“Behold, I Come Quickly”

"I will seek out My sheep, and will deliver them out of all places where they have been scattered in the cloudy and dark day." "And there shall be one flock and one Shepherd." (Ezek. 34:12; Jno. 10:16.)

Lord, Thy sheep are sadly scattered,
And the world is strange and cold:
Many lambs, with piteous bleating,
Cry for some protecting fold.
Jesus, gentle Shepherd, come !
Gather all the wanderers home.

Some are straying on bleak mountains,
Where the grass is dry and dead ;
Wolves have entered, and have spared not;–
What sad havoc they have made !
Jesus, gracious Shepherd, come !
Call Thy wayward wanderers home.

Over all, where'er they're straying,
Ever watchful Thou dost keep ;
Thou dost mark the faintest bleatings,
And the wanderings of Thy sheep.
Follow them, where'er they roam,
And Thou 'lt surely bring them home.

Some are feeding in the valleys,-
Where the grass is tender, sweet;
Tracing out the unseen footprints,
Sitting at the Master's feet,
Looking, Lord, for Thee to come.
Come, and take Thy loved ones home.

Keep their hearts, the while they're waiting,
Ever faithful, Lord, to Thee.
Filling up the fleeting moments,
Ere Thy glorious face we see,
Shepherd of Thy scattered sheep,
May we patient vigil keep.

H. McD.

Monday Morning.

If I mistake not, fellow-Christian, there is a special test often connected with the above-mentioned season of our lives. Very much it seems to one sometimes like the descent of the disciples from the top of " the holy mount," where they saw the Lord " transfigured in glory," to contact with the power of Satan at the bottom of it. And how many similar cases does the Word of God record! Next unto Noah's altar of thanksgiving and sweet savor, where he gets God's covenant of " His bow in the cloud,' is his vineyard of wine, and becoming drunken to the exposure of his shame. Next unto Abraham's tent and altar between Bethel (house of God) and Ai (ruins) is his going down to Egypt (the world) because of Canaan's famine, and there his denial of Sarai (grace) and the bringing up of the bondwoman (law). Next unto Moses' " esteeming the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in Egypt," and "choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God," is his estimate of them as a burden that he cannot carry, and later, calling them "rebels." Next unto Israel's song of triumph because of their redemption is, as a sad refrain," they murmured against the Lord " because of Marah; and the time would fail one to tell of all the " Monday mornings," in some sense so, (what they too often, alas! are, rather than what by grace they should and may be,) recorded on the pages of Scripture. But with so much to hint our meaning, we will now turn to our own; and what are they, fellow-Christian? "Down to the depths," is it, as to spiritual experience, when our Lord has said equally for this as for the day before, (in which how often we have found " His joy our strength"!) " My grace is sufficient for Thee," and " as thy days, so shall thy strength be"? How is it thus? Whatever can it be that makes that bright-faced, happy Christian who then praised God for all that Christ is and has done for us, and " worshiped Him in the beauty of holiness," now droop beneath the trials of the way, and join the ranks of "the murmurers and complainers," saying, "All these things are against me"? Is there not a cause? There is, and this it is, I humbly venture to suggest:Then, our faith looked up to Him who is our strength as well as our salvation, and thus our ranks were closed against the enemy; now, our eye is upon the way, ourselves, others, or the world around us-"winds and waves boisterous," and we begin to sink. Or, as Bunyan's "Christian " climbed the hill Difficulty, there to get a good view of all beneath, and a fresh drought of purer air, thus to "thank God and take courage," when, alas! now the arbor placed by the King of the pilgrims for his rest and joy becomes a snare, and he takes his ease, forgets his journey, and loses his precious roll.

"Well, how shall it be otherwise? for things do seem to go so crooked sometimes, and especially then " (Monday mornings), say some who desire to please the Lord, but this special season of ordinary life has oft proved too much for them. Well, how? we echo; and an apostle, speaking of what he knew, and testifying what he had seen, furnishes the divine answer:"I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me." Say not in thine heart (for " the word of faith " dispels all reasonings, where God and His power are in question,) that he knew not your trials, it may be of to-day,-the getting up late-the breakfast half served-family out of sorts-but little time for the morning reading, and then the question rising, "Will a man rob God? " and how little confidence in Him for the path through the day! More than the aggregate of all this he knew, and yet said, "Every where and in all things I am instructed both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need." "I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content." (Phil. 4:)

Blessed word this,-"content"! but to how many of us it seems like a far-off shore we even scarce hope to reach. May we not, then, again well ask, Is there not a cause? There is, again we reply,-this:"Content" is chapter four, and the way thereto is well marked out as " the path of the just, that shineth brighter and brighter to the perfect day." Chapter one, " To me to live is Christ;" two, "The mind which was also in Christ Jesus;" three, "This one thing I do:.. . I press toward the mark."Little wonder, then, that four is, " I have learned to be content; I know how to be abased and to abound; I am instructed to be full and hungry, to abound and suffer need. I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me." Thus, Christ for life, pattern, object, is-yes, must be, Christ for rest and stay of heart! As in an Old-Testament day with the prophet Habakkuk, who at first says, " O Lord, how long shall I cry . . . . !Why dost Thou show me iniquity, and cause me to behold grievance? for spoiling and violence are before me; and there are that raise up strife and contention. Therefore the law is slacked, and judgment doth never go forth:for the wicked doth compass about the righteous; therefore wrong judgment proceedeth."But ere long he learns a lesson as to what seemed a greater calamity still-" a bitter and hasty nation marching through the breadth of the land to possess the dwelling-places that are not theirs," and says, "Art Thou not from everlasting, O Lord my God, mine Holy One? we shall not die. O Lord, Thou hast ordained them for judgment; and, O mighty God, Thou hast established them for correction."And later on, betaking himself to his watchtower, as he tells us, " to see what He will say unto me, and what I shall answer when I am reproved [argued with]," he learns the secret of all true rest of heart for sinner and for saint alike-" The just shall live by his faith." Then, hearing God's sevenfold woes upon the wicked, adds, "The Lord is in His holy temple, let all the earth keep silence before Him," and pours out his heart's plaint there,-"O Lord, I have heard Thy speech, and was afraid:O Lord, revive Thy work in the midst of the years, in the midst of the years make known; in wrath remember mercy." Then, in. conclusion, saying, " When I heard, my belly trembled; my lips quivered at the voice:rottenness entered into my bones, and I trembled in myself, that I might rest in the day of trouble:" ending with "Although the fig-tree shall not blossom, neither shall fruit be in the vines; the labor of the olive shall fail, and the fields shall yield no meat; the flock shall be cut off from the fold, and there shall be no herd in the stalls:yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation. The Lord God is my strength, and He will make my feet like hinds' feet, and He will make me to walk upon mine high places." May it be ours, then, beloved brethren, to learn from these " things new and old," and in the strength of our God, equally for this our day as for that, that" this is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith," and thus shall our " Monday mornings" become but so many fresh occasions in which to realize the power of His might, and become " more than conquerors through Him that loved us."

Be it so, for our present joy and future reward as well, and above all that " God in all things may be glorified through Jesus Christ, to whom be praise and dominion forever and ever. Amen." B.C.G.

Be Still, My Soul!

Be still, my soul! the Lord is on thy side ;
Bear patiently the cross of grief and pain ;
Leave to thy God to order and provide;
In every change, He faithful will remain.
Be still, my soul! thy best, thy heavenly Friend
Through thorny ways leads to a joyful end.

Be still, my soul! thy God doth undertake
To guide the future as He has the past;
Thy hope, thy confidence, let nothing shake,
All now mysterious shall be bright at last.
Be still, my soul! the waves and winds still know
His voice who ruled them while He dwelt below.

Be still, my soul! when dearest friends depart,
And all is darkened in the vale of tears,
Then thou shalt better know His love, His heart,
Who comes to soothe thy sorrow and thy fears.
Be still, my soul ! thy Saviour can repay,
From His own fullness, all He takes away.

Be still, my soul! the hour is hastening on
When we shall be " forever with the Lord,"-
When disappointment, grief, and fear are gone,.
Sorrow forgot, love's purest joys restored.
Be still, my soul! when change and tears are past,
All safe and blessed, we shall meet at last.

Be still, my soul! begin the song of praise
On earth, believing, to thy Lord on high;
Acknowledge Him in all thy works and ways,
So shall He view thee with a well-pleased eye.
Be still, my soul! the sun of life divine
Through passing clouds shall soon more brightly shine.

“Be Careful For Nothing” philippians 4:6.

We are sure to bring unmixed sorrow upon ourselves when we take ourselves, our circumstances, or our destinies out of the hands of God. Thus it was with Jacob, as we may see in the sequel of his life. (Gen. 27:35.) Whoever observes Jacob's life after he had surreptitiously obtained his father's blessing will perceive that he enjoyed very little worldly felicity. His brother purposed to murder him, to avoid which he was forced to flee from his father's house. His uncle, Laban, deceived him, as he had deceived his father, and treated him with great rigor. After a servitude of twenty-one years, he was obliged to leave him in a clandestine manner, and not without danger of being brought back, or murdered by his enraged brother. No sooner were these fears over than he experienced the baseness of his son Reuben in defiling his bed. He had next to bewail the treachery and cruelty of Simeon and Levi toward the Shechemites; then he had to feel the loss of his beloved wife; he was next imposed upon by his own sons, and had to lament the supposed untimely end of Joseph; and to complete all, he was forced by famine to go into Egypt, and there died in a strange land. So just, wonderful, and instructive are all the ways of God.

As to Rebekah, she was called to feel all the sad results of her cunning actings. She, no doubt, imagined she was managing matters most skillfully; but, alas! she never saw Jacob again. So much for management! How different it would have been had she left the matter entirely in the hands of God! This is the way in which faith manages, and it is ever a gainer. "Which of you by taking thought can add to his stature one cubit?"We gain nothing by our anxiety and planning; we only shut out God, and that is no gain. It is a just judgment from the hand of God to be left to reap the fruits of our own devices; and I know of few things more sad than to see a child of God so entirely forgetting his proper place and privilege as to take the management of his affairs into his own hands.

The birds of the air and the lilies of the field may well be our teachers when we so far forget our position of unqualified dependence upon God.

" Commit thy ways unto the Lord ; trust also in Him, and He shall bring it to pass."

Rewards.

No part of Scripture can be overlooked, we know, without loss. And if a wrong principle is imbibed,-as, for instance, that it is selfish and legal to think of rewards,-the scriptures on that subject are robbed of their power for us, in some measure at least. Not altogether so, for we are happily inconsistent often with our own theories; but in some degree we must be losers if in any way we are unprepared to submit, take heed to, and profit by every side of Scripture.

But we do not suppose that any really deny that rewards are mentioned in Scripture. They are too prominently mentioned to be overlooked, but is it not a line of truth that has been a good deal slighted amongst us? and are not many under law against using and profiting by such scriptures at all rather than in danger of a wrong use of them? I think we shall see that the danger of wrongly using them is less than that of slighting them altogether.

Now, when once we have known grace in the soul, there is no longer confusion as to the place that belongs to good works before God. I need not dwell upon that point for those for whom this is specially written. Not to win heaven and glory and escape judgment do we serve (a hard bondage that!), but to please Him and to obey Him in all things who has chosen us. But nevertheless we must acknowledge on every side there is danger, and so here,-that in our service, self-sufficiency, self-seeking, and assumption creep in and turn the heart from simplicity; and hence the jealousy, no doubt, of many lest the dwelling upon rewards should serve to develop this too natural tendency.

But when we look more carefully at the subject, what presents itself? In the first place, and above all, as already necessarily suggested, Scripture has spoken-God has spoken, and it is for us to submit, not to be wise above what is written. The Lord has not feared (if we may use that term,) to hold forth rewards; we, then, need not hesitate to be heartily occupied with them,-nay, we are bound to be so, as a matter of obedience, as well as of liberty and joy.

And in the second place, when we consider the exercises of the heart natural to us in this connection, is it not comparing ourselves with ourselves and with others, walking in the sight of men, and seeking honor from them, that is our constant snare, rather than the thought of rewards in the day of Christ? Indeed, it at once occurs to the mind that the thought of reward from the Lord is that which indeed truly corrects the other tendency, and puts to flight selfishness, assumption, legalism, and all the sadly common and evil tendencies that so readily spring in our foolish hearts when walking before men. Let it be a small thing to us to be judged of men and of man's day, for we are seeking reward from Christ. What will His "Well done!" be in that day. What will it be to have His approval, the holy and the true One, who says, "I know thy works"? But it may be said, "All will agree that we are to seek His approval." Yes, but let it be definitely before the heart that rewards are held forth, and encouragement to seek to win them. Let their character be what they may, they are to be considered as such, and to be sought for as such. Consider the effect of this doctrine upon us at any time,-to make it definite, say to-day,-I have been occupied with service (and our whole life is that, of course,) this morning, and the scripture comes to mind, " The Lord will reward His servants," "knowing that whatsoever good thing any man doeth, the same shall he receive of the Lord." (Eph. 6:8.) What is the effect upon me? Very often I would be checked by the thought, and the heart would confess that the service had not been so much for the Lord as in some subtle way for myself, or, what is perhaps very common with us, in a mere cold and legal round of daily doing;-sadly common and truly sad condition! so dishonoring to Christ, and so different from the patient joy of true service! Or, I might be found doing something that the thought of reward from the Lord would cause to appear in its true color, and show it to be something that I ought to have done with if I would seek His approbation and not the satisfaction of self-will or the approval of others as unspiritual as myself; "for if a man strive for masteries, yet is he not crowned except he strive lawfully "-a solemn while sweetly solemn scripture to test many and all of our doings! It will be a sharp pruning-knife in that day, and it is meant to be such for our own use now, in the soberness and simplicity of honest and God-fearing self-judgment.

But if our service is found to be truly to the Lord, as far as we have light to judge, then the heart is truly gladdened and preciously encouraged in the way; and the knowledge that He has "eyes as a flame of fire" is welcome to the deeper instincts of the heart; and the thought of receiving from Him the " white stone," and the new name written in it known only to the receiver,-what can we say about it? Shall we say we are not to be occupied with rewards after such a promise? What can we do but bow our hearts and seek grace to honestly and joyfully respond to such a solemnizing and heart-filling encouragement from the One whose side was pierced?

Is it not clear, then, that the thought or truth of definite rewards, whatever our tendency to misuse every truth, (and may we be always on our guard,) -nevertheless, is it not clear that this truth is emphatically one that really guards against the very legalism and assumption that a superficial consideration might lead us to think it would produce.

The twenty-third chapter of second Samuel presents a striking illustration of this subject of differing rewards in the names and deeds of those recorded in the roll of honor of David's mighty men. Even the differences between those who all greatly excelled is carefully noted. There were three mighty men who broke through the host of the Philistines for David's sake. They had had a previous training and previous victories, and now they join with one mind to take their lives in their hands for their master. It was "keeping his words," for he had but breathed a desire, and they sprang forward to fulfill it. It was intimacy with their master that enabled them to know his desire, and love led on to service. But note what follows. "And Abishai, the brother of Joab, . . . was chief among three. And he lifted up his spear against three hundred, and slew them, and had the name among three. Was he not most honorable of three? therefore he was their captain:howbeit he attained not unto the first three. And Benaiah, . . . had the name among three mighty men. He was more honorable than the thirty, but he attained not to the first three."

How precious the love and grace that so carefully notes the devotedness of poor failing followers ! Devoted to the master who was their shelter when, discontented and in debt, they had fled to him for refuge and consolation.

But Abishai, though having honorable mention beyond many, yet attained not to the first three. Perhaps no scripture presents in a more striking way the truth of rewards and distinctions of rewards in the day of Christ, the true David. Love -devotedness to David was of course the motive that led to these mighty deeds; but the Scripture bids us know-keep in mind-that for every good thing that a man doeth, that shall he receive of the Lord. " But he that doeth wrong shall receive for the wrong which he hath done; and there is no respect of persons." But the Lord's estimate will be different from man's, and much that has a name to-day will have none in the day of Christ. Joab, who commanded David's armies in the victory over Absalom while David was an outcast from Jerusalem, gained no reward from David in the day of his return to his throne and power; but the king kissed Barzillai (2 Sam. 19:39), an aged and infirm man who loved David, and had provided sustenance for him in the day of his rejection.

Let the thought of His love and of His reward encourage and sustain us in the path of willing obedience and diligence of spirit. Self-indulgence, unholiness, covering of sin, serving selfish interests, running unsent, seeking great things before men abroad but ourselves a stumbling-block at home, mere routine of work without heart, will all appear such then, but every deed of love, however little noted now, will have its reward. E.S.L.

Present Things, As Foreshown In The Book Of Revelation.

THE ADDRESSES TO THE CHURCHES

Ephesus, the Decline of the Church. (Rev. 2:1-7.)

It is not in any wise as being the metropolitan church of Asia that we find Ephesus first addressed. This, which has been the thought of many, has assuredly no countenance from the Word. The Church of God, which is Christ's body, is not composed of churches, but of members, united together by that blessed Spirit which unites all to Christ the Head. Hence, the " churches," or " assemblies," are only local gatherings of so many Christians as find themselves, in the providence of God, actually together. Each of these is, according to Scripture, the Church in that place, as the true text reads invariably in these two chapters. This expanded would be, as in the epistle to the Corinthians, the " Church of God " in such or such a place. The place adds nothing to this title, nor is one gathering of its members superior or inferior in privilege or responsibility to any other.

It is true that the Church of God is riot only designated as the body of Christ in Scripture, but also as the House of God-the place of His abode. But here, again, it is the Church at large that is so. There are not bodies of Christ, but "one body." Just so there are not houses of God, but " the house." In each place, the local assembly represents the Church at large, as being indeed the local Church, -what of the Church at large is in that place. And this may vary, from time to time, in numbers, spirituality, and many other ways:and thus there will be peculiar local responsibilities, differences, and privileges, as is recognized in the chapters before us; but the standing in each the same.

No doubt we must not forget, as indeed we are not allowed to forget, the immense difference between profession and reality. A dead Sardis could not be in reality of the body of Christ at all. But this is nevertheless what the Church means, if it means any thing according to Scripture. The professing church is this, or it is a lie; and how solemn a lie!

No, the reason why Ephesus stands at the head of those addressed here is of another nature. It is to be found, not in any external supremacy over the rest, but in its original spiritual eminency, and as the church to which the truth as to the Church had been first of all committed, and this, not as to its order upon earth, but as to its heavenly character.

The Ephesians had been addressed by Paul, as now at a much later date they are by the Lord Himself; and it is in comparing the tenor of these two epistles that we find the significance of its' being Ephesus, and no other, with which we here begin. The epistle to the Ephesians is that which carries us up to the height of Christian position, quickened out of death in trespasses and sins as following the course of a world governed by Satan, -and quickened with Christ, raised up together, and seated together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus. This is individual, true of all believers, if there were no Church at all; but God has done more, and as united to Christ by His Spirit, we are members of His body, the fullness of Him who filleth all in all. Both as body of Christ and habitation of God, the apostle develops the doctrine of the Church in this epistle; while in the fifth chapter he carries us back to the beginning, and shows us once more the Church under the type of Eve, espoused to Him who will yet present her to Himself a glorious Church.

These are the truths, given to all saints, no doubt, but of which the Ephesian disciples were counted worthy to be the first recipients. And the apostle could write to them in this way as " faithful" ones, communicating what the spiritual state at Corinth or Galatia or among the Hebrews would have hindered his making known to them (i Cor. 3:1,2; Heb. 5:11-14). If Corinth headed a list of churches declined from first love, we should not marvel; but can we fail to realize the significance of its being Ephesus, the special custodian of the truth of the Church itself, in its heavenly reality?

The style of the address is, at the very outset, a sign of distance, as unusual as full of significance on the part of the Lord toward His people. There can be no proper question that the churches are themselves addressed, for this is directly stated at the conclusion of each epistle:" He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches." Yet the Lord's words are, "To the angel of the church" in each case, and to this the style of the address fully corresponds. The responsibility of every thing that is wrong is ascribed to the angel; it is he that has them that hold the doctrine of Balaam, or of the Nicolaitanes; it is he that suffers the woman Jezebel; it is he who is threatened with the removal of his candlestick. It is quite plain that he represents the church in does some way, and it is urged that the has this force of a representative wherever not stand for the heavenly beings so called, who though higher naturally in the scale of yet minister to the heirs of salvation.

The word "angel" means, as everyone knows, simply " messenger," and is applied to the spirits of heaven as God's messengers to men. But it is plain that the messenger does represent, so far as his errand is concerned, the one who sends that receiveth whomsoever I send and he that receiveth Me receiveth Me." Thus this meaning of the word is derived from its original one.

However, the representative character of angel here is plain. It is natural enough that advocates of episcopal or presbyterian find, as they do with equal facility the pastor in this representative-angel. In scripture elsewhere it is impossibly to find either of these things, largely as they are now believed in, and therefore as impossible, if we cleave to Scripture, to read them in here. Apostles, evangelists, pastors, and teachers we to the Church at large, though a Peter might especially address himself to the circumcision Paul to the Gentiles. But where apostle of this place or that? Just as little have we the pastor of this church or of that. Bishop and deacons, it is true, we do find with a local office still, never the bishop of an assembly, but the bishops; with whom it is allowed that the elders identical. * *Acts 20:17, 28 ("overseers," the same word as "bishops"); Tit. 1:5, 7."* They ordained them elders in every church "(Acts 14:23). The one representative of each assembly supposed to be signified by the angel cannot be found in Scripture elsewhere.

Ephesus had its bishop-elders long before this, as we see in Acts 20:Its diocesan bishop at the time when this was written tradition makes the apostle John himself! He, then, cannot be the angel to whom he is told to write, nor will the search be more successful in other directions. All that can be truly urged is that this address to the angel is in accord with what we know to have been the state of things a century or so after the time of Revelation. And this is quite in accord with its sad significance.

We have epistles to individuals, as to Timothy and Titus, never to the church through these. We have the epistle to the saints in Christ at Philippi, with the bishops and deacons, not to the bishops and deacons for the church. The constant method of address is to the church as such; and suppose here the "angel" were to stand for the bishops of Ephesus, how evident would it make the contrast between the first epistle (perhaps of thirty-odd years back,) and this second one!

No more the direct address of familiar intimacy, though now from the very lips of the priestly Mediator. Yet His love has not changed; the change, then, has been in His people. The strange style is from One whom they have treated as a stranger. Sadly it tells of the close of the old intercourse which he who seeks will find as invited to, if it were Laodicea, " I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with Me." Turn to the Acts, and see how free, how tender, how as a thing of course-which deepens, not lessens, the wonder of -it,-this intercourse can be. Or look back even to Genesis, if you will, and learn how truly God's last thought is His first thought. It is man who has driven back these approaches upon God's part, and forced Him into the cloud and darkness. The Church has but repeated the old history, though now, because the Light has come, the darkness is more strange and terrible.

But it is important to ask, Has He for our sins, then, given up His Church to this? and does the "angel" speak of distance maintained on His part toward even one, the least of all His saints? With whom, as with the angel, does He still speak face to face ? Is it with an official class who interpret Him to those beneath them? Does the sun, as in winter-time, no longer reach the valley-bottoms, but only gild the tops of the hills with light? or is it to some gifted men that Christ reveals Himself, who, as planets, shed the little of His radiance they can reflect on others? Ah, no; it is not men of gift, still less an official class, who are indicated by the angel. The heart of those who know their Lord shall answer, It is not. No; nor, alas! is it any longer the church as a whole either; very far from that! Read the superscription "to the angel" in the light of the subscription, " He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches," and you will find that still the question of who are nearest Christ is answered by another, who has ears and eyes and heart for Him. He still speaks as of old to those who as of old listen. His ways, His attitude, His heart, can know no change. The stars that shine in His firmament are the overcomers of the darkness, not of the world now merely, but of the church,-planets that know their orbit and are held by their center, and shine by the light of Him who shines on them. "The seven stars are the angels of the seven churches." If to the opened ear Christ speaks, it is plain that the responsibility of hearing is as much as ever that of all. None are released from it. And yet it is not to the mass that He can speak any more, or the overcoming would not be in the church, as it clearly is. Already it is the few that listen, and the constraint in the Lord's manner is but the indication of His sense of this.

It may seem strange, however, that if the "angel" stands for these who listen to Christ's voice, He should hold them responsible, as we have already seen, for all the evil in the church with which they are connected. How, it may be asked, can He thus burden with the sins of the whole the few who have an ear to hear? The responsibility of an official class is more readily recognized than of those who may be, however spiritual, the feeblest possible to accomplish any change in the condition of things around them. But this is not the question. It is true we are powerless to alter the general state. The ebb-tide of ruin can be stemmed by no hand of ours, and this feebleness of ours may seem an available plea to withdraw us from responsibility as to it. But not so teaches the word of the Lord. Our associations are here distinctly recognized as part of our general condition. We are to "depart from evil," not be unequally yoked with unbelievers, purge ourselves from vessels to dishonor, and follow righteousness, faith, love, peace, with those that call upon the Lord out of a pure heart. For association with evil we are therefore ever responsible. It may be said that such principles, carried fully out, would involve a very narrow path and a wholesale giving up of spheres of usefulness. But be it so or be it not so, it is not ours to choose. Our path is defined for us. " To obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams; for rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness as iniquity and idolatry:"

Yes, " rebellion "! How gladly would we call an obedience limited by our own wills by some lighter name than that! Yet what else, in truth, was that which brought out Saul's true character, and lost the kingdom to him and to his seed forever? What he left undone was a mere trifle to what he did. And the sheep and oxen had been spared to sacrifice to the Lord. What fairer excuse have people now to offer for much disobedience-evil plausibly intended to bring forth good ? And how hard is it to understand that while we may obey in much that in fact costs us little, the true test of obedience is just in that in which we are called to renounce our wills and our wisdom, perhaps to forfeit the esteem and companionship of others, by doing what has only the Word of God to justify it and must wait for eternity to find right appreciation!

But now to listen to His word to Ephesus, who " holdeth the stars in His right hand, and walketh in the midst of the seven golden candlesticks." The one point of the address is plain, and it is left to stand in sufficient, solemn, decisive contrast with all else that is unmingled commendation. Works, labor, patience, abhorrence of that which is evil, trying fearlessly those who put forth the highest claims, bearing for Christ's name's sake, and not fainting,-all this, put in the balance with one solemn charge:"Thou hast left thy first love." And this follows:" Repent, and do the first works, or else I will come unto thee, and will remove thy candlestick out of its place, except thou repent."

Let us look at these things more closely. Their interest for us is of the deepest, for upon this one root of evil has grown all that has ever been in the Church's long decline through the centuries which have intervened between that day and this. And this it is which, as we see, brings about her removal from the place of witness for Christ on earth. This it is too which is the secret of decline in every individual Christian. For us all, it should rouse the earnest, heart-searching inquiry, "Is it I?" For, if it can be truly said of any of us, " Thou hast left thy first love," it is vain for us to think that other things can be really judged. The single eye is wanted even to see them with. We must get back to this, or there is no real recovery. Two masters, the Lord says Himself, we cannot serve.

How much there was He could commend at Ephesus! "I know thy works" is commendation clearly. But not only had they works, they labored. Do you think there are really so many of whom it could be said, they labor? We have recognized, what is so precious to understand, that we have our different spheres of service, and that there is no mere secular work, if really done for Christ. But to labor is to work with energy-to " toil," as the Revision gives it. How many of us toil for Christ ?

Then they had patience-endurance. Many begin well, like the Galatians, but in the face of unforeseen difficulties give way. It is the mark of divine work that it endures. Human energy quickly spends itself:faith draws upon a stock that never decreases. It was true faith that wrought in these Ephesian saints.

Patience, too, is apt to degenerate into a toleration, more or less, of evil. Finding it on every hand, and no where perfection, the very contact with it is apt to dull the spiritual sense. Charity would fain put also the mildest construction upon every thing. We are bidden to " take forth the precious from the vile," but we learn to tolerate the vile because of the precious. We become liberal where we have no right. The Lord praises the Ephesians for the opposite conduct:" Thou canst not bear them which are evil." And where there was the very highest assumption, they did not fear to test it:"Thou hast tried them which say they are apostles, and are not, and hast found them liars."

But more, it was true love to Christ which wrought in all this:" Thou hast patience, and hast borne for My name's sake, and hast not wearied." Yet here it follows:''Nevertheless I have against thee,"-not" somewhat," as if it were a little,-" that thou hast left thy first love."

But how dreadful a dishonor to Christ is this, to lose one's first love! It is as if at first sight He was more than He proved on longer acquaintance! Is not here the very germ of final apostasy ? I do not, of course, mean that the Lord will allow any of His redeemed to be lost out of His hand. "God is faithful, who hath called us into the fellowship of His Son Jesus Christ;" and this faithfulness of God is our security:" the gifts and calling of God are without repentance." Nor only so; if we are born of God, we have that within us which cannot suffer us to become what we were before:"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." Yet while this is true on the one side, in the child of God as identified with the divine nature by which he is such,-still, on the other side, it is no less true that in the believer also there remains yet the old nature. In him still there is that which lusts against the Spirit, and only if ye " walk in the Spirit, ye shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh."

Here is what makes the world to us such a battlefield. Capable, on the one hand, of enjoying all the joys of heaven; capable, on the other, of being attracted by that which lies under the power of the wicked one,-the eye affecting the heart,-day by day we are solicited by that which daily lies before us and from which there is no escape. Our danger here is first of all distraction, some gain to us which is not loss for Christ, or that dulling of the spiritual sense we just now spoke of; the dust of the way settles upon the glass in which Faith sees her eternal possessions. Our remedy is the presence of Him who with basin and towel would refresh His pilgrims, cleansing away the travel-stains that they may have part with Him.

Here alone first love is maintained. Here, in His presence, we learn His mind. The holiness of truth is accomplished in us. What is unseen but eternal asserts its power. The illusions of the prince of this world pass from us. The glory of Christ is revealed, and the eye here also affects the heart; He becomes for us more and more the light in which we see light, the Sun which rules the day, not only enlightening but life-giving:the light in which we walk is the "light of life."

Now here, as I have said, first love cannot but be maintained. Who could be daily in His presence, ministered to by Him, having part with Him, and yet grow cool in response to His love? It is impossible. Where this is the case, intimacy has not been kept up. We have not permitted the basin and towel to do its work. Assurance of heart before Him has been replaced by an uneasy sense of unfitness for His presence, the true causes of which we have not been willing fully to face, and for which the remedy has therefore not been found.

In this state there may be yet much work and labor and zeal, and true love at the bottom. Fruit may be on the tree, plentiful as ever, but not to the Master's taste as once, not ripened in the Sun. Form and bloom and beauty may be little lacking:this was the state at Ephesus. But the Lord says, " Repent, and do the first works."
What is the test, then, of "first love"? Not " work "-activity in outward service; this they had at Ephesus:not even " labor," for this too they had:no, nor yet "endurance"-though a more manifest sign than either of divine power in the soul. Not zeal against evil, nor boldness to examine and refuse the highest pretensions; not suffering even for Christ's name, and that unwearied. All this is good and acceptable to God, and the Ephesians had it all, and yet says the Lord, "I have against thee that thou hast left thy first love."

What, then, is the test of first love? It is in the complete satisfaction of the heart by its object. You know what power often there is in a new thing to take possession of one for the time being. And in first love, it is characteristic that it engrosses the subject of it. The Lord claims again and again the power to give this complete satisfaction of heart to His people. " He that drinketh of this water shall thirst again:but he that drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall never thirst; but the water that I shall give him shall be in him a fountain of water springing up unto eternal life." "He that cometh unto Me shall never hunger, and he that believeth on Me shall never thirst." " If any man thirst, let him come unto Me, and drink. He that believeth on Me, as the Scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water."

Now this it is that will give a peculiar character to the life which nothing else will. It is of this the apostle speaks when he says, "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." It is this satisfaction with a heavenly object of which he is giving the effect when he says, "This one thing I do:forgetting the things which are behind, and reaching forth unto that which is before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus." " What things were gain to me, those I counted loss for Christ. Yea, doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord; for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win Christ."

This is the secret of happiness, who can doubt? That for which he counted all else dung and loss must have given him surpassing, supreme happiness. And happiness such as this, derived from nothing in the world, is power over the world. The back is upon it. The prize is elsewhere. The steps hasten upon a path that glows with the light of heaven. Holiness is found, as it Only can be found, in heavenliness.

Such was the apostle, and Christianity is nothing else to-day. Blessed be God, it is not something either to be found far on in the Christian course, but at the beginning. It is first love which has these characteristics. In Christ Himself, at once for present need, all fullness is found, as His own words declare. " He that cometh to Me shall never hunger, and he that believeth on Me shall never thirst." It is in drinking of other streams that the old thirst comes back upon him who does so. " The lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life" are "all that is of the world." He that drinketh of this water shall thirst again. So the world holds its own by their very misery.

But we are not speaking of the men of the world. It is to Ephesus-to the saints there-the Lord is speaking:to those to whom the heavenly truth had been unvailed, the depositories of it upon the earth, the representatives of the Church at large. And it is to the Church at large, through Ephesus, that this is now addressed. Can any doubt the truth of such an application ? Would that it were even possible! but we have not to go beyond the New Testament itself to find the application confirmed, and to hear the prophetic announcement of still further departure even to the very end. The epistles of Paul, long before Revelation, reveal a state of things already beginning, such as it is hard to realize of those early days. In one of the very earliest comes the statement, "The mystery of iniquity doth already work," and " that day "-the day of the Lord-" shall not come, except there come a falling away first." The two epistles to the Corinthians are the next in time to those to the Thessalonians, and at Corinth there is sin such as was not named among the Gentiles, with divisions beginning, and some denying the resurrection of the dead. Next, Galatia is backsliding from Christ under the law, and receiving another gospel. Then, to the Romans he has to write, bidding them avoid those who cause divisions and offenses, contrary to the doctrine they have learned. His next epistles are written from a Roman prison:but here he has to say of those to whom he had written that their faith was spoken of through the whole world, "All seek their own, not the things of Jesus Christ." The epistles to Timothy may close the sorrowful picture:"At my first answer no man stood with me, but all forsook me:"-Paul ends his course like His Master. Not alone at Rome:"This thou knowest, that all they which are in Asia have departed from me." But now all that will be vessels of honor, fit for the Master's use, are to purge themselves from the vessels to dishonor. Evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse; and in the last days perilous times shall come, men throwing the Christian dress over their unchanged natures, having the form of godliness but denying the power thereof. From such they must turn away.

Peter, John, Jude, add each some fresh feature to the terrible picture; but we need not dwell upon it more. We see the professing church is ruined and doomed. The true-hearted are already a remnant. By the " many antichrists " then present, the latest apostle decides that it is the last time. We look beyond even the Ephesian epistle here to see the hopelessness of the thought of any general repentance. And the word abides, " I will take away thy candlestick out of its place, except thou repent."

The promise to the overcomer meanwhile rings out its words of cheer, "To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the tree of life which is in the midst of the paradise of My God." There is to be no yielding, however the difficulties of the way increase. God's stars shine by night as by day, and the darkness only makes them more apparent. It is no new thing, the darkness. The path of faith has been in all ages essentially alike. The incentive comes from beyond, and no sorrows of the way can mar the beauty of the paradise of God.

The tree of life in the garden of old meant clearly dependent life, which was to be ministered to Adam by its means. In himself, innocent as he was, there was no continuance apart from this. God would thus remind him of the essential mutability and dependence of the creature-a safe and wholesome lesson.

For us too, redeemed by the precious blood of Christ, and possessors of eternal life, this is still life in dependence; and herein is the secret of its eternity. It is life in Christ, in the Son who is alone essential Life. Of the fruits of this we shall partake forever. How suited an appeal to those in the state addressed in this epistle! It is failure in maintaining the place of dependence, in receiving out of His fullness in whom dwells all the fullness of the Godhead bodily, that is the very secret of their condition. The mind, the will, the heart, are in independence. He who keeps close to Christ overcomes. How suited, then, the encouragement to one who knows already the blessedness of this place, to look on to the time when in far other circumstances the full results of it shall be attained,- when eternally it will be ours to know the joy of that dependence which secures His ministry of love to us forever! "For of Him, and through Him, and to Him, are all things; to whom be glory forever. Amen." F.W.G. (To be continued.)

Answers To Correspondents

Q. 34.-" Have the Old-Testament saints resurrection-life now ? and can it be said that they are seated in the heavenlies in Christ Jesus ?"

Ans.-The life of all saints is in Christ, and therefore the same life in all. That it is resurrection-life has, I suppose, its special force for us who are still in mortal bodies, and walking by faith on earth. According to the Lord's words in John 11:25, power of resurrection is manifested for Old-Testament saints when they are raised up from the dead. The conscious security and liberty of justified men, which is involved for us, no one would, that I know, deny to those who are the "spirits of just men" departed to God.

As to the second question, they are in Christ, as we are ; but we are only in the heavenlies in Christ:they are in paradise themselves. This again gives a special force for us in the truth of Eph. 2:6.

Q. 35.-"What is the nature of the oneness in Hebrews 2:ii? Is it oneness of life, or oneness of sanctified position ?

Ans.-It is oneness of life surely. " For both He that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one "- (ξέvός, out of one,) of one father-a well-known use of the preposition, and which seems here to be settled by what follows :-" for which cause He is not ashamed to call them brethren"-to own them as His Father's children. The expression, " He is not ashamed," is a difficulty with some as to this interpretation; for in this case, if is said, He could not do otherwise than call them brethren. But surely the possession of divine life by the redeemed leaves yet so immense a distance between them and Him, as to leave abundance of room for the condescending grace of such a title given to them by Him. These poor children of the dust, partakers too of a fallen nature, did it not require an eye and a heart such as His to recognize in them His brethren? And at any rate, was not the link there, and when He says, " Go to My brethren, and say unto them, I ascend unto My Father and to your Father," can it be believed that the very thing which makes His Father our Father is not in His mind?

As to the other thought, of a position as man sanctified to God, His as true Man by incarnation, and ours as by His work set apart, it certainly accords less with "My Father and your Father," and with the passage itself. " For both He that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one" makes the sanctification to be only the state of the sanctified, while it is the work of the Sanctifier. To say " all of one class," which, or some equivalent word must be introduced in this case, would certainly not give the idea of "one in sanctification," and how else it is implied, I do not see.

Q. 36.-"Rom. 11:25 :'Until the fullness of the Gentiles be come in;' does that mean the completion of the Church ?" .

Ans.-Practically that:it is the full number of those grafted in in the place of the cut-off Jewish branches.

C.E.H.

“The Man-child,” (Rev. 12:)

The Man-child who is to "rule all nations with a rod of iron" embraces both Christ and the Church ; the interval from His ascension to that of hers not being looked upon as time, and both taken as one event, of which His was the first-fruits."

The portion of the Church is to reign over the nations in His heavenly glory, when the earth will be brought into ordered subjection in the "administration of the fullness of times"-the millennial kingdom.

" Know ye not that the saints shall judge the world?" says the apostle. This is, then, the portion of the Church. But she has a sweeter portion than that of judging the nations,-she has the Bridegroom Himself as her heart's portion-" the Bright and Morning Star."

When Christ asks for the heathen, according to the second psalm, He will have the Church safely in the glory, and she will be joint-heir with Him, the bride of the Lamb.

Many passages might be cited in the Old Testament which show that where Christ is spoken of, there the Church is included as seen in Him. She herself is never spoken of. She was hidden in God's own. counsels. This is "the mystery" (Eph. 5:32) which, until it was revealed by Paul, was "kept secret"-"was not made known"-"hid in God." (See Rom..16:25 ; Eph. 3:5-9; Col. 1:26.)

Thus, to resume, when passages only true of Him are imported into the New Testament, we find them applied to the Church-as, for instance, this second psalm.

We may compare, with this thought in our minds, Isaiah 49:6, where it applies to Christ only, with Acts 13:47, appropriated by Paul in the New Testament for the Church.

Also Isaiah 1. 8,9, where Christ is before the mind of the Spirit, with Rom. 8:33, 34, which is the portion of the saints. Comp. also Is. 49:8 with 2 Cor. 6:2; and Eph. 6:13-17 with Is. 59:17, etc.

This will help us in understanding these " unsearchable riches of Christ."

How sweet, then, that when we read of Him in the Old Testament, we find the Church's portion, as united to Him, bone of His bone, and flesh of His flesh, by the Spirit sent down at Pentecost!

“Thine Eyes Shall See The King In His Beauty”

"Thine eyes shall see the King in His beauty; they shall behold the land that is very far off." (Is. 33:17.)

Thine eyes shall see !-yes, thine, who blind ere-while
Now trembling toward the new-found light dost flee;
Leave doubting, and look up with trustful smile,
Thine eyes shall see !

Thine eyes shall see !Not in some dream Elysian,-
Not in thy fancy, glowing though it be,-
Not even in faith, but in unvailed vision,
Thine eyes shall see!

Thine eyes shall see !Not on thyself depend
God's promises, the faithful, firm, and free ;
Ere they shall fail, earth, heaven itself, must end :
Thine eyes shall see !

Thine eyes shall see! Not in a swift glance cast,
Gleaming one ray to brighten memory,
But, while a glad eternity shall last,
Thine eyes shall see!

Thine eyes shall see the King! The very same
Whose love shone forth upon the cursed tree,-
Who bore thy guilt, who calleth thee by name ;
Thine eyes shall see!

Thine eyes shall see the King-the mighty One,
The many-crowned, the light-enrobed ! and He
Shall bid thee share the kingdom He hath won.
Thine eyes shall see!

And in His beauty! Stay thee, mortal song,-
The " altogether lovely "One must be
Unspeakable in glory,-yet, ere long,
Thine eyes shall see !

Yes ! though, the land be "very far" away,
A step-a moment-ends the toil for thee ;
Then, changing grief for gladness, night for day,
Thine eyes shall see !

F.H.R.

A Personal Experience.

Eight months ago, I came to Scotland the most miserable of men, and now stand here one of the happiest on this side " the glory." My life since boyhood has been passed in foreign lands, where, immersed in the cares and pleasures of this world, unable to understand the ways of God about original sin, and uncertain as to the truths of Christianity, I lived entirely without God, and drank at all the fountains where the world finds pleasure, only to find them, as Solomon did long ago, to be "vanity and vexation of spirit."

I had gold enough to satisfy me, and there was absolutely nothing on earth I cared for. I was . weary of my life, and now conscience, lulled hitherto almost to sleep, woke up with this terrible truth, "You knew your duty, and you did it not." I feared this would ring in my ears through a lost eternity, for I never doubted the immortality of the soul, or imagined, with some modern philosophers, that men are irresponsible descendants of monkeys. These strivings of conscience I now believe to have been the gracious work of the Holy Spirit in answer to the prayers of many real Christians, who constantly pleaded with God for me.

You will wonder, dear Christian friends, why in my wretchedness I did not at once come to Him who gives rest to the weary. Ah, I was where the world with all its boasted knowledge is (Jno. 17:) -I "knew Him not"!

I was told that God was love, yet saw the whole earth full of misery:-a child but a few days old, for example, suffering intensely through the faults of its parents. "Surely," I thought, "if God were love, this world would not be the scene of suffering which I see it is." And besides, I had been taught that Christianity was intended by God to regenerate the whole world, and fill it with peace and joy. I had sad proof before me every where that it had totally failed so to do.

I had read in "Gibbon" what Christians were in the primitive days-a separate, peculiar people, devoted to God, having no home here, rejoicing to die and get away to Christ, or waiting for Him to come for them. " What a contrast," thought I, " with the Christendom of today!"

I had stood in the churches of South America, amid thousands of kneeling Christians (so called) most assiduous in performing their religious duties, yet knew that the whole population were sunk in the most complete moral depravity, the priests being the worst of the community. Their religion was evidently an empty form, which had totally failed to improve them. How could this corrupted Christianity be that which God had intended for the regenerating of the world?

Coming to Protestant lands, I found all manner of sects detesting one another, yet all professing to be Christians. " Surely," I thought, "if the Bible were from God, there could not be this disparity of belief and form, and disunion among those professing to be taught by it." I saw also that, though there was an almost universal profession of Christianity and church-going, etc., practically men and women lived as though the world, not God,-time, not eternity,-were the aim and object in life. These professing Christians were almost entirely occupied with those worldly things all of which I had found to be "vanity and vexation of spirit." In these sad circumstances, what else could I think but that this so-called Christianity was almost as great a farce in Protestant Scotland as in Romish Peru; that, far from regenerating mankind, as I had been taught it would, it had itself become corrupt and worldly, and had most completely failed to purify the people, and separate them from the world to God. How could it be from God? Such was my thought.

Still conscience said," However these things may be, 'you knew your duty, and did it not.'"

My deliverance began by learning that the gradual conversion of the world during this age was an entirely human invention, totally opposed to the statements of the New Testament, which invariably represents the true Church of Christ as " sheep among wolves "–a " little flock," while " the whole world lieth in wickedness;" that the good seed, though sown by the Son of Man Himself, would yield but very little fruit; that the devil would be allowed to render the most part of it unproductive, and to sow tares among the wheat, to leaven the whole of professing Christendom with his false doctrine; that Christ did not pray for the world, but for the little flock which believes on Him; that the mystery of iniquity was already at work in Paul's day, and would continue till the open manifestation of the wicked one-" the man of sin;" in fact, I saw that these days in which we live are called by the Holy Ghost (Gal. 1:4)," This present evil age" (it is aion-a period of time, not kosmos-world); and that the devil is " the god of this age [aion] " (2 Cor. 4:4), and will continue to be so until its close.

Beloved friends, these terrible truths, themselves astounding and inexplicable to us, settled the whole difficulty for me. It was exactly what I had found this present scene to be-the devil's age. That being- the fact, I must not look during this period for the immediate righteous government of God manifested on the earth. God is silent now, though (Ps. 1:) the foundations of the earth are out of course. The devil being captain of the ship called " This present evil world," she must go on to destruction at that "great and terrible day of the Lord" when our blessed Lord will come to bind up Satan, and execute righteous judgment on those who have rejected His grace.

If the question, " Why is all this?" be asked, we answer, At the tomb of Lazarus, the Judge of living and dead groaned within Himself and wept, not about Lazarus, whom He was going to raise from the dead, but on account of this scene of ruin and death. This gives perfect rest to the heart. We can then say that, though not understanding God's ways, we know God's heart.

When God's spirit opened my eyes to see that, the Bible told me exactly the true state of things around and within me-that this age, with its corrupted Christianity, is the devil's work, and that I was a guilty and lost sinner, I had no more doubt that it was divine; I believed in the love of God who had given His only begotten Son to die for the guilty and the lost, for enemies, and thus entered into rest.

The infinite God has spoken, let finite man lend an attentive ear. And oh, what a message of love and grace has reached a guilty world, and brought by such a Messenger! (See Jno. 1:) The Lamb of God! what a name for the almighty Creator of all things-Jehovah's Fellow! What so gentle, so innocent, as a Lamb? Then, whence came this wondrous Messenger? From "the bosom of the Father." Oh, beloved, what words of love are these
-Lamb! Bosom! Father! What word in our language like "bosom"? A little child hides its face in its mother's bosom, and knows no fear. Then "Father!" What word so suggestive of perfect confidence and rest? And when the meek and lowly Man of Nazareth was to be baptized by the Spirit for His work here below, what form did that Spirit assume? The fiery tongues of Pentecost? Nay, upon the gentle Lamb of God descended the Spirit like a gentle dove, and the Father's voice was heard saying, " This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased." Oh, beloved, would not these words alone show us the heart of our blessed God? Lamb, bosom, Father, dove, have to my ear a melody divine-a melody which, in the riches of His grace, God blessed by the Spirit to the salvation of my soul.

But more, what message did this heavenly Stranger bring? "GRACE and truth came by
Jesus Christ."The whole truth that I am a lost ruined sinner, totally unable to help myself; and then the only thing suitable for such an one, grace -free, undeserved favor. The law said, " Thou shalt love the Lord thy God;" Grace says, God loves you. How do we know it? The law demands, but grace gives. He has given us His only-begotten Son. Oh, beloved, how is it possible to distrust such a God, or not to love our blessed Kinsman-Redeemer, who has given us Himself and all that He has, washed in whose blood we stand before our God and Father, accepted in the Beloved, loved as Jesus is loved, one with Him ; and best of all, to be with Him forever, being even now seated in Him in heavenly places, and soon to be conformed to His image, in body as well as soul, and sit with Him on His throne. (Rev. 3:21.) Meantime, the King is not yet upon His throne as the acknowledged Lord of all, but, seated at God's right hand, awaits the day known to God alone, when He shall come to meet us in the air, and take us to His Father's house.

At present, His kingdom exists in a mystery (Matt. 13:), and necessarily so, seeing that the rightful King has been rejected, and that a usurper, the devil, is practically "the god of this age." Oh, how sad to think that so many professing Christians should be nestling down in the devil's world, as if it were well with them, and, like the Gadarenes of old, not desirous that Jesus should come to drive the devil away!

All this inexplicable scene of sorrow and suffering is an anomaly which will be terminated when the earth's rightful King has come. Meanwhile, let us remember that we are espoused as a chaste virgin to Christ. Shall we make ourselves at home among the murderers and despisers of our Lord? We are pilgrims and strangers here, our citizenship being in heaven. God has no earthly people now, these being the times of the Gentiles; but when the saints have been taken up to the Father's house (Jno. 14:3) God's earthly people, the Jews, will be restored, put in grace under the new covenant, and under the reign of the true seed of David, shall blossom and bud, and fill the face of the world with fruit.

We who believe in a risen Christ, who is gone into heaven, are a heavenly people, and our hope is heavenly; for " from thence we look for the Saviour, the Lord Jesus Christ, who shall change our vile body, that it shall be fashioned like unto His glorious body." For that day we wait; for that day Paul and his dear Philippians, and all the ransomed saints of God who have "fallen asleep in Jesus," are still waiting in heaven; and for that day our blessed Master also waits upon His Father's throne. (Rev. 3:21; Heb. 10:13.)

Oh, beloved, as we often sing, "this world is a wilderness wide;" and it is so to us mainly because He whom our soul loveth is not here. Is it not the one great desire of our hearts to see that meek and lowly Man of Nazareth, who sat by Sychar's well, who wept human yet divine tears over human sorrows, who " loved us and gave Himself for us," and who has left us those lovely words (Jno. 14:3), "I will come again, and receive you unto Myself; that where I am, there ye may be also"? "Even so, come, Lord Jesus."

Bible Lessons On Matthew. Chap. 3:—continued.

"Then went out to him Jerusalem, and all Judea," etc. John commences here, our Lord with "Galilee of the Gentiles;" John, to show that God must have Israel in confession before Him; Jesus, to show that all being of Him that showeth mercy cannot be confined to Israel, and that they themselves must be debtors to the same grace that blesses Gentiles.

" Were baptized of him in Jordan, confessing their sins"-separation from Israel's guilty and unbelieving condition, owning the just judgment of God upon themselves.

"When he saw many Pharisees," etc. John had not come to own Israel nationally, or these surely had claim above others, but " to make ready a people prepared for the Lord (Luke 1:17); hence he claims conscience-work, not worldly patronage;- they were not to think divine blessing was theirs by birthright, but only in the confession of their forfeiture of all by their sins, and coming to God in self-judgment. Their only valid claim was a moral one-" fruits meet for repentance." God was able of the stones to raise up children unto Abraham, for the sovereign grace which took him up was equally free to bless others also.

"And now already the ax is laid unto the root of the trees." Grace is sovereign, and works above all question of human merit; but yet must it be realized that judgment is deserved. "The ax is laid at the root:" hitherto there had been but the fruit dealt with in God's government; now that which only brought forth "evil fruit" must be also. Another thing-it had been tilled and nurtured, "but brought not forth good fruit"-all had been spent upon it in vain. So with men universally-even the heathen "did not like to retain the knowledge of God" which they had, but became "alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that was in them;" hence all the darkness and corruption that ensued. (See Rom. 1:, 2:)

"Hewn down and cast into the fire,"-not only ceasing to have a place in blessing as hereto, but judged of God-cut off as to the kingdom and its blessings here, and consigned to judgment. But John's testimony was not alone to judgment, but the "mercy that rejoiceth against it" also. "I indeed baptize you with water unto repentance "- putting them in the place of confession before God, in their consciences having entered into His judgment of them; " but He that cometh after me shall baptize with the Holy Ghost and with fire." John could but bring them into their true place before God; the Lord Jesus, mightier than he, into His-own place before Him. Those who bowed to the Word, instead of the deserved judgment of their sins, getting the fruit of Christ's work-indwelling of the Holy Ghost; those rejecting it, the baptism with fire-symbol of the consuming judgment of God. B.C.G.

Faith's Paradoxes.

"As unknown, and yet well known; as dying, and, behold, we live; as chastened, and not killed; as sorrowful, yet alway rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, and yet possessing all things." (2 Cor. 6:9, 10.)

I often weep, yet I am not sad ;
Often in sorrow, I yet am glad ;
Chastened sore, yet I shall not die ;
Poor I am, yet how rich am I!
Naked, but clothed in fairest dress :
Nothing I have, yet I all possess.

Losses and troubles upon me rain ;
I count the losses my richest gain :
I am a fool in the world's esteem ;
Folly and madness my choice they deem:
Christ's reproach is my richest prize ;-
God's folly makes me divinely wise.

I pass through rivers, yet am not drowned ;
I walk the waves as on solid ground ;
The hottest fires cannot singe or burn ;
The hosts of darkness cannot overturn:
While He that dwelt in the bush is near,
And God is with me, what should I fear ?

Say, is the devil more strong than God?
Or Pharaoh's scepter than Moses' rod ?
Lo ! in the river and in the sea,
In the hot furnace, He's still with me :
In the dark valley, and in the grave,
Jehovah-Jesus is strong to save.

Soon shall the weary night be o'er,
The sun will rise to set no more ;
Soon shall the winter's cold rain be past,
The turtles be heard in the land at last;
And soon shall the glorious Bridegroom say,
"Arise, My fair one, and come away."

Oh, what a moment the past will seem !-
Vanished away like a troubled dream ;
Not worth a sigh will its grief be thought,
When to His presence we're safely brought;
Praise, our employment ceaseless be ;
Chiefest among ten thousand He !

J.G.D.

Present Things, As Foreshown In The Book Of Revelation.

THE SON OF MAN AMONG THE CHURCHES. (Rev. 1:9-20.)

We come now to the vision which introduces the messages to the seven assemblies which with it constitute the first part of the book. The second part is similarly introduced by the vision of the fourth and fifth chapters. There is a very evident and characteristic difference between the stand-points of the two. In the one case it is John, companion with the saints in tribulation and endurance, and the scene is on earth; in the other case he is called up to heaven, and the scene is there.

The apostle writes, not as such, but as one in the common fellowship of the martyrs of Jesus, with whom testimony and suffering were linked necessarily together, the kingdom to be reached through tribulation. He being in Patmos for the word of God and for the testimony of Jesus Christ, the word of God is afresh communicated to him, and the testimony of Christ anew committed into his hands. Is it not the abiding principle, only in a more than usually eminent example, that "to him that hath shall more be given"? Did ever any one find himself so in Patmos without learning something of the revelations of Patmos? Surely it could not be. Joseph becomes in his prison the " revealer of secrets;" Moses in his wilderness banishment sees the burning bush; David in his affliction develops the sweet singer of Israel; Paul gives out the mystery of the Church from the place of his captivity; John follows only in the footsteps of these; and those who have followed him, though at a humbler distance, and with no fresh revelations because the Word of God is complete, have they no unfoldings of the Word, no nearer views of its Subject and Revealer, to more than compensate for the sorrow of the way-rhapsodies though they may seem to those of days of less demand and less enthusiasm?

Yet when the apostle puts himself down thus simply as "partaker with you in the tribulation and kingdom and patience in Jesus," does he not expect us also, and invite us, as it were, into this fellowship? and must we not in some true sense be there in order to profit aright by this communication? If we will be friends with the world, can we expect to understand or be in sympathy with the prophet of Patmos? And if it be a Christian world we think of, the words have nothing but an evil significance, if we take the significance from Scripture. But among the many tongues with which for our sins we are afflicted, how few are content to speak simply the language of Scripture!

" I became in the Spirit on the Lord's day," it should be. It was not simply in the right and normal Christian state in which John found himself, as so many think, but carried out of himself by the power of the Spirit; his senses closed to. other things, his spirit awake to behold the things presented to him, and hear the voice that speaks to us also in him. The expression is found again in the beginning of the fourth chapter, at the opening of the vision there.

"On the Lord's day" does not mean, as some suppose, the prophetic " day of the Lord," for which there is a different expression, and which would not really apply at all to this first vision and what follows it. It is the Lord's day, the day of Christian privilege, in which in the joy of His resurrection we look back upon His death. Yet this does not surely shut out the looking forward to His coming:"ye do show forth the Lord's death till He come."This is the only right attitude for the Christian to be in, as one that expects his Lord. And this is indeed why, as it would seem, the voice that John hears speaks behind him, and he has to turn to see the One who speaks to him. His attention is to be directed to the present state of the Church; turned back, therefore, from the contemplation of the coming glory, to what to one so engrossed is a thing behind.

He turns, and sees seven golden candlesticks, or "lampstands," as the word is. They answer in number to the seven lamps of fire burning before the throne, the significance of which we have already seen. They represent, as we are told, the seven assemblies (5:20), and, plainly, as responsible to exhibit the light of the Spirit, during the night of the Lord's absence. The reference to the golden candlestick of the sanctuary is evident, and the contrast with it is as much intended for our notice, and should be as evident. The candlestick of the sanctuary was one only, its six branches set into the central stem, and it speaks of Christ, not the Church. The seven candlesticks are for lights, not in the sanctuary, where Christ alone is that, but in the world. And while there is a certain unity, as representing doubtless the whole Church, yet it is the Church seen, not in its dependent connection with Christ, but historically and externally, as "churches." Each lamp stand is set upon its own base, stands in its own responsibility, as is manifest. To speak of the Son of Man in the midst as the invisible bond of union is surely a mistake. He is judging, not uniting.

Moreover, it is the Church in the larger, not the narrower sense here. Sardis as a whole is dead, and not alive. Christ is outside of Laodicea. Individually, they are local assemblies, which, as we shall see, stand each for the professing church of a certain epoch, or what in it characterizes the epoch. To see in them but Ephesus and its contemporary churches, as a large mass of interpreters still do, is indeed to be blind, and not see afar off; but the proof as to this comes naturally later. They are golden candlesticks, as set for the display of the glory of God (of which the gold speaks); but this is not what of necessity is displayed by them ; they have the privilege and responsibility of it, but the candlestick may be, and in fact is, removed.

But the vision here is not simply, nor mainly, of the candlesticks-the churches; it is of One rather from whom alone they receive all their importance, -" One like unto the Son of man, clothed with a garment down to the foot, and girt about at the breasts with a golden girdle." The attire is that of a priest, but not in service, for the girdle is not about the loins, and the dress hangs loosely to the feet. As Priest, He is therefore a son of man, but He is more; and this the words, "One like unto the Son of man," indicate. Why "like unto" this, if He were indeed only this? The precise expression, moreover, is from Daniel, as what follows unites with it the features of the Ancient of days as pictured there. Thus it is the divine-human Priest, the true Mediator between God and men, as God and Man.

Yet He is not interceding. The characters which follow show Him as when He comes to judge the world, and these are applied, in the third and fourth addresses, to the judgment of the churches. "His head and His hair were white as white wool, as snow;" this marks Him as the Ancient of days, the perfection of holy wisdom; "and His eyes were like a flame of fire "-with the same absolute holiness searching all things; "and His feet like unto white [-hot] brass, as glowing in a furnace*,"-judgment following, as inexorable against evil; "and His voice as the voice of many waters,"-the sound of that ocean which reduces man so easily to his native littleness and impotence. *On the whole, this seems the sense; but a word unknown to the lexicons perplexes the commentators. *

Such is He who in grace has become the Son of man, but whose holiness is as unchangeable as His love is perfect. All judgment is committed unto Him, because He is the Son of man. The Church and the world alike are in His hand whose glorious uprising will bring, in a short time, summer to the earth. "And He had in His right hand seven stars; and out of His mouth goeth a sharp two-edged sword; and His countenance was as the sun shineth in its strength."

All this exhibits the Lord as just ready to come forth and take the kingdom; it is as if He had left the sanctuary, and were clothing Himself in the cloud with which He returns. And so Scripture, when urging our responsibility upon us, carries us constantly on to the day of His appearing, when the result of conduct will be brought out and manifested to all. There is a wide distinction always recognized between this and His coming to receive us to Himself, with which nothing but grace is associated. This is the time when we receive the fruit of His work; and beautiful it is to see, and unspeakably comforting it is to realize, that first of all-before any thing else, His heart must have its way, and the sufficiency of His cross be shown to set the believer in full, unchallengeable possession of eternal blessedness, before ever a note of judgment has sounded, or a question as to his work been made. And this is plain from the fact of what the resurrection of the saint is stated to be. " It is sown in corruption "-the body of the dead saint;- " it is raised in incorruption:it is sown in dishonor; it is raised in glory:it is sown in weakness; it is raised in power." And we who are alive and remain unto the coming of the Lord, we shall be changed like them into the image of the heavenly, and caught up together with them, to meet the Lord in the air. Thus incorruption, glory, power, are ours before ever we see the face of the Lord or are manifested before His judgment-seat.

But with His appearing is associated the recompense of works; and thus all exhortations, warnings, encouragements, contemplate this. And so the Lord is seen in the vision here, though among the churches. In this way all is simple, and we cannot confound His being "in the midst of the assembly " with His being in the midst of the assemblies, or seek for principles of gathering in what is of a totally different nature. " Who walketh in the midst of the seven golden candlesticks " is the Lord's own word to the church in Ephesus. How different is the thought of His walking in the midst from His being in the midst as the center of gathering!

Principles of church-order and discipline are not to be sought in the book of Revelation. It is most important to realize that God's Word, if it be beyond our systems, has a system of its own; and that He has so arranged His truth that His people may know where to look for it, and find it with more simplicity than in fact we do. Each book has its line of truth, distinct from, however much connected with, every other one. The first of Corinthians is the book of church-order and discipline. Revelation is the book of the throne, and divine judgment. And the simplest view of the vision before us agrees with this, which will only be more manifest the deeper we look.

The vision of glory overpowers the apostle:"And when I saw Him, I fell at His feet as dead. And He laid His right hand upon me, saying, 'Fear not.' " How the Christ of the gospel comes out here! What words more characteristic of Him than this, "Fear not"? "Perfect love casteth out fear," and such love is His who speaks, not alone to John in this, but to all who, realizing more His majesty than His grace, would put Him back into the distance and darkness from which He has come out to us. What we are is no more in question; the cross has manifested that fully:all for us lies now in what He is; and the cross has revealed that too. Word and deed witness for Him and unto us, and His right hand of power acts with His word:"Fear not; I am the First and the Last, and the Living One; and I was dead, and behold, I am alive for evermore, and have the keys of death and of hades."
Here again divine and human characters are mingled. The First is Cause of all; the Last, the end of all. " All things were created by Him and for Him:" no expression of divinity could be clearer or fuller than this. Then the Living One is necessarily also the Source of life,-living and life-giving. But this Living One has died, gone into death to become its Conqueror. Alive for evermore, He has the keys of death and of hades, -that is, of that which holds the body and that which holds the soul of the dead.* *A similar connection of death and hades is found in the twentieth chapter:" Death and hades delivered up the dead which were in them "- the one, the soul; the other, the body. "Hades" is never "the grave," as our common version sometimes renders it, and never " hell," which is its alternate rendering. " Thou wilt not leave My soul in hell," as spoken of the Lord (Acts 2:27, 31), agrees with neither. The distinction in these terms shows very simply that it is the body only which really dies, or over which death has its proper empire.* Thus man's condition is plumbed to the bottom, for death is the seal of that condition. Only that which meets the condition can break the seal of it.

He, then, who has been in death for us has turned its awful shadow into morning, not to bring back indeed out of its grasp the first creation, but to open for us the door into infinitely higher blessing. The gates of strength* have yielded to our Samson, and more:out of the eater comes forth meat, and out of the strong sweetness. *" Gaza " means "the strong."* How beyond measure is this love of One who, though the Living One, has been in death far us! How rich have we become through this voluntary poverty! And " He who descended is the same also who ascended up, far above all heavens, that He might fill all things."

He goes on:-

"Write, then"-with this assurance,-"the things which thou hast seen, and the things which are, and the things which shall be after these; the mystery of the seven stars which thou sawest in My right hand, and the seven golden candlesticks. The seven stars are the angels of the seven churches, and the seven candlesticks are the seven churches."

These words give us the division of the book. " The things which are" must needs apply to the seven assemblies and their state. "The things which shall be after these"-not "hereafter," which is too vague,-to the things which follow from the fourth chapter on. This is evident, whatever view we take of the interpretation of these sections. With the first of them only have we to do here,- "the things which are," or present things.

Present, then, in what sense? present at that time merely, and now long past? or, as many now consider, present still? Do the addresses to the churches give only such lessons for us here to-day as must necessarily be found in what is said to Christian gatherings of by-gone days by One who with perfect wisdom, knowledge, holiness, and love speaks to just such as we are? Or is there, beside all this, as many believe, a more precise, designed correspondence between these seven Asiatic assemblies and as many successive periods in the history of the Church at large-a prophetic teaching for all time, until the Lord come, and our path here is ended? Let us look briefly at what has been urged as to this latter view.

Against, it has been urged that the addresses are not given as a prophecy of the future, but simply as to churches then existing, now long passed away. This is undoubtedly the most forcible objection that has been made; for imagination is unholy license in the things of God, and the addresses have not the general style of prophecy, as must be admitted. We do right, then, to be watchful here. But answer has been made to this:in the first place, that at the very beginning of the book, we have the whole of it called a prophecy:"Blessed is he that readeth and they that hear the words of the book of this prophecy, and keep the things that are written therein." It seems, therefore that we have distinct warrant for holding the addresses to be prophetic, and that we should rather require it for refusing them this place.

Beside this, the disguise which confessedly they assume may be accounted for. The Christian's privilege and duty are, to be always expecting his Lord. He who says in his heart, My Lord delayeth His coming, is a " wicked servant." There was to be left room for this expectancy, as the best help against discouragement, the most effectual remedy against settling down in the world, the best means of fixing the eyes upon Christ and things above. This was not to beget false hope or encourage mistake, for the time of the Lord's return they were assured they did not know:" Watch, for ye know not when the time is." But thus to put before men a prophecy of a long earthly history for the Church would be to destroy what was to be a main characteristic of Christians, to take out of their hands the lamp of testimony to the world itself, the virgin's lamp lighted to go forth to meet her Lord.

And it is blessed to see that now, if, in the end of the days, the full meaning is being revealed, and we are shown how much of the road we have actually traveled, the effect is, after all the long delay, to encourage expectation, not to damp it. That we are nearing the end is sure; that any part of the road remains before us to be trodden, we have no assurance. The very thing which to past generations would have been an evil too fully to disclose is now for us as great and manifest a gain.

For the prophetic view is further urged the constant emphatic appeal to our attention with which every one of these addresses ends. Was it only for men of that day and place that it is written, " He that hath an ear, let him, hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches"? No part of Scripture is so emphasized beside. Again, are there no candlesticks amid which Christ walks except those of these Asiatic churches? The very number 7 is characteristic of this book, as it is significant of completeness also. As the seven Spirits speak of the complete energy of the one blessed Spirit, do not the seven churches stand for the varied aspects of the one Church of God on earth?

And to them as representatives of this one Church is the whole book committed,-not for their own use merely, but for ours. As John is the representative servant, so the churches are representatives of the Church.

But the great proof of the correctness of the prophetic view is (what as yet it would be premature at any length to enter on,) the real correspondence between the picture given of the seven churches and the well-known history of the professing church. We have the successive steps of its decline-first hidden, then external; the judaizing process-by which it was transformed from a company of saved and heavenly people into a mixed multitude uncertain of heaven, clinging to the certainties of earth; away from God, and committing the sacred things, for which they are too unclean, to an official class of go-betweens. Then open union with the world, once persecuting, now friendly, Balaam-teachers for hire promoting and celebrating it. Then the reign of Jezebel, inspired and infallible, her cup full of abominations and filthiness of her fornication. Then Protestantism, soon forgetting the things which it had heard, sunk into its grave of nationalism, though with a separate remnant as ever, dear to God. Then an era of revival and blessing, the Spirit of God working freely, outside of sectarian boundary-lines, uniting to Christ and to one another. Then, alas! collapse and threat of removal, Christ rejected and outside, the lukewarmness of water ready to be spued out of His mouth.

Such is the picture:does it appeal to us? In the midst of all this, in the central church, the center of the darkness, at midnight surely, there begins a cry, faint though at first, but gathering strength as the time goes on, "Go ye out to meet. Him!" In Thyatira first, " Hold fast till I come!" To Sardis, "I will come on thee as a thief." To Philadelphia, -more as in haste now,-" I come quickly." Then Laodicea, and the end!

Does this appeal to us? What follows then? Briefly:a scene in heaven, and a redemption-song before the throne; a Lamb slain, who as Judah's Lion unseals the seven-sealed book; churches no more on earth, but once more Jews and Gentiles; and out of these, a multitude who come out of the great tribulation; until, after the marriage of the Lamb has taken place in heaven, its gates unclose, and the white-horsed Rider and His armies come out to the judgment of the earth.

This to many even yet may read as strange as any fiction. I cannot of course enter on it now. But there are those who object that by this view the relative importance of events is quite inverted. Two chapters give us the whole course of Christendom ; the largest part of the book by far is taken up with the details of some seven years after the Church is removed to heaven:why so rapid a survey of what so immediately concerns us?-so lengthy a relation of what will not take place till after the saints of the present time have passed from the scene?

But how often are we mistaken in the relative importance of things! God seeth not as man seeth; and the common view which appropriates seal after seal to the succession of Roman emperors, trumpet after trumpet to the inroads of Goths and Vandals, vial after vial to the French revolution and Napoleonic wars, has surely missed His estimate of importance. But more:the events which fill so many chapters have indeed for us the very greatest significance. The time is that "end of the age" which is the harvest of the world; it is the judgment for which all around is ripening, and in which every thing comes out as He who judges sees it. Is it not for us of the greatest possible moment to see that final, conclusive end of what is now often so pretentious and delusive? Here we may surely gather, if we will, lessons of sanctification of the most practical nature. Indeed we are sanctified by the truth; and whatever is of the truth will sanctify. F.W.G. (To be continued.)

Fragment

" The world will allow the mere statement of any doctrine provided no attempt be made to put it in practice. It is only when faith begins to produce works that the Christian is confronted with bitter antagonism."

" Jesus was not popular. The multitude might follow Him for a moment, because His ministry stood connected, in their judgment, with ' the loaves and fishes,' which met their need; but they were just as ready to cry, 'Away with Him!' as ' Hosanna to the Son of David!' "

Bible Lessons On Matthew. Chapter 3:

"In those days came John the Baptist." Israel have not cared for their Messiah, and, in the person of Herod, have sought His life ; and John's voice is to call them to a judgment of their ways, and turn their hearts to God,-" the disobedient to the wisdom of the just." His was a separating testimony-from and to-from the national rejection, and to the rejected One. All for their blessing was there in the Lord's person, but there was moral fitness needed to receive it, and this John comes to produce by his testimony of repentance. Personally, and in his circumstances and testimony, all speaks of being outside the nation's condition,- "In the wilderness of Judea," saying, "Repent ye;" thus fulfilling the word of the prophet Esaias," The voice of one crying in the wilderness [an outside place],' Prepare ye the way of the Lord; make His paths straight.'" There the message reads, "All flesh is grass" which "repent ye" really means,- turn from all that you are, as judged of God, to own "the Hope of Israel." And what grace and truth mingle in His appeal-" O Israel, thou hast destroyed thyself, but in Me is thy help"! (5:4.) The one who calls upon others for preparedness of heart to receive the Lord must be personally the exponent of what his testimony is to them.

FRAGMENTS.

"The same John . . . Raiment of camel's hair. Leathern girdle about his loins.
Meat, locusts and wild honey."

In apparel, no diversity of texture; girded to his loins-distinctly upon him, and concentration of purpose, as " the man of God;" meat, independent of human supply, and from two opposite sources; the very plague of eastern countries, and nature's sweet, both made to serve his need. All in perfect accord with his testimony and abode, and exactly reproducing the inspired record of Elijah, in "whose spirit and power' he had come. All is found where his lot is cast-in the desert, as with Israel, long before, when Jehovah fed them, and "their raiment waxed not old, neither did their foot swell for forty years."

How blessed that in such circumstances can be found thus, clothing and sustenance-the lives of others yielding it, and even nature's sweet God can bestow, for John is one self-governed, and devoted to Him ! Are we thus true enough in heart to be intrusted with such? (See Deut. 33:13; Ps. 81:16.) B.C.G.

Priestly Offerings.

"But who am I, and what is my people, that we should be able to offer so willingly after this sort ? for all things come of Thee, and of Thine own have we given Thee." (i Chron. 29:14.)

It is beautiful to see the grace with which we are brought to give God His own. Three sacrifices are to be offered by God's priests(a class that embraces every believer, young or old):

1. Themselves.-The apostle beseeches, and that "by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is your intelligent service." (Rom. 12:I.) For "ye are not your own; ye are bought with a price:therefore glorify God in your body." (i Cor. 6:20.) See for example 2 Cor. 8:5-they "first gave their own selves to the Lord."

2. Their Worship.-As holy priests, " to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ." " Whoso offereth praise glorifieth Me," says Jehovah. '.' By Him therefore let us offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually," etc. (Heb. 13:15.)

3. Their Goods.-"But to do good and to communicate [1:e., of your substance-Gal. 6:6; i Tim. 6:18] forget not; for with such sacrifices God is well pleased." (Heb. 13:16; Phil. 4:18.)

“A Shadow From The Heat” isaiah 25:4.

When the cares of life oppress thee,
And thy spirit longs for rest;
If thy friends should disappoint thee,
E'en the dearest and the best;
Then the time has come for learning
Lessons which are learnt alone
In the Master's secret presence,
All thy sorrows made His own.

Lessons which will, in the learning,
Turn thy bitter into sweet;
Marah shall be left behind thee,
Elim greet thy weary feet.
Who can comfort as He comforts ?
Never sorrow was like His;
'Twas in love for thee He bore it,
Who can offer love like this?

If on bed of pain to languish
He should gently bid thee lie,
Think of His surpassing anguish,
Think of all His agony:
Not a grief but He has measured,
Not a tear He doth not see ;
Oh, as one his mother comforts,
So the Lord will comfort thee !

If some loved one turn and leave thee,
Think how He was left by all;
Well He knows-who else so truly?
What it is in vain to call,
In the hour of deepest sorrow,
For a loving friend to cheer,
And because He knows, has felt it,
He to thee is ever near.

And when thou has learnt the lesson
How to trust a love so strong,
Learning how thy best conception
Of His goodness did Him wrong,
Falling far, how far below it!
Seeing Him, thy song shall be-.
"Oh, the half of all His beauty,
Never hath been told to me !"

The World That Perished, And That Now Is.

"Besides the awful picture of the apostasy of men before the flood presented us in Gen. vi, we have the description of their state connected with the prophecy of Enoch in the epistle of Jude, and another tradition concerning them, recorded by divine inspiration, in the book of Job. The moral picture of the antidiluvian world is thus strikingly presented to Job in the way of question:-

" Hast thou marked the old way which wicked men have trodden? Which were cut down out of time, whose foundation was overflown with a flood:Which said unto God, ' Depart from us!' and what can the Almighty do for them ? Yet He filled their houses with good things." (Job 22:15-18.)

And this bounty of God to " the unthankful and the evil," "filling their houses with good things," is expressly pointed out in the words of Christ concerning that period:"In the days that were before the flood, they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, . . . even thus shall it be in the days of the Son of Man."

Thus it is plain that the last hour of this present world is to answer both in its restless activity and its moral character to the last hour of the world before the flood. There is, however, a promise of the Church's preservation from the world's last temptation and judgment (Rev. 3:10 with i Thess. 4:16-18) by the taking up of its last members into heaven before the final current of human iniquity and the divine wrath that follows it shall set in upon the earth (2 Thess. 1:7-12). And in what state was the old world before the awful close?

It was a world in the full enjoyment of the gifts of God's providence, yet "murmurers and complainers" (Jude 14-16); a world suffering from human violence, yet " having men's persons in admiration;" a world which heard the "preacher of righteousness," yet continued " walking after their own lusts;" a world which was told of the Lord's coming, yet persisted in their "ungodly deeds" and "hard speeches." It was a world that had its fair women and its mighty men; its architects, its musicians, and its artificers, as well as its shepherds and its husbandmen, men dwelling in cities and men dwelling in tents, men of renown and men of violence. But their renown, where has it placed their names? They are not remembered in heaven or earth; they lie deep in the records of hell. Their might, what was it when the flood "came and took them all away"? Waters gushing from beneath, waters rushing from above! Deep called unto deep. " The triumphing of the wicked is short."

Forgotten Workers.

They lived, and they were useful; this we know,
And naught beside ;
No record of their names is left, to show
How soon they died.
They did their work, and then they passed away,
An unknown band;
But they shall live in endless day, in the
Fair shining land.

And were they young, or were they growing old,
Or ill, or well,
Or lived in poverty, or had they wealth of gold,-
No one can tell;
Only one thing is known of them-they faithful
Were, and true
Disciples of the Lord, and strong, through prayer,
To save and do.

But what avails the gift of .empty fame ?
They lived to God;
They loved the sweetness of another Name,
And gladly trod
The rugged ways of earth, that they might be
Helper or friend,
And in the joy of this their ministry,
Be spent, and spend.

No glory clusters round their names on earth ;
But in God's heaven
Is kept a book of names of greatest worth,
And there is given
A place for all who did the Master please,
Though here unknown ;
And there, lost names shine forth in brightest rays
Before the throne.

Oh, take who will the boon of fading fame !
But give to me
A place among the workers, though my name
Forgotten be;
And as within the book of life is found
My lowly place,
Honor and glory unto God redound
For all His grace !

Advice To Beginners. By A Plain Man.

I want to say a few plain things to you that are young in the way. It won't do us "old ones" any harm either, for we have all of us got an uncommon love for keeping "just inside" the wicket-gate; as if religion was nothing but standing still when once you're through that.

Well, first, be sure that you are in the right road. Put that down. ' You will never get along at all if you keep stopping and wondering whether it is the right road. I was over to Stithians the other day; and coming home, I lost myself-or thought I did. Ah, 'twas poor speed with me then. I was afraid that I should have to go back again, and so I went on at a snail's pace. Well, I came to a directing-post, but it was all weather-beaten and worn, and didn't help me a bit. Very soon I saw a man coming. "This the way to Penwinnin?" I called out. "Yes, straight on." Ah, I was off then, ' as fast as I could get over the ground. You'll never get on till you are quite sure that you are in the right road.

Now, you beginners must get into the way of resting on Jesus without any doubt. Don't ever go trying to be content with good feelings and good desires and good resolutions. They are all very well, and thank God for them; but good feelings are turned into bad failings when we put our trust in them. Get into a way of looking straight up to the cross for salvation-morning, noon, and night. Bright or dull, glad or sad, there it is for us always, -"in Him we have redemption through His blood, even the forgiveness of sins."

The devil keeps thousands of people in prison all their days, by getting them to look away from Jesus. " Come, he says, " come-you are not so happy as you used to be;" or, " you are not so happy as you ought to be. You must come to jail." And there he keeps them, letting them out of the cage, once in a while for a bit of fresh air, when it is wonderful fine weather. And all the time blessed Lord Jesus has finished the work for every one of us. Why, there are times when I've got to buckle those words about me like a life-belt-" He loved me and gave Himself for me." When my good feelings and my good every-thing-else are clean swept away, I must hang on that.

Next, don't go thinking that the road to heaven is all up-hill. I can't bear to hear people go talking bravely and cheerfully about every thing in the world except Christ; that's always doleful and dismal and hard. They can put a bit of cheerfulness ' into their work, but begin with Christ-they'll groan directly. The man can do his ten hours, and more than that at a pinch; and the woman can manage the washing, and look after the baby, and cook the dinner too, and not think that is any thing very dreadful:but when 'tis in the Lord's service, listen to them then:-They are such poor weak creatures; and they have got so many troubles, and so many trials, and so many temptations; and they are so full of their doubts and their fears; and the devil he is so busy. That's it, that's it;-smart enough and strong enough an' clever enough for every thing else in the world except the one thing that they were made for-serving the Lord!

Don't any of you young folks get into such dreadful ways. You are poor, weak creatures-of course you are; and saying so a hundred times a day won't make you any stronger. You have got temptations and trials-of course you have, and groaning over them will only make them look more and bigger. But what else have we got? Ah, folks stop there, and that is how they fail.

Don't get into a way of looking always upon that side, as if that is all. Ah, bless His name, what about Him ? The glorious Lord, who can make lame folks run, and blind folks see, and dead folks live!

Talk about your temptations and trials if you like, but do talk about Him too who is able to keep us from falling, holding us all the way with His right hand. Do let us count that we are upon the winning side:get into the way of thinking about the mighty Jesus, and keep there. Bless Him, He has brought ten thousand safe home, and He can set you and me there too, with white robes, and crowns, and palms of victory. If a man can go along cheerfully any where, let him go along brave and cheerful in the road to heaven. Ah, what company! " All power is given unto Me in heaven and in earth." Listen to that, and then think how it finishes-"And, lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world."

Then I want you to mind one day at a time. Seeming to me that our heavenly Father has given us our life in days, because He sees that we can't manage more than that at once. People might get on very well if they were content to take life like 'tis given; but they go wondering whatever they shall do next week, or whatever will happen to them next year, and so they get frightened, and think that 'tis no good their trying-not a bit.

Don't go trying to put your arms round a year, and don't go troubling about next week. Wake up in the morning and think, Here's another day come. Whatever I do and whatever I don't do, Lord, help me to do this-help me to live to Thee!

Then, be sure and get a good start. A good start goes further than any thing to make a good day. Let the Sun of Righteousness rise all fair and clear in the soul, and 'tis easy to walk in the light all day then. Here, young folks, I've seen bits of rhyme about the weather, so as to help people to remember it better; and here is a bit for you to think of every morning:-

"Between six and eight
You have sealed its fate."

Tell me how a man gets ready for the day, and I'll tell you how he gets through it.

Ah, there's poor Bro. Meanwell; he will read a chapter in the morning, but he never thinks about it. He will kneel down to pray, and it is the same old set of words exactly, day after day and year after year,-all so pat and so smooth, but there is no bite nor grip about them.

" Making very poor speed ?"-I should think so, when you can scarcely stay to get a bit of breakfast for the soul, and then go starving it till supper-time.

Next, set out with a good courage. Poor Little-faith wakes up with a sigh and a shiver. "I am so different from most people," says poor Little faith; "and here is another day come, and there are so many cares and so many. hindrances!" I want you young folks to get into a way of setting out feeling quite sure that God is for you; and not just when you go to meeting, but in your work and your worries-in wants and cares like yours and mine.

Little faith forgets this. He is like those folks that go out in the water ankle-deep, and then wonder how it is that they can't float and swim like other people do. Plunge right into the sea of His grace, young folks. Start the day thinking, There'll be nothing to-day but He will help me; there'll be no where to-day but He will be with me, no temptation but He can deliver me, no burden but I can cast it upon Him. Let the music of His precious promises ring in our souls. Go out into the day thinking how the loving Father looks all along it, and knows what we want.

Then mind this, young folks:When you're getting ready for the day, get alone. There are not many forms and ceremonies laid down in the New Testament; but there is one that the Lord Jesus has laid down so clear that we dare not neglect it-it is in the sixth chapter of Matthew:" When thou pray-est, enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret."

Get away alone with the Lord. We want to shut our ears as well as our eyes. A man can lift up his heart to the Lord any where; but if he wants to have a real bit of prayer, he must get away alone with the Lord. Abraham rose up early in the morning-when there was nobody else stirring, I expect, and he'd got it all quiet; and the blessed Jesus Himself sent the disciples away across the sea while He went into a mountain apart to pray. Do get alone somewhere with the Lord.

Then get a bit of the Word in your heart every day. If we want to be right in all the things of our life, there is only one thing that will do it:meditate upon the Word. Come winter as well as summer; come spring as well as autumn; there's fruit, and fruit in his season-the right sort of fruit. Stick to the Word, young folks,-every thing else almost will grow out of that.

Then the next thing is about praying. Mind that too. There's a lot of things going by the name of gold, but it is only in the looks. So there is a good deal of what people call prayer, but it will only do for them that don't know the real thing.

For years, I used to fancy that it was proper to begin to pray and go right on without stopping till I had done altogether; but one day, I was down at Redburn Market, and as soon as I had got one thing that I wanted, I asked myself, "What next?" then, "And what besides?" Since I have done that, my prayers are more real; and it has brought me into a way of telling the Lord about the day's work and things, that is very helpful.

Oh, do open your hearts to Him, young folks. Don't let there be any secrets from Him. When you are kneeling down, ask yourselves, " What more do I want?" and "What besides is there?"

And be real. Don't be afraid to call things by their right names. Do be real when you pray.

Present Things, As Foreshown In The Book Of Revelation.

The Style and Character of the Book. (Chap. 1:4-8.)

We now come to the opening words of the book itself. It is in form a letter from the beloved apostle to "the seven assemblies which are in Asia." This Asