's victories; think of all that has been manifested by these conquests. Has David not also been a worshiper ? Has he not even had it in his heart to build a house for Jehovah ? Has he not cared for the ark? All that is true. Surely the king has been interested in the things of God, in considering His will, and what is due to His holy name. But see, for the first time, even partly through Satan's work, here is the discovery of the place for the altar and the site of the house of God. Oh, now mark, how God has given Satan a long start, and in the end He comes in such a long way ahead of Satan. " Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound." This is the spot on which God has had His eye from the calling of the people,-the spot where He would place His name, and where His eyes and His heart would be continually. I say, think of it to the glorifying and magnifying of our God. He brings out that spot at the very time when there is such deep failure, -when, apparently, Satan has had his greatest triumph ; here and now you have the place for the altar, the site for the house, the home for the ark.

The next chapter goes on, as if nothing had happened in the way of failure, with that account of the magnificence with which the king provides for the building of the house, and bringing the ark into its place. Oh, how that pressed home on my soul when alone in the bush in New Zealand, broken-hearted about what was going on among saints in Britain and America ! and when, through God's mercy, one was led to look at things in the light of this chapter, one could see and say of the trouble, " Satan is in it; pride has been at the bottom of it; and here is what has happened." The Lord has had to act in judgment. But what a gleam of light, what a lifting up of soul, when one saw that by this very failure, and even by the devil's apparent triumph, God was bringing out as never before the place for the altar, the spot where He has set His eyes and His heart, where His name should be continually ! Oh, if one could get what is surely in this,-if saints so learned the meaning of gathering to the name of the Lord, as if, under the Spirit's power, they were realizing what it is to be brought there for the first time, would it not be like the surprise and joy when the Lord answered by fire, and revealed the right place for the altar, the site for the house, and the home for the ark ? What a triumph on God's part! There might be gathering to the name of the Lord Jesus Christ in reality as never before. Shall we not be exercised as to its realization ?

But if the lesson is unlearned,-if these things are not taken up and individually gone through in God's presence, oh, what loss! what an opportunity is missed ! Satan indeed gets a triumph; saints indeed suffer loss; the Church as a whole must in some sort feel this tremendous mistake. There will surely be further discipline and judgment. But let there be ever so few who really get to God about what has happened, they will get blessing indeed ! Then let us try to look beneath the surface and see God's ways with us, and how He has had to deal with our pride and lack of charity. We have neither been humble before Him, nor generous-hearted in our thoughts toward other members of the body of Christ. Then, since God has had to humble us, surely we ought to learn not to boast of position, not to speak lightly of servants and saints who are apart from what we may think we are on,-divine ground. We need rather to be humbled, and all pretentious ideas removed. Is not this the lesson we get with the serpent of brass? instead of its being God's instrument, working deliverance and salvation, when the people have got away from God, and are in a morally low condition, acting by memory and rote, they make an idol of the symbol of blessing, and offer incense to the serpent of brass? When there is recovery, it is broken to pieces, and counted merely what it was,- a serpent of brass. We may bless God for what is true about gathering to the Lord's name, and what souls have learned of recovered truths through certain teachers, in connection with what grew up around them; but if faith in God gives place to the mere memory of and reverence for those through whom the blessing came, there may be a slipping into idolatry, as in offering incense to the serpent of brass. On the other hand, when there has been holiness and dependence, what real blessing has been the result. Then it has not been the smashing of things around, and showing up evil, and merely waking up saints to be against the evil that they are separated from, but then they find that the Word is brought against themselves, and they are broken and humbled so as to sigh and cry, taking their true place as having had a part in all that has come into the house of God. And when, beyond this, there is the beauty and matchlessness of that blessed One attracting the heart, you will find saints really gathered, formed, and controlled by the sense of what the Lord is in Himself. Peter, on finding with whom he has to do, says, "Depart from me, for I am a sinful man, O Lord," yet he is clinging to Him all the more closely. So when souls discern that all has been shown up and met by the Lord, and there has been the unfolding to their hearts what the Lord is Himself, there is this clinging to Him in spite of personal vileness and the general break-up of the professing church. It is when there is the realization of the terrible failure that there will be the learning of what gathering to Him really means, as brought about by the power and grace of the Holy Spirit.

On the other hand, when evil is more before the mind, the saint may think of truth and stern righteousness until again, if you can discern it, he may be found to be a fresh Pharisee. Where did the Pharisees come from at first ? A thought by a brother put into shape what was in my own mind, as he showed that we never hear of the Pharisees until the remnant had returned from Babylon. That is a remarkable fact. Then as it was among the returned remnant that Pharisaism was developed, is there not a danger of those who have sought to be separate from the confusion of Christendom manifesting once more something of the spirit of the Pharisee ? Indeed it may be amongst those who have recovered truths, and have got the real thought of gathering to the name of the Lord that you find this spirit as among no other Christians? Do we not need, then, to be on our guard against such a spirit? Is not this one mark of our pride, on account of which the Lord has had a controversy with us ? Instead of talking of the denominations as Judaism, and attacking those in them so as to cause bitterness, we should try to get the Word of God to break us down, until, in true brokenness, there would be that among us which would attract rather than repel many sincere Christians. Then, where holiness and grace prevail, the Spirit would constrain and gather saints, so that it would be like finding the site for the altar and the ark. Thus God can bring about by the failure far more than what would defeat Satan. He can bring out of it for many what may never have been known before, as to being really gathered by the Spirit's power unto the name of the Lord.

Then, beloved brethren, look at these thoughts, however crudely they may have been presented. Use the opportunity to get out of the lesson what God has intended to teach ; and may we know what it is to be in His presence, and gathered unto His name, and all that was signified by the place of the altar and the ark, as we never knew it before. Miss the opportunity, and you may launch out in gospel-work (and no one who knows my past work will ever suspect that I make light of that or the work of the young evangelist)-but, oh, think! what are you gathering to ? When God speaks in connection with the tabernacle, have you ever noticed this one lesson ? You begin with the mercy-seat,-you are right in where God's very presence is. (Ex. 25:10.) It is not even the blood that suits the sinner which is first presented, nor the altar that manifests the accepted sacrifice; but the mercy-seat. So you find it also in Jno. 4:, where the Lord Jesus does not merely think of the sins, and the forgiveness and the peace which that poor soul may enjoy; He thinks of what, through God's infinite grace, that one is to give back in worship, in spirit and in truth, to the Father. How much such a line of things as we have suggested from this effort of Satan against Israel, may teach us when looked at in the light of what Satan has been doing among saints during recent years !

One would desire these crude thoughts to be taken up that we may learn anew what the true thought of gathering really is.

It is on my heart to say that one may rejoice in gospel energy and success, but let not that, however blessed, set aside what the Lord's thought is in connection with gathering, or what the Father's thought is in connection with His seeking worshipers who should worship Him in spirit and in truth. This will lead to another line of thinking and acting toward what is called "the systems," than many pursue. " Systems" ! Oh, I am sick of the expression, and even think it comes to be a little like cant! God has a system, of which Christ is the center, and I glory in the thought. Then, instead of being opposed to and trying to break up every thing in the nature of a system, we ought to learn more of the meaning of God's system, and seek to go on and get saints occupied with that. God may just have been breaking up what is ours, and even permitting Satan to have a hand in it, that we might not be building anything of our own; but learn to discern the things that be of God from those that are of men Yes, God is above all, and can bring out of the failure what will glorify His name. W.C.J.

Fragment

It will often be found that those who get on most rapidly in theory are the slowest in the practical and experimental elements, because it is more a work of the intellect than of heart and conscience.

Jacob's Mistake. (continued From Page 293.)

All this is the spirit of Jacob as long as he is Jacob. Human power must be supplemented by human artifice, where it is found, as it is soon found, so greatly wanting. When in the presence of God we have measured ourselves, and have learned the secret of strength in Him, of necessity all these things drop off. Does God need man to sin for Him ? Can He not afford to be open and honest? So as we wait upon God, our hearts are purified by the faith that is in Him, for faith is at once the worker and the purifier. How good, then, is it to wait upon Him ! It is just one thing that the flesh can never do. Work, it can; plan, it can; but wait upon God, it cannot. What wonder, then, that God should send trouble to loosen our hold of other things, that we may lay hold of Him with both our hands, and lean upon Him with all our weight, and in result, find His strength made perfect in our human weakness?

This is what makes us Israels; and yet there is something more to be considered. For it is to be well understood that Peniel is not the place where Jacob becomes fully what his name is. As I have said before, he receives it, but is not confirmed in it. Nor only so:Peniel is not in the full sense what Jacob calls it. God is not yet seen face to face, although he says so. Could he, had he really met God so, add to them what he does, as if it were the great thing to rejoice in, " I have seen God face to face, and my life is preserved"! Could he say to his brother Esau directly after, "I have seen thy face, as if I had seen the face of God, and thou wast pleased with me " ? Who that had seen the glorious face of God could compare it with Esau's ?

Nay, it is in the darkness he meets God here, and not in the light. When the dawn breaks, He departs. Nor does He answer the request to know His name. "And Jacob asked him, and said, ' Tell me, I pray thee, thy name.' And he said, 'Wherefore dost thou ask after my name?' And he blessed him there."

So that though he does indeed get blessing, it is not yet full blessing. And indeed how little like Israel is he in the scene that immediately follows with his brother! God has indeed Esau in hand; but Jacob, fawning in the dust, seems still the same Jacob. He does not go "after my lord, to Seir." He goes to Succoth, and builds him a house there. Then he buys a portion of a field before the Hivite city of Shechem; Dinah going out to see the Canaanitish women of the land, falls and is defiled; Simeon and Levi, with a craft and rage that the Spirit of God pronounces accursed, destroy the whole city. Jacob, through all, shows only utter weakness. His crippled thigh may be plain, but not his power with God, nor yet with men.

Striking contrast with his claim of the name and of the power ! For on that " parcel of a field " which he buys, he erects an altar which he consecrates to the name of El-elohe-Israel-"God"-or the Mighty One,-"Israel's God." Plainly, he is not disposed to think lightly of his divinely given name; nor lightly to estimate the "power" ascribed to him in it. "God is Israel's God," he says; "God belongs to Israel." And then, as in defiance of the assertion, the blast of ruin comes. The miserable man shrinking with horror from the bloody swords of his sons, shrinks yet more as he realizes the condition into which he is brought with the Canaanites around:"Ye have troubled me to make me to stink among the inhabitants of the land, among the Canaanites and the Perizzites; and I being few in number, they shall gather themselves together and slay me; and I shall be destroyed, I and my house."
Why, then, is this? What is the secret of this collapse on the part of Jacob, so immediately following what is manifestly signal and divine blessing? The following chapter shows Israel is not yet properly Israel. He has to be confirmed in the possession of his name, as he there is And yet of course the fault is entirely his, and must be his Let us proceed, and this will explain itself. Jacob has forgotten Bethel, that place so eventful in his history already, to be so still more in the time to come. God must recall him to it.

"And God said unto Jacob, 'Arise, and go up to Bethel and dwell there; and make there an altar unto God, who appeared unto thee when thou fleddest from the face of Esau thy brother.'"

At once a change takes place, and it is apparent that there is indeed a cause of weakness such as that we no longer wonder at what has occurred, but only at the grace which can deal so mercifully with those who have dishonored Him "Then Jacob said unto his household, and to all that were with him, 'Put away the strange gods that are among you, and be clean, and change your garments; and let us arise, and go up to Bethel.' …. And they gave unto Jacob all the strange gods that were in their hands and the earrings that were in their ears, and Jacob hid them under the oak which was by Shechem."

And immediately the power of God manifests itself. "And they journeyed:and the terror of God was upon the cities that were round about them, and they did not pursue after the sons of Jacob. So Jacob came to Luz, which is in the land of Canaan-that is, Bethel, he and all the people that were with him. And he built there an altar, and called the place El-Beth-el."

How marked is the difference now ! El-Bethel stands in manifest opposition to the forsaken altar of El-elohe-Israel God is no longer for him the God of Israel simply He is now "God of His own house," a house which speaks necessarily of something which belongs to God and must be kept in the holiness which becomes His dwelling-place. The sanctuary is the only place of strength and refuge for man, for it is the only place in which He dwells, in whom is our hiding-place. And from this, in absolute holiness, He governs every thing. It is clear that His power cannot be used against Himself; that man cannot be the Master, but only God ; that we belong to Him, not He to us; and thus is Jacob's great mistake revealed. Was the power of God to be associated with the false gods in Jacob's tents? Was it to be used in behalf of a house built where Jacob was to be a pilgrim and a stranger? or a piece of ground bought in close association with a heathen city? This could not be. Jacob must learn that it is not God who belongs to him, but he to God. In this way, and in this way only, can the power he has learnt be used.

And so "God appeared unto Jacob again, when he came out of Padan Aram, and blessed him."-How his wanderings since at Succoth and at Shechem are passed over here as so much lost time!-"And God said unto him, 'Thy name is Jacob:thy name shall not be called any more Jacob, but Israel shall be thy name.' And He called his name 'Israel.' "

Now he has got it, then, in full possession :- divine strength to do the divine will, and to walk in divine ways. No other way, surely, could the gift be given or enjoyed. Would we have power to work disaster with our own wills ? Would we have power without the guard of holiness? Would this be a greater gift, or no gift? a blessing, or in fact a dreadful curse?

No one, of course, could hesitate a moment how to answer a question put in that way. And yet in secret, and under the most plausible pretexts, do we not desire and expect what is indeed forever impossible ? Was not Jacob doing just this at Succoth ? was he not at Shechem ?

Has he no imitators in these Christian days? Alas! it is what is being attempted every where-to
be Israel’s, while forgetting Bethel,-to find the power of God in the path of self-will. Ah, on the other hand, would we only have the gift with the necessary conditions of it, how would the power of God indeed be realized!

For here at Bethel God proclaims Himself, what He did before to Abraham and to Isaac, the Almighty God, and bids him be fruitful and multiply, and assures to him afresh all the promises to his fathers. Surely for us, no less than for him, is all this:it is written, not for his sake, but for ours. We need but to give up to Him what is His,-to be, without reserve, surrendered to Him, to know how His strength is made perfect in weakness-how all-sufficient His grace is.

Oh, to be perfectly surrendered! Why should our own wills be so dear to us? Why should we prefer our ways to His only wise and holy ones ? why choose certain disaster, instead of pleasantness and peace ? Surely, there is no infatuation like that of unbelief; for unbelief it is, and only that which can refuse entire submission to Him who is at once our God and our Father.

Only let us remember that it is in our weakness that His strength is perfected. Our weakness remains still weakness. The strength is His, though continually put forth for us. It is our infirmities in which we glory, that the power of Christ may rest upon us. Doubly blessed is it to be thus continually made aware of the love that is set upon us, of the arm that shields us, of the might that works through us. Through all, God accomplishes in us a weaning from ourselves which is our only security. "We are the circumcision who worship God in the Spirit, and rejoice in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh " (Phil. 3:3). At the end, as at the beginning, in saint or in sinner, confidence in one's self is confidence in the flesh.

“He. That Believeth

Is not condemned, but he that believeth not is condemned already."

Most awful sight!-on Calvary's mount
Three crosses stand in bold relief;
There in the midst the Saviour dies,
On either side a thief.
Oh! blessed Saviour, by
Thy pain Thy loved ones reap eternal gain.

What led Thee to that awful cross?
What brought the Sinless One so low ?
'Twas not for aught that He had done,-
No sin of His. Ah ! no.
God's spotless Lamb,-the Victim slain,
For us He died, and lives again.

'Twas sin that nailed His blessed hands
And feet to that accursed cross;
Your sins and mine, O fellow-man,
He bore, to suffer thus.
But we, like that poor thief, believed ;
Like him, eternal life received.

In these three crosses we behold
The saved, the Saviour, and the lost.
The story of our ruined world,
The Saviour's death the cost.
Heaven's door is closed against our sin,
But faith in Jesus let us in.

Not Lost And Not Saved.

THE ELDER SON. (Luke 15:25-32.)

Every one of the class that were now following the Lord would realize in the prodigal his picture, and thus would find the invitation of grace superscribed with his name. Publicans and sinners would have the mirror plainly before them, and the truth in the description was absolute truth,-the condition of all men, if they could but realize it. With the other class who murmured against this grace, their lack of realization made it necessary to deal differently. They needed, above all, the mirror; and to be that, it must reflect the truth:but there would be a great difference in this respect, that the truth it conveyed would be no longer absolute, but only relative truth. Christ's words must exhibit them to themselves in such a way as they could recognize themselves; not, therefore, simply as God saw them, but according to their own thoughts about themselves; and yet with that in it which-appealing to their conscious experience-would bring them into the reality of what they were before God.

This is the whole difficulty as to the elder son in the last of our Lord's three parables here; and it is a difficulty which has already faced us in the first of them. The ninety and nine sheep which went not astray,-the ninety and nine just persons who need no repentance,-have no real representatives among men:yet they vividly portrayed those scribes and Pharisees who were not lost, and needed no Saviour. The light is let in there where it is said that there is more joy in heaven over one sinner that repenteth than over them.

In this last parable, the inner workings of the heart are much more exposed, and consequently these features of the first one are found in more development. But the whole is so plain that certainly the Pharisees here would make no mistake about the application. They, at least, would not think of Jews and Gentiles being in question, or of the recovery of a backslider:they would not think of the Lord meaning the whole lesson for others than themselves!

But there is nothing that is not clear if only we are at the right point of view. Thus that it is the elder son that represents the Pharisees has point in this way. Certainly they would not have accepted the position of the younger. To the elder belonged the birthright, with its double portion, in every way of value in the eyes of a Jew. On the other hand, in the book of Genesis, nothing is more distinct than the way the first-born all through loses the birthright. " That which is first is natural" merely, rings through the book. And even so it is here.

When the younger son is restored to his father's house, the elder son is in the field. It is characteristic of him that he is a worker, and a hard worker. All that is due is credited to the busy religion of the Pharisee. But his secret soon comes out:when he hears music and dancing in his father's house, he does not know what to make of it. It is not that he has heard yet of the return of his brother. It is not that he is simply a stranger to grace. But the sounds in themselves are unaccustomed ones:"he called a servant, and asked what these things meant," He is the picture of that joyless, cheerless service which finds nothing in God. No pleasures are known as at His right hand for evermore. The soul cannot say, " In Thy presence is fullness of joy." There is work of a certain kind perhaps in plenty, but it is work in the field simply -afar off. Such work is no test of piety; it is only the "work of faith and the labor of love" which are so. And where faith and love are, the soul works amid music, and is never outside the Father's presence. As His grace can be no surprise, so the merry heart sings with melody to the Lord,-" music and dancing" cannot surprise it. Joy is the atmosphere in which we are called to live,-the strength for labor, the secret of holiness. It can lodge in our hearts with sorrow, and abide all the changes of the way. The apostle says, " He that sinneth hath not seen [Christ], neither known Him." May we not say, " He that rejoiceth not, cannot have seen Christ"?

These Pharisees had Him before their eyes, yet saw Him not,-looked into His face, and knew Him not. Theirs was work in the field, while the Father's house was dull and pleasureless. Thus to have it opened after this sort to publicans and sinners could not but anger them-could not but rouse an unwelcome voice in them -a voice they could not but hear, while they would not listen to it. The truth commends itself to men's consciences, when their hearts reject it, hardened through a pride which will not brook humiliation. Did the grace which showed itself so readily to other men refuse them ? Nay, the gospel expressly comes out to all,-to every creature-in the same tender tones, addressing itself to all. This elder brother had no door closed in his face. " He was angry, and would not go in." Nor was there any thing of indifference toward him, but the contrary:"then came his father out and entreated him."

It will not be found at last that the Father's heart has failed toward any of His creatures. How solemn is His protestation,-"As I live, saith the Lord, I have no pleasure in the death of him that dieth:wherefore turn yourselves, and live ye." No:men must tear themselves out of the arms which are ready to inclose them. God is not estranged from us,-needs no reconciliation, although men's creeds may impute it to Him. " We pray in Christ's stead, Be ye reconciled to God " (2 Cor. 5:20). Man indeed needs his heart changed. Listen to the elder son, and you will find the grudge which is in the heart of many religionists:" But he said unto his father, ' Lo, these many years do I serve thee, neither transgressed I at any time thy commandments; and yet thou never gavest me a kid, that I might make merry with my friends. But as soon as this thy son is come, who hath devoured thy living with harlots, thou has killed for him the fatted calf.' "

Thus it is plain, men may be busy for God, with all along a grudge in the heart against God. Their blank and cheerless lives, spite of all that they can do, witness against them; but they would fling the accusation against God. Their hearts are not with Him. They have "friends" to whom they turn to find what with Him they cannot. They take outwardly His yoke, but they do not find it easy:there is no fulfillment of that-"Ye shall find rest to your souls."

Who is in fault ? How vain to think that God is ! How impossible to find aught but perfection in the Holy One ! Do that, and indeed you will stop all the harps of heaven, darken its blessed light, and bring in disaster and ruin every where. There is no fear:He will be justified in His sayings, and overcome when He is judged. But it is an old contention, and a frequent one:"Wilt thou also disannul my judgment? wilt thou condemn me that thou mayst be righteous ?" Ah, we must do that, or submit to that judgment of God ourselves; for it is recorded as to us, "There is none righteous,-no, not one," and "what things soever the law saith, it saith to them that are under the law, that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world become guilty before God."

To take this place is repentance, and then we are Pharisees no longer. We need grace, and thus we come to understand it. We understand it, and so appreciate it. We find it in God, and thus turn to Him. How sweet is then His voice ! and how the spring of joy begins to bubble up within the soul! Repentance and faith are never separate, and the tear of penitence is the clew of the Spirit, that already sparkles in the morning brightness-fuller of joy itself than all the pleasures of sin can make one for a moment!

Of this the elder son knows nothing. His heart is shut up in self-righteousness, and there in nothing that can harden a heart more. Self-righteousness claims its due, and sees nothing but its due in all the blessing God can shower upon it. The more it gets, the more it values itself upon it. The getting so much is proof positive of so much merit. Poverty and misfortune (as the world calls it) are equal proofs of demerit, except indeed when they come upon itself, and then they are unrighteousness in God. So the heart is, as the Scripture expresses it, "Shut up in its own fat," insensible even to the grossest stupidity, or living but to murmur out its folly and its shame.

But the father's words seem to many to refute this account of the elder son. How could he say to such an one as this, " Son, thou art ever with me, and all that I have is thine "? Does God speak to the self-righteous and unsaved after this manner? Could it be said of them that they are ever with God, or that all that He has is theirs ? If so, would it not seem as if after all they had the better portion ?

We have only to look, however, at the facts of the parable to find a convincing answer to all this. Let us take these two things separately, and inquire what is the real truth as to each.

First, "Thou art ever with me."This must of course express a fact, but what is the fact ?That the elder son was with the father, had lived a decorous life, and not wandered as the younger had, is plain upon the surface; and it is not strange that the father should express his approbation of that. The open sins of publican and harlot certainly are not, in God's eyes, better, or as good, as the moral and well-ordered life of the respectable religionist. So the woman in Simon's house the Lord evidently puts down as owing the five hundred pence, rather than the fifty; and of her He says, "Her sins, which are many, are forgiven." It would not magnify God's grace to say that because they were minor sinners it flowed forth so freely to " publicans and harlots," nor is there ever any such reason given. He does not set a premium upon vice-God forbid!-but all natural laws, and all His government among men operate against it. Even the infidel, as to Scripture, allow sin nature a "power that makes for righteousness"-meaning by that too just what the Pharisee would mean. Thus the father's, " Son, thou art ever with me," has its basis of truth.

To make out the complete meaning, however, we must certainly supplement it with something else than this. That there was inward nearness to the father upon the son's part is impossible to believe:he had never rewarded or festivity with his friends ! And in truth the Father makes no provision for merriment elsewhere, and would have no "friends" recognized outside His household.

There was no real nearness to the father, then, in this elder son, and we cannot supplement thus the thought of his outward nearness. What remains for us? Surely as to the younger, so to the elder, it was the father's heart that spoke ; and from his side, "Thou art ever near me," tells of One who is not distant from His creatures, in whose heart they dwell near indeed. Yes, He is not far from every one of us; and of this He would persuade the Pharisee no less than the prodigal. "God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on Him should not perish, but have everlasting life."
But "all that I have is thine"? That is plainly an earthly portion, not a heavenly. If we look at the beginning of the parable, we find that the father had divided between his two sons his living. The younger had spent his portion, wasted it with harlots,-plainly the earthly things, which God does entirely divide to His offspring by creation. To the elder, there still belonged his:he had not squandered it, and it was all that was left. Heavenly grace, when it bestows the best robe, does not thereby give back the lost health, the wasted substance, the natural things which may be gone forever. These things belong still to the prudent and careful liver, such as the elder son was. The meaning here should be very plain, and God would thus appeal to those who, receiving daily from His hand, are yet content to live in practical distance from Him. "The goodness of God leadeth to repentance."

But he keeps to His grace:" It was meet that we should make merry and be glad; for this thy brother was dead, and is alive again; and was lost, and is found."

Jesus In The Midst.

In the gospel of Matthew, chap. 18:20, we read, "For where two or three are gathered together in My name, there am I in the midst." These are the words of our blessed Lord, and they speak to our hearts of love-yea, love unspeakable,-of forgiveness and peace unlimited,-of joy too, because it is Himself is there. We find the apostle Paul, by the Spirit, reiterating this blessed truth in Heb. 2:12, "Saying, 'I will declare Thy name unto My brethren, in the midst of the church will I sing praise unto Thee." Yes, beloved saints, Jesus in the midst!-the earnest to our hearts of a time not far distant, when we shall behold Him with our eyes, the center of all glory, and we forever with Him, clothed in bodies of glory like unto His own. (i Jno. 3:2; i Cor. 15:49; Phil. 3:21.) Glorious anticipation this, when we shall gather around Himself once more ! This time, all radiant and bright, shining in the full blaze of His glorious presence ; crowned, as He only knows how to crown those who have not (in ever so small a measure) been ashamed to confess His name down here. And if the blessed realization of His love and grace has led them, while in this scene of sin and sorrow, to cast away as worthless, for His dear name, many hurtful weights once prized, what will be their joy to declare in that blest scene above what they have tasted down here, and have sought to declare, even His own great worthiness! So we see them cast their crowns of glory at His feet-a testimony to the value of His own peerless self. (Rev. 4:4, 10, 2:) This is the ending in glory of what has begun in grace on earth. But oh! beloved saints of God, what of that which comes between ?-the sowing now.

But is it not a blessed privilege now to have Him "in the midst" of the two or three gathered to His name- Himself making our hearts glad as we realize by faith His personal presence? Like the gladness that filled the hearts of the disciples of old when He appeared to them, the doors being shut. Jesus, their Saviour and ours,- the mighty Conqueror ! having burst the bands of death, and risen triumphant over all the powers of darkness, holding them under His feet, He stands in their midst- the Blesser. (Jno. 20:19, 20.) And this blessing extends to you, dear believer in Jesus; for He says, in ver. 29 of this same chapter, " Blessed are they which have not seen and yet have believed." It is God's eternal Son who is before us, and has promised thus to meet us who value His presence more than the praises of men. What wondrous grace is this! Jesus our Lord "in the midst"! What a joy and strength for our hearts !

"If here on earth the thought of Jesu's love
Lifts our poor hearts this weary world above,-
If even here the taste of heavenly springs
So cheers the spirit that the pilgrim sings,-
What will the sunshine of His glory prove ?
What the unmingled fullness of His love ?
What hallelujahs will His presence raise ?
What but one loud eternal burst of praise ? "

Let us look now at another scene in which we find "Jesus in the midst." The most momentous the world has ever seen or will ever again witness, and the foundation of all of which we have spoken. We read, "He steadfastly set His face to go to Jerusalem." And why? Because "the time was come that He should be received up." Outside Jerusalem's walls they raised three crosses; "there they crucified Him, and two other with Him,-on either side one, and Jesus in the midst." (Jno. 19:18.)
Solemn hour that was on Calvary's hill when He, the Son of God, the Lamb of God's providing, was made an offering for sin ! "Jesus in the midst" of sinners–the Sin-Bearer-the sinner's substitute. All the waves and billows of God's wrath going over Him. "Brought into the dust of death," and there was none to pity. (Ps. 22:, 42:, 69:) For you, dear reader, He suffered,-for you He died. Oh ! turn your eyes to this amazing sight. A sinner on His right, a sinner on His left, and Jesus the spotless holy Lamb "in the midst"-made sin. Heart that agonizing cry, " My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me ?"

Has it no answer in your heart? Did not Jesus bear that awful load for you ? " Stricken, smitten of God," and "forsaken." In the midst of sinners, their Saviour. Oh ! that cry, "Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?" Words of awful warning to those who go on heedless of this great sacrifice,-who see no beauty in that " visage marred more than any man, and His form more than the sons of men." But how blessed for those who have believed the testimony from God concerning His beloved Son, setting to their seal that God is true ! " He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life; and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him." (Jno. 3:36.) "Unto you therefore who believe, He is precious." (i Pet. 2:7.)

Let us, then, have Him before our hearts, taking pleasure in remembering Him-Himself, the blessed One, the eternal Son of God; His incarnation; His path through this world manifesting the heart of God to men; His mighty work on the cross meeting the sinner's need and glorifying God in respect to sin; His perfect obedience to the end. Well may our hearts believe, and bow and worship. Gladly may we yield ourselves up to Him as His own purchased possession. (i Cor. 6:19, 20.)

In conclusion, let us remember, God always speaks to us through His Son. By Him He made the worlds, and through Him ever revealing Himself since. It was the glorious Son of God Isaiah saw (Isa. 6:) when he had his needs met as an undone sinner; and forthwith we see the prophet as the ready messenger, and hear from his lips that great prophecy of grace and glory. (Isa. 53:) It was the glorious Son of God the apostle Paul saw when on his way to Damascus, full of hatred against the lowly followers of Jesus, and had his eyes opened, and heart set right to worship and serve Him in a devotedness that has not since been equaled. It was the same glorious One who appeared to John, quelling his fears when he had fallen as one dead in the presence of such glory; assuring the beloved disciple that He was the One who had died for him, and was alive for evermore-" the first and the last." (Rev. 1:17, 18.)

And we too, in these last hours, are privileged to look upon the same glorious Person. Called "out of darkness into His marvelous light," it remains our inestimable portion, with unveiled faces "beholding the glory of the Lord," to be "changed into same image from glory to glory." (i Cor. 3:18.) Wondrous blessedness ! Reader, is it yours ? J.F.G.

" We think of all the darkness
Which round Thy spirit pressed,
Of all those waves and billows
Which rolled across Thy breast.
Oh, there Thy grace unbounded
And perfect love we see;
With joy and sorrow mingling,
We would remember Thee."

Jacob's Mistake.

The story of the book of Genesis is that of the divine I life in the soul of man, and which is distinguished from all that might be confounded with it. Thus we have every where in it those notable contrasts which must strike even the most superficial reader. Thus we have Cain and Abel, Ishmael and Isaac, Jacob and Esau, and, in only less close connection with one another, Lot and Abraham. Jacob is not only, however, contrasted with Esau, he is in still more important contrast with himself. Indeed his history may be said to be but an inspired comment upon the two names which are identified with the two characters in which he is exhibited to us as Jacob and as Israel,-names which are used in the same way all through Scripture-the one as the natural name, the other as the spiritual; the one declaring where grace found him, the other what grace made him. We are going to look at him now at that decisive point of his life at which he passed from one condition to the other,-from being Jacob the "supplanter" (rightly called so,) to his being Israel, a "prince with God."

For it was not by quiet growth that he passed from one into the other condition, but by the strokes of God's hand in discipline,-stroke upon stroke, until at last His purpose is attained. After what long labor indeed ! and how many experiences! and only when the freshness and energy of youth are gone, and Jacob is past the age when Abram got his new name and his Isaac. Solemn it is to see this. Especially when God has spread this life of Jacob, with its lessons, over so many pages of this book, for it begins in the twenty-fifth chapter-half way through the book-and only closes with the close of it. Well worthy of our attention it must surely be, when God has thus spread it out before our eyes, while a few verses give all that He cares to say of nations and mighty movements such as fill men's histories. "The world passeth away, and the lust thereof; but he that doeth the will of God abideth forever."

But who is he that doeth the will of God ? Alas! whole-heartedly and unreservedly, if we mean, how few are to be found of such ! The mass even of Christians have a limit beyond which obedience does not go. With some, it is set farther off ; and with many, nearer at hand; and with many, the entire want of exercise as to matters of the greatest importance prevents the apprehension of their condition altogether. There are so many things about which they do not mean to be troubled, that they certainly manage to secure to themselves a very easygoing life, which they call "peace," forgetting that our peace now is only with God, while "on earth" the Prince of Peace declares He has not come to send it, but rather a sword (Matt. 10:34).

This determination not to be "troubled" means only a determination not to be exercised,-not to have inconvenient questions raised,-not to have things settled according to God ; whereas the apostle speaks plainly of the need of exercise, " to have a conscience void of offense toward God and toward men" (Acts 24:16). An un-exercised conscience means only indifference and want of heart; and in this case nothing can be right. How great a mistake it is to suppose that in some self-chosen limited range one may serve God acceptably, without going beyond it!-that we may pay Him His tenth and please ourselves in the nine-tenths which remain !-that God will accept the limits we give Him, and be content with a tenth of our hearts as readily as with a tenth of our income ! Alas ! I ask again, if we speak of whole-hearted and unreserved obedience to the will of God, who, who are yielding it to Him? and the answer will surely have to be, Few, very few indeed.
And thus do we force God to be against us,-against us, just because, indeed, He is for us. The breaking of our wills must come in tribulation and sorrow, not such as that which He has ordained for His people, but bitterness which bows the spirit and shadows the inmost recesses of the soul. And there is no sanctuary in it, the abode of light and peace, which can be a citadel secure from invasion. The peace which is made with ourselves by keeping God out breaks down in alarm and consternation when it is no longer possible to keep Him out. And yet without this, the blessing-the unspeakable blessing which He brings ever with Him cannot get in.

In this way the history of Jacob is most deeply, most solemnly instructive. The " prince with God," how alone does he become so?-how late does he become so too! Driven from his kindred and his father's house by his own duplicity and evil, he finds twenty years' discipline in servitude in Padan Aram, a victim to the same duplicity in another, and returns back to the land he had left, enriched indeed, but to meet even worse distress. God, that He may not have to deliver him up into his brother's hand, must take him into His own. In what a striking way He does this ! and how graciously ! coming down as man to meet him, in that familiar guise with which we have become since then, thank God, so intimately acquainted. Yet it is in the darkness of the night, and as an antagonist He does so:-

"And Jacob was left alone; and there wrestled a man with him until the breaking of the day. And when he saw that he prevailed not against him, he touched the hollow of his thigh, and the hollow of Jacob's thigh was out of joint as he wrestled with him."

Let us remember the circumstances of the time in which this took place. Jacob was already in the greatest distress at the news of his brother Esau being on the road with four hundred armed men to meet him. He saw himself already in the hands of his incensed brother, the acquisitions of many years, his wives, his children, and his own life in imminent peril,-God, in His righteous government, Himself against him. He had just sent over the brook all that he had:was it indeed all gone from him? he might ask, as the night fell upon him, more solitary than when twenty years before he had left his father's house. Then suddenly he was in the strong grasp of a stranger. Sought out for attack, he grappled with him as for life, and then began that strange conflict, the mystery of which evidently fell also upon Jacob's soul. Did he penetrate it? At last, he certainly did :had the truth been dawning upon him gradually? did it come in a moment, as, at the stranger's touch, his thigh-joint slipped from its socket? Then, at least, he knew in whose strong yet gentle hand he had been struggling; and so with every one who is to be an Israel, the mystery must be revealed of a struggle they have been long perhaps maintaining in the dark with One they know not, but whom they now know, and whom when they really know the struggle ceases, and with the ceasing of which the unrest passes out of their lives. For who of His own, brought to the positive conviction of with whom he is struggling, would longer struggle? Our impotence, at least, would come to our relief, as with Jacob his crippled thigh did. And on His side, when He has demonstrated to us our weakness in that in which He discovers Himself, He contends with us no more.

So the struggle ceases. There is left with us the abiding mark of it in the consciousness of nothingness; and we may indeed carry it with us even outwardly, as Jacob did. Will it not in some sense be ever manifest as to us that we have measured ourselves in the presence of God, the only place in which we get our true measure? Surely it will. A humble spirit, a chastened temper, a quiet step, such as are thus and only thus acquired will not be hidden. The more surely inasmuch as it is to such that the assurance is fulfilled, "Thus saith the high and lofty One that inhabiteth eternity, whose name is Holy;! dwell in the high and holy place, with him also that is of a contrite and humble spirit, to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones " (Isa. 57:15).

Nevertheless, the fullness of this blessing is not realized at once, as we shall see in Jacob. It is here indeed he gets his name of Israel, though needing to have it confirmed to him before it is fully his:-

"And he said, 'Let me go; for the day breaketh.' And he said, 'I will not let thee go, except thou bless me.' "

Oh, mighty power of weakness over strength ! Oh, blessed God, that canst thus be constrained by the need of Thy creatures ! Jacob can no longer struggle, but he can cling. The strength which is gone from his loins is thrown into his arms, and there he hangs, strong arid desperate in his need, with the tenacity of one who will drown if he lose hold of his refuge. Did you ever know what it is so to lay hold of God and not find blessing? None ever did. But first we must confess ourselves what we are:-

"And he said unto him, 'What is thy name?' And he said, ' Jacob.' And he said, ' Thy name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel; for as a prince hast thou power with God and with men, and hast prevailed.'"

This is a simple lesson, yet a great one. It is the principle that the apostle proclaims when he says (2 Cor. 12:9), "Most gladly, therefore, will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me."

We talk of the need of power. We lament the lack of it. We covet for ourselves the revival of what seems is to have passed away. Well, here is the sure way of possessing what we long for, as sure to us now as to those in the days gone by. There is no change in God. The necessities of His holiness are the same ever. The sufficiency of His grace is ever the same. He who glories but in his infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon him, shall have the power of Christ to rest upon him. Who that has known the one, but has known the other? Still, the strength of God is perfected in weakness. Still, "to him that hath no might, He increaseth strength." Yea, "the youths shall faint and be weary, and the young men shall utterly fall; but they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run and not be weary, and they shall walk and shall not faint" (Isa. 40:30, 31).

These are principles that abide through all dispensations. They are holy, for they exalt God. They are fruitful in blessing to His creatures. The present is a clay of Jacob-like activity:of Israels there are how few ! Jacob valued the blessing of God:this is evident in his worst actions; but his means were all his own. " The end justifies the means " seems to have been practically, if not avowedly, his motto. And with how many who similarly value God's blessing is it so to-day! They would be careful not to avow the motto; nay, they would not like to carry it out to any thing like its full extent, yet after all, look at their methods, listen to their frequent plea, "But it is for a good purpose ! " and can you doubt that the Jesuit maxim really controls them ? that their morality is but diluted Jesuitism?
Do you not even hear in the mouths of Christian people even, what they believe they have apostolic authority for, that "being crafty, I caught you with guile " ? Nay, is it not indeed there in 2 Cor. 12:16 ? Have we not chapter and verse for such a principle ? Well, then, shall we say that the Scriptures positively commend cunning and deceit? Where are the consciences of those who can so argue? If you will look only a little more closely, you will see that it is manifestly the quotation of an adversary's argument-a thing not at all uncommon with the apostle- and that he takes particular pains to appeal to them for its refutation in the next two sentences. But it shows what lurks under the surface, that such a principle should be even for a moment thought to have divine sanction.

(To be continued.)

Fragment

BY S. RIDOUT. (Luke 15:3-7 ; Song of Solomon 2:10-15.)

I just want to speak a moment about the love of Christ to His people in a little different view. We have seen how precious we are to the Lord Jesus, in spite of our utter insignificance and worthlessness, in spite of every thing we are, because we are the gift of the Father,-that setting the worth of the most worthless saint beyond price to the Lord Jesus. In Luke, we see how precious we are to Him, not only because we have been given by the Father, but because, like the good shepherd, He has gone out and sought us. We were "dead in trespasses and sins," and the Lord Jesus, in order that He might reach those who were dead, died Himself; in order that He might reconcile us, He took such a distance that He said, "My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" He could go no further than that, and that is the love He has to every one of us. He loved us so that He could go that distance to save you and me. How precious we must be in His sight when He speaks of us as a "pearl," as a "precious jewel"! Those whom He has rescued from the power of death He has made a jewel that He will wear forever. That is how dear the weakest believer is to the Lord Jesus. In the Song of Solomon, we find that He not only loved us, and gave Himself for us, but that He wants to have communion with us. " Oh, my dove," etc. The Lord Jesus wants to hear your voice and mine speaking to Him,-wants us to have communion with Himself. Dear brethren, if you have nothing to tell the Lord but that you are away from Him, that will be sweet to Him; no matter what it may be, He says, "Sweet is thy voice." The father surely would have been glad to have seen his son in a different plight, but was it not a joy to the father's heart to see him when he was a great-way off? Is it not a joy to the Lord even if we say, " I have wandered from Thee:I have been out of communion " ? We are dear to the Lord, so dear that He is going to have us very near Himself. We are so dear to Him that He wants us to be talking to Him while we are here. The love that Christ has to His people leads Him to long and ask each one of us to have communion with Himself. How can we show our praises to the Lord Jesus more than by saying we want to have communion with Him,-letting Him hear that voice, whether in praise or in confession ? It is sweet to Him, if it is real. This is the way He shows His wonderful love to us, which we will never realize until we see Him face to face. To the honest Christian, beloved, there is no other walk than to walk with God.

Notes Of Addresses

By W. Easton & S. Ridout, at Plainfield Meeting, July,'89).

By WM. EASTON (Jno. 17:)

I have read this chapter, beloved friends, not with the idea of expounding it, but just to set forth a few thoughts about it, in order to make the Lord Jesus "Christ Himself a little more precious to us. We can never make too much of Him. I shall never forget the remark of a dear old servant of God many years ago, when he asked me on one occasion to supply a pulpit for him. As I was leaving the house, he said,-

" Remember, now, God delights to hear any one speak well of His Son."

I have never forgotten that, beloved friends, and through God's mercy I try to the best of my abilities to speak well of His Son. And I want so to set Him before our hearts to-night that the very youngest Christians in this tent shall find that the Lord, in however feeble a measure, has been endeared to their hearts; and if we succeed in that, it will be an immense thing.

And here let me say another word before going further. It is not God's gift to us that we are to speak about. Were we speaking of that, and unfolding that, we should turn, in all probability, to the third chapter of John's gospel, where we read that "God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth on Him should not perish, but have everlasting life." That is God's love-gift to the world. Blessed one it is, surely. Would to God that every one in this tent knew it! Would to God that every one in this tent could say, "I have got that; I have stretched out the hand of faith, and have taken hold of that gift, and now I can say, ' Thanks be unto God for His unspeakable gift;' I have eternal life. I know the Father, and I know the Son of the Father; and my heart is acquainted with both." What a thing to say! Many times I am positively astounded, in preaching the gospel, at some of the simple truths-truths that we call elementary-that we almost feel ashamed to talk about before a company of saints, because of their simplicity, and yet how profound their depths ! The sacrifice of the Son of God ! or the love of God ! what do we know about them, beloved brethren? Next door to nothing. There is a depth in such themes that our souls have never yet fathomed. There are heights we have never yet reached. May the living God give us to enjoy more even the so-called elementary truths, such as " God so loved the world." Beloved brethren, we have never exhausted that theme, therefore we need not be ashamed to preach from it. We have never got to the bottom of it yet, and all true-hearted saints will be delighted to hear it, and to pray for it.

We commence, then, with this:God has not only been pleased to give a love-gift to us, but He has been pleased to give a love-gift to His Son. He has given something to Christ, as well as given Christ to us, and therefore our theme is not, " God so loved the world, that He gave His Son; " but it is, God so loved His Son, that He gave the saints to Him. What a wondrous thought! And beloved brethren, that is just what I want to set forth tonight, so that even the youngest Christian here may have larger and grander thoughts of the Saviour, and be able to enjoy Him more than ever.

I want, then, to get fastened in our minds this blessed thought, that God has given us to Christ. " Oh," you say, "we knew that years ago." I know that, my friends, but remember you haven't sucked all the honey out of it yet. God has been pleased to take hold of you and me; and, to show the fullness of His heart's love for His beloved Son, He has given us to Christ. Tell me, how does such a thought affect your soul and mine? Can you estimate the value that the Lord Jesus Christ puts upon
you as the Father's love-gift to Him? Can you tell what the thoughts of His heart are toward us? What must He think of us? This is the way to look at His love. And, dear young Christians, never let us forget this :every thing depends upon the person who gives the gift. It is not a question of the value of the thing itself. It may be very trifling and insignificant-any thing but a costly thing; but the question is, who gave it ? I can tell you, I carry a little thing in that pocket-just a tiny little thing, yet money won't buy it. Another person perhaps wouldn't give ten cents for the thing itself. All the cents in America could not buy it from me. Why ? Simply because of the giver. How blessed, then, to think that the eye of the Lord rests upon every saint in this wide world with affection and delight, because they have been given to Him ! Yes, that blessed One looks down from the heavens into this tent to-night, and sees and values and loves even the feeblest of His own. Beloved brethren, it is the most wonderful thought imaginable ! God has given you and me to His beloved Son ! What a revelation this is to us ! It was the gift of the Father to the Son. It was just as though He said to the Son, " You see how I love You, and I am going to give You something that I know You will value." Thus the thoughts and feelings of the Saviour toward us are molded, if we might so speak, by this blessed fact, that we are the Father's love-gift to Him.

Now if you take and read this chapter at your leisure, you will find that the words, " give," " given," and "gavest" occur seventeen times,-the same number as the chapter. They give a character to it. And it lets us see that the Lord Jesus Christ looks upon the saints with this thought in His mind. Just as though He said, " This is the gift that My Father in His love has given to Me, and now I will tell out My heart, so that they may hear what the thoughts and the feelings and the desires of My heart are about them." He might have whispered that prayer into the ear of His father about us without letting us know, but the blessed Lord would not do that. That would not satisfy His loving heart; hence we hear Him saying, "These things I speak in the world, that they might have My joy fulfilled in themselves (5:13). He would have it communicated, He would have it written down too, so that you and I might listen to the breathings of His heart into the ear of the Father, and learn the wondrous fact that they were about us-He was praying for us. What a wonderful thing! Beloved brethren, do we enter into it ? Oh, does it not endear Him to our hearts? It is occupation with Him that endears Him to our hearts, as we sometimes sing,-

" I look to Him till sight endear
The Saviour to my heart."

Oh, what a blessed thing it is, just to get the eye of faith upon that blessed Object, and drink in the revelation there unfolded to us in this seventeenth of John, and listen to the breathings of His blessed heart, and to put ourselves in the midst of that hallowed circle that He calls " His own." Just think of it, and take it home to your own heart. Me, a poor, weak, worthless thing in myself, perhaps just converted, and to think I am dear to the heart of the Lord! Who could express it but Himself? No one. But He has made it all known to us in this chapter, that we might have the enjoyment of it all now, and be with Him forever and forever by and by. How true is that word, " Having loved His own which were in the world, He loved them unto the end "! (Jno. 13:1:)
Now what is the first thing He gives us when He thinks of us as the Father's love-gift to Him ? Well, He says, the first thing I will give them is eternal life, "As Thou hast given Him power over all flesh, that He should give eternal life to as many as Thou hast given Him" (5:2). He knew that our poor wretched hearts could never understand these things unless He gave us a new nature capable of understanding and enjoying them, therefore He says, "I will give them eternal life;" "and this is life eternal, that they might know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent" (5:3). Now do not let us forget that the Lord is not here defining what eternal life is,-He is not giving us definitions of eternal life ; He is telling us the characteristics of it. The man that has it knows the Father and the Son:" That they might know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent." I understand human life because I am a human being myself, and have the same life that every man has. In like manner I understand and am able to enjoy, according to my measure, the Father and the Son, because I have the same life in me-eternal life. Isn't that a wonderful thought, beloved friends? Isn't it a marvelous thing to begin with ? He says, " I will give them eternal life." Every child of God has it; they could not be children of God if they hadn't it. They never did any thing for it. It was the pure sovereign act of God in giving it to them. The Lord says, "I will give them eternal life." We have got it, thank God. We are not putting it far away over yonder, and hoping that some of these days we shall get it. No ; we have it, and enjoy it now. Then there is another thing:"I have manifested Thy name unto the men which Thou gavest Me out of the world." Here there is relationship, and knowledge of it. I am not speaking of how far they entered into it, but merely of the fact itself; for all through, the Lord was revealing the Father. Isn't it a wonderful thing to know the Father,-to know the heart of that One that gave His well-beloved Son to us, and gave us to His Son ? And that is what all young Christians know. Even the babes know the Father (i Jno. 2:13). The Lord Jesus is here speaking of His disciples, but the application is equally true to us, as He says further on in the chapter, "Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe on Me through their word " (5:20); so that all believers come in, and may have the enjoyment of it. And it seems as though the Lord knew that Satan would try to steal that away from us, and that some long-headed individual would come in with his reasoning, and say, " Oh, that was only for the disciples," and. He put that little word in for our comfort, " Neither pray I for these alone, but for those that believe on Me through their word." Oh, what a blessed thing it is to know the Father! There are many of the dear children of God who seem afraid to say, " Father." You hear them speak about God, and sometimes in their prayers they address Him as the Great and Holy, and Almighty Lord God, and use all those great and glorious titles of God;-titles which are all true in their place, but which are not the familiar but reverent utterances of a child to its Father. Ah, it is another thing to know God as Father ! To be able to say that the Father's name has been revealed to my heart, and I know that He is my Father. That gives the boldness-the affectionate and holy boldness of the child. And such a thought, beloved brethren, does not give license, but it keeps us steady and sober; for we know that while that One who is up there is our Father, we know that our Father is God. What an important thing that is ! Never let us forget it. That blessed God is our Father, but He who is our Father is God. This gives Him His place, and keeps us in ours. It is well for us to keep these things clear and distinct, beloved brethren, especially in these days, when people are attacking the Word of God on every hand, and taking or leaving just what they please; and when some are making every thing of the universal Fatherhood of God, without the new birth, and various other notions which men spin out of their own brains.

Again, you find Christians speaking about the blessed Lord, and calling Him their Elder Brother. This is a shocking thing ! I hope none here will ever do it. If the Lord Jesus, after having borne all our sins, and the penalties due to us because of those sins, upon the cross, and having been raised by the glory of the Father, and ascended to His right hand,-if He in grace associates us with Himself in resurrection, and deigns to call us brethren, let us adore Him for the grace that could do it; but never let us seek to bring Him down to our level, and call Him "Brother." Thomas did not say, "My dear Elder Brother;" but " My Lord and my God." Oh, see to it that we give the Lord His true place. Let us not use language that even unintentionally lowers Him.

Then there is another thing:the Lord's care for His own comes out here so beautifully. "While I was with them in the world, / kept them in Thy name; those that Thou gavest Me I have kept, and none of them is lost, but the son of perdition; that the Scripture might be fulfilled " (5:12). And then in the ninth verse, " I pray for them:I pray not for the world, but for them which Thou hast given Me; for they are Thine." And in the eleventh verse, " Holy Father, keep through Thine own name those whom Thou hast given Me, that they may be one, as we are." Is it not blessed, beloved friends, to see the value that the Lord Jesus attaches to us, and the interest He has in us ? He gives us eternal life, makes known the Father's name to us, and then, in view of His going away, makes the fullest provision for our being kept, by putting us into the care of the Holy Father. It is just as if He said, "These poor things are so precious to Me that I couldn't intrust them to any one else, so I will hand them over to the care of the One who gave them to Me, for I know His heart, and He will look after them:' Holy Father, keep through Thine own name those whom Thou hast given Me.' (5:ii) 'While I was with them in the world, I kept them in Thy name'" (5:12). And in the ninth verse, " I pray for them . . . which Thou hast given Me; for they are Thine. And all Mine are Thine, and Thine are Mine." Isn't that a wonderful thought ! Think of our being put into the care of a holy Father! Sometimes we forget this, beloved friends. Sometimes we forget the character of the One that is looking after us. It is well to bear it in mind, and to walk in the sense of this solemn but blessed fact:my Father is the holy Father, and as such, He would have His children in keeping with His own character; so I must think of that, and seek to act accordingly. It is not, beloved friends, that it makes us melancholy. I don't believe that having the sense of the Father's love makes us pull long faces. I don't believe that God ever meant His people to pull long faces and appear miserable. I believe that holiness does not tend that way at all. That is legality, and, alas ! many of the saints of God are legal to a degree; but legality is not liberty, and liberty is not license. There is holy reverence when we approach the presence of God, but there is a freedom without levity. God means us to be natural and real. We are not all cast in the same mold, so we need not try to imitate each other in any way; only let us be real, and keep before us the fact that our Father is God,-that He is the holy Father. And if we know this, do not let us seek to get out of it in any way, but let us seek to be consistent with it, and at the same time to be joyful and real in our hearts before Him. God looks for reality, and He will have it. Let us therefore beware of assuming any thing.

Well, He is keeping us, caring for us. What should we do if He wasn't ? I am not speaking now of the Lord looking after us as the High-Priest, etc., but of the care of the holy Father. May our hearts enter more into it.

But there is another thing, beloved friends. The Lord is going to have us with Himself. He has given us eternal life; He has revealed the Father's name to us; He has put us into the Father's hands while He is away; and now He says, " I am going to have these poor things, that I love so much, with Myself up there;" and He says, "Father, I will that they also, whom Thou hast given Me, be with Me where I am; that they may behold My glory" (5:24). Isn't that a beautiful thought, brethren ? that there is a glory which the Lord Jesus Christ cannot give to us, but He knows we shall be delighted to behold it. He counts, as it were, upon the affections of our hearts. He knows we shall be delighted with the thought that there is that which is His which He never could communicate, but which we shall be delighted to behold, while we worship and adore. And that corrects some strange thoughts that are going about to-day. People are getting into serious errors in this connection. Some are saying that the saints are on an unqualified equality with the Lord; others, that everything that the Lord Jesus is and has as man, the Christian is and has; and others, that all His acquired glories the Christian will share with Him. Beloved brethren, I deny it. To me, it is an awfully solemn thing to make such statements. Yet I have even seen such a statement in print, and handed round to meet supposed current errors, that "all that Christ is and has as man, the Christian is and has." I say again, I deny it. It is false. Will he who made that statement have the bride ? Christ as man will have her. Will he sit upon the throne of David ? Christ will sit upon that throne. Will he have the glories of the first and second of Hebrews ? Never. Yet Christ has them. Yes, He has glories peculiar to Himself, even as man, which we can never share. Blessed be His name forever and ever! But there is one thing absolutely certain, that there is not one single thing that the heart of the Lord can give to us or share with us that He will withhold from us-not one. He will give us everything His loving heart can give. But let us beware, and not rob Him to exalt ourselves.

And when it is a question of seeing Him, and being with Him, He says, "I will that they also, whom Thou hast given Me, be with Me where I am." How is that going to take place? Is He going to send for us? No. Is it the angels that are coming? No, not even the highest of them. He will not even send Michael or Gabriel. The saints are so precious, so valuable, that He says, as it were, " I must go after them Myself." When, therefore, the time comes that He must have us with Himself, (and this verse is to have its fulfillment,) it is Himself who comes. As the apostle beautifully puts it, "The Lord Himself shall descend from heaven," etc. (i Thess. 4:16.) It is not another Jesus:it is the "same Jesus." The One who "bore all our sins in His own body on the tree" (i Pet. 2:24); who bears all our sorrows on His heart on the throne. Yes, it is the same Jesus. The One whom God "raised from the dead, and set Him at His own right hand in the heavenly places, far above all principality, and power, and might, and dominion, and every name that is named, not only in this world, but also in that which is to come; and hath put all things under His feet, and gave Him to be the Head over all things to the Church, which is His body." (Eph. 1:19-23.) Far above what? Name any thing you like, or any name you like:He is far above every one and every thing. And it is that Jesus whom we know and love. We have not lost Him because He has gone in there. No, no; blessed be His name ! By faith we have seen Him go up to the throne of the Majesty in the heavens, and take His seat there. There is where Jesus is tonight. Don't we know Him ? Surely, we do ! And He occasionally pays us visits, in ways so marvelous that all we can say is, you must experience it for yourselves:it cannot be explained. He says, " I will manifest Myself to him" (Jno. 14:21). You must know it for yourselves. It is so wonderful, you cannot explain it. People may say, "I don't believe it." Well, be it so. But when once you have tasted it, my friends, you will believe it then, and you will want others to taste of it likewise. Peter speaks of it when he says, "We rejoice with joy unspeakable and glorified." It is not fanaticism either, but the sober teaching of God's Word. Would that we all had more enjoyment of it! And that is the One we are going to see. We are going to be with Him and like Him forever.

He has expressed His will about us, and that will shall have its accomplishment soon.
Beloved brethren, He is coming Himself. Who is it we are waiting for? Jesus. He might be here to-night. "I will come again, and receive you unto Myself," He said. How shall we go? Shall we fly? No! though we sometimes sing, "Then as we upward fly." We shall be " caught up." The same mighty power that raised the blessed Lord, and took Him up there, will be that by which we shall be raised, and we shall pass into the presence of the Lord that has loved us so long and so well;-loved us with a love that is inexpressible, because He has taken us from the Father's hand as the love-gift of His Father's heart to Him. Dear young Christian, isn't He a blessed Saviour? Don't you feel that your heart is drawn out to Him more, through this brief glance at His love? And if you should feel inclined to say, "O Lord, how very little do I love Thee, in view of such a display of Thy love to me !" take courage and comfort from this fact, that there is One who loves Him perfectly. "The Father loveth the Son;" and remember, the more we see of His love, and the more we are occupied with His love, the more will our love flow forth to Him. "We love Him because He first loved us." May the Lord give us a greater enjoyment of these things, and make them good in our souls.

A Word Of Encouragement To Tract Distributors.

"HOWARD LAKE, MINN., Sept., 1889.

"Dear Brother,-

"Brother L.'s business takes him through the villages and towns of this state, and he has many an opportunity for sowing the seed of the gospel. One Saturday evening, having entered the town of G–, and made preparations for staying over the Lord's day, he was asked by a friend to come to the barn, to look at a horse. On entering the barn, an open oat-sack met his eye, and into it he quietly dropped a tract. This tract was put into the sack in the hope that this friend, whom he knew to be a stranger to God's love, would find and read it. But ' God moves in a mysterious way,' and as this oat-sack belonged to a minister who kept his horse in the same barn, the minister found the tract and took it home to read. Knowing the town to be an ungodly one, his curiosity was excited, and he wondered much by whom the tract had been dropped. The next day, as he was having a vacation, he attended services held by a minister of another denomination. Looking over the congregation, he saw a man turning to his Bible, and perceiving him to be a stranger, he thought, 'There is the man who put the tract in the oat-sack.' After meeting, he spoke to him, and finding him a follower of the Master, invited him to his house. The acquaintance then commenced resulted in the blessing spoken of in the following letter addressed to him lately. M.F.S.

"My Dear Brother,-

" It has been some time since I wrote you, and some strange things have transpired since then ; one of them is that a preacher should be brought out into the light as shed forth by Jesus in His Word. A small beginning ofttimes, under God's care and guidance, has a very great and worthy ending. For instance, a tract dropped in the mouth of an oat sack is a small thing-a small beginning, but the conversion of forty or fifty sinners, and perhaps more, and the blessing and upbuilding of a number of God's weak children-among them a preacher,-and the gathering together of a company of God's children as the result thus far, is a great ending; and the end is not yet. Who can tell whereunto this work, begun so simply, will grow. Go on, my brother, with your distribution of gospel-tracts:try another oat-sack,-it seems to be very fruitful ground. The great result of your work in that respect only eternity will reveal…… W.H.S.

The Power Of An Assembly, Etc.

THE POWER OF AN ASSEMBLY TO BIND AND TO LOOSE. (Matt. 18:15-20.)-Continued.

3. THE LOCAL ASSEMBLY.

We need now to consider more closely the assembly itself. It is the only place in Matthew,-and in the gospels-in which the assembly is spoken of, this passage that we are now considering, except where, two chapters before, the Lord announces to Peter that upon that Rock which he had confessed He would build His Church. The reference is evident to that very passage ; for it is there that the power to bind and to loose is committed to Peter which here is committed to the assembly:not, however, to the whole Church, of which He there speaks, but to the local church (or assembly). The reason should be plain :the local assembly is the only practical means by which the Church as a whole can express itself. The Church at large is the whole membership of Christ all over the world. Such a body would be of course impracticable to bring together upon any occasion and unite in a common judgment. The assembly at any one spot is thus empowered by the Lord to act for Him, even though they be but two or three, the lowest possible number of which an assembly could be formed.

It is, moreover, as actually come together that they have authority:this is expressly stated both here and in the epistle to the Corinthians (i Cor. 5:4). Only thus could it be said, "There am I in the midst of them." Those actually gathered together, and no others, have power to bind and to loose.

This is of importance in connection with what some have maintained-that all gatherings in a city or town are but one assembly, and that for any one of these gatherings to act for itself apart from the rest is simple independence. It may not seem needful to mention it here, but as a principle that has proved itself fruitful of evil, it deserves to be considered still. Many yet hold it, who know not what it is they hold,-have not examined its consequences in the light of Scripture, nor even been aroused by what one might suppose abundant experience.

The plea for it is that Scripture speaks only of " the assembly" in a city, of "assemblies" in a district like Galatia. It has been answered that the now-accepted reading of Acts 9:31 speaks of "the assembly throughout all Judaea and Galilee and Samaria," while in many cities no doubt there was but one assembly. Even in Corinth, a large city for the times (when cities were by no means what they are to-day), the whole church is spoken of as coming together into one place (i Cor. 14:23); so that the language cannot be pleaded in the very place where it would be of most importance to the argument, in the epistle namely in which the order of the church on earth is the special subject. If at Corinth they could all come together into one place, there must have been few cities, one would say, in which they could not.

But the true answer is that there is no doctrine in all this, and that the doctrine which we have in Scripture as to assembly-action is different and contradictory to the thought. The question is simply to what kind of an assembly is the power to bind and to loose intrusted by the Lord; and then the answer must be that it is such an assembly as actually assembles, and no other. This, is evident:it is "where two or three are gathered together in My name," says the Lord, "there am I in the midst of them." If such an assembly pronounces as to any matter within its province, where is the warrant for saying it does not bind ? or that which in a country place would be right and incumbent upon them to do, would be in a city mere independency ?

Scripture has no idea of an assembly composed of assemblies, but ever and only of an assembly composed of individuals. Membership is only in the body of Christ, and the local assembly, according to the idea of it, before schism had rent the Church, as it soon did, was just the " one body " in whatever place,-the practical working representation of the whole body of Christ. But if so,- and the first epistle to the Corinthians makes it undeniable,-there is then no possible place for another kind of assembly, whose units shall be assemblies and not members:the body of Christ gives us quite another thought. This kind of city-church contended for is really the beginning of an ecclesiastical system like to those around us, and far from the simplicity of Scripture. Its influence is morally evil, for we cannot violate Scripture without suffering the consequences of it.

The first effect is, that there must be some unifying third kind of a meeting to enable the whole to work unitedly; and since this cannot be a meeting of the whole, it must be a meeting of representatives, whether self-chosen or chosen by the gatherings. If the latter, a new kind of official is created; if the former, it is worse by so much as they act upon their own account, and without being responsible in any proper way to those they represent.

Other consequences are sure to follow. The representatives come to be the men of leisure, and, as naturally connected with this, the men of means, and not the better is it if they are, along with this, the men of gift; for so all the more readily is a clerical caste established,-the ruin of all divine order in the Church of God.

You have now a parliament, or congress, not an assembly such as the Word contemplates or the Lord authorizes here at all; and yet in their hands is the final decision practically left. And after in perhaps a dozen really competent assemblies-competent, it is owned, in any other place,-the matter has been apparently settled, it is put into their hands for final adjustment.

Thus the Lord is dishonored, for " there am I in the midst of you " is no longer what gives competency to act, and He being slighted, and the Spirit of God grieved, it is no wonder if there should be plenty of conflicting judgments to exercise the presiding board,-for such it is. Worse evils follow. These great city-assemblies come to have, necessarily, preponderating weight in the minds of the Lord's people round about. They become centers of influence, and soon courts of appeal. They attract the ambitious; they become temptations to the spiritual; they learn to feel their power and to exert it:metropolitanism grows apace. Alas ! we are but tracing the first steps of that decline which subjected the Church to the sway of the world, and eventuated in a Roman dictator issuing his decrees from the Vatican.

This will be thought by some mere raving and abuse. Let it be so. A John could wonder with great astonishment, when he saw in prophetic vision the harlot church. Rome was the slow growth of centuries, and the steps that led to it were almost insensible at the beginning. Yet there has been enough before our eyes to warn those who are capable of receiving it. It should be enough indeed for us that Scripture condemns it all, as it surely does, when it puts the authority to bind and to loose into the hands of two or three gathered to Christ's name, and makes the basis of that authority His own presence in the midst of those so gathered.
We may leave this, then, in order to insist more fully upon another thing which has been already in part before us, but which needs the strongest possible enforcement, and at the same time the fullest consideration that can be given it. All these points as to the order of the Church of God will be found to be most deeply affecting her spiritual condition. They are no mere formalities without moral importance. It would be really dishonoring to God to suppose so. This is the difference so pronounced between human regulations merely and the commandments of the Lord. Indeed, the human regulation is worse than this:in the things of God it is positively immoral, because it gives the conscience another master than the Lord; but I speak now of their character apart from this. What
God enjoins is always holy and promoting holiness. Nor can we go aside from it without the most serious loss in this respect. Yet among those most intelligent in divine order, nothing is more common than violations of this where plainest, as if it were really without any spiritual significance.

It is no new thing, however, that those who insist most upon church authority seem to know least of what the church is,-nay, to have the least respect really for it. It needs not to go as far as Rome, or even to high episcopalianism, in proof of this. Those who are clear enough in theory are often found in practice most opposite to it; and "theory" alone it surely can be which so little influences practice. What is the "Church"? It is the membership of the body of Christ:who doubts it? among those at least who are likely to read this. But when I ask, "Are women, then, of that church to which authority has been given, to bind and to loose ? is it necessary to consult them as to church-decisions? how many there are whose practice at least excludes them altogether ! Some even would plead that the apostle's prohibition of their speaking in the assembly would equally exclude them from being consulted as to its acts. But the two things stand upon entirely different footing.

In the first case, God, who has given the woman her long hair for a covering (i Cor. 11:15), has thus indicated that her place was not to be in public. The attractiveness of her modesty is as soon lost by such prominency as the bloom of a delicate fruit by handling. What can be more unfeminine than boldness in a woman ? What more dignifies her than, a retiring spirit? The head is set boldly upon the shoulders:the heart is safe guarded by its circle of ribs. If the man is, as the apostle says, the head of the woman, the woman is no less clearly the heart of the man.

But God has given woman a conscience no less than man, and to ignore her conscience is more to deny the God that gave it than to put her forward in the assembly is to deny what nature teaches by her long hair. For the conscience is just that in us which owns the divine authority. Deny the conscience, you have unseated God from His throne in the soul. If you can suppress it, the glory is gone from manhood, the beauty and grace from womanhood. Nay, humanity is lost, and a Nebuchadnezzar must be driven to the beasts (to which he belongs) until he knows that the Most High ruleth in the kingdom of men. Only when he owns that does his kingdom return to him.

The question of discipline is the question of good and evil,-of our association with what is for God or with what dishonors Him ; it is but our taking part in that strife from which no one, even from childhood, can withdraw himself. Force any one to walk hand-in-hand with what he believes in his soul dishonors God, and you have corrupted him, cast him out from fellowship with God, shadowed and perverted his life, and set him upon a road which, wind as it will, goes ever downward. Does it matter whether the pronoun be masculine or feminine- whether you say "him" or "her"? No one the least worthy of respect can think so.
Even a conscience not forced at all, but left unexercised, is a serious evil. " Herein do I exercise myself," says the apostle, "that I may have always a conscience void of offense toward God and toward men." A want of exercise means a soul indifferent-careless if it be with God or not. People may be drilled, no doubt, into a belief that they are irresponsible-that the responsibility lies elsewhere ; but this will not alter the nature of things, nor prevent the results which necessarily follow. Your belief about it will not make tares wheat, or thorns grow figs. The leak in your boat will scuttle it, though you may sleep easy because the responsibility is in other hands. God's truth turned to a lie is not a lie; and man's lie, though heartily believed in, will not act the part of truth. When God speaks, whosoever has ears is to hear; and if he has none, it is no less God that has spoken.

Now the "church" is not the men of the assembly merely; nor is it the leaders, or the gifted ones, or the intelligent:it is the church. And a judgment given must be, not the judgment of the few or of the majority, but of all. So, if it is truly their judgment, it must be their intelligent judgment, or it is not a judgment at all. They must know the case, know the scripture that applies to it, have full opportunity, without hurry, and waiting upon God. Here is the real duty of leaders, to see that there is no driving, no undue pressure brought to bear, no concealment, and no warping of facts or of the mind:and how helpful will leaders be who can do such work as this ! But in the moment of decision there must be no leaders, but all clear, each one for himself and before God, as if all depended upon himself and there were not another.

True, a judgment arrived at in this way will be a much slower matter than we often desire. Little do we realize what a safeguard God has provided for us by means of the very slowness and dullness of which we complain. God would have us walk in none other than a very plain path-a path which can be made plain to the dullest. To have to make it so plain means to have to rehearse it to ourselves, to look at it from many a side, to have opportunity to detect perhaps what in our haste we had overlooked before. The difficulties in the way are to force us to wait on God for a solution. Ah, God is wise, be sure, in thus linking us together as He has done, and not alone is help given by the wiser to the duller, but by the duller to the wiser also, that we may prove, not how necessary are the wise merely, but how necessary we all are to one another !

And if there are slow ones to be quickened, dull ones to be cleared, souls to be helped in various ways, think you God does not care for all this,-does not look to see it done, does not bless us in the doing it as well as those to whom it is done? See how He thinks of and provides for general blessing by that which seems to our haste only evil to be got rid of. Patience is one of God's own attributes, as it is the sign of an apostle also. And if patience has her perfect work, we shall be perfect and entire, wanting nothing (Jas. 1:4). No wonder that the world should be a place of tribulation, when "tribulation worketh patience " (Rom. 5:3).

It may be said that this is an ideal assembly-action, and that we cannot expect it to be often attained. Alas ! I believe it true that it has been very seldom so. The decision of an assembly counts as that, although half the assembly have never been consulted even,-though the whole matter was settled by a few in a brothers' meeting, and only the result has been communicated to the assembly for their adoption blindly; though the protest of conscience has been unheeded, and indifference and confidence in leaders have made it in fact the judgment of a very few. But in all this, what we sow we reap, and have reaped. God is not mocked; and under His government, the results of such courses have been manifest. Let us not talk of precedents, but honestly and faithfully, by the light of God's holy Word, consider our ways. Not the united voice of all the assemblies in the world can make evil good, or hinder the work of evil being ever evil.

We disclaim rightly association with evil. Have we been as careful about it in this form as we have been in some other forms? I am sure we have not. And thus on the one hand laxity has prevailed where there was indifference, and narrowness and party-action have had their opportunity upon the other, God has ordained help for us in a quarter from whence we never should have thought of it-help from the very ones who need help. The simple and ignorant, the weak and prejudiced, the "babes" of the assembly,-let us realize that these all are to have their intelligent part in assembly-action; and what a guarantee have we got against hasty and party treatment of what is submitted for it; while the result comes out that we must seek help from God to raise the general tone and condition of the assembly, if we would avoid disaster in the time of testing. How wholesome is this necessity! What a binding together of hearts would be the result of the acceptance of it! How would the meaning of church order-and of the church itself-become apparent to us ! Haste is self-will:even though it take the form of zeal for holiness, and care for the honor of the Lord. These, if real, will manifest themselves in care for the least of Christ's purchased flock, and in the endeavor that the separation from evil involve not a worse evil. What need have we of understanding better Christ's headship of His Church, and the omnipotence which we grasp when in helplessness we wait upon Him! And what need to remember that the Church, if one, is yet composed of many members, every one of whom is as distinctly the object of His care and love as if there were no other. His own tender and solemn words, do they not rebuke us all ?-" See that ye offend not (cause not to stumble) one of these little ones."

Fragment

If our hearts are cherishing the abiding hope of the Lord's return, we shall set light by all earthly things. It is morally impossible that we can be in the attitude of waiting for the Son from heaven, and not be detached from this present world.

There are not two faces alike; not two leaves in the forest alike; not two blades of grass alike:why, then, should any one aim at another's line of work, or affect to possess another's gift ? Let each one be satisfied to be just what his Master has made him.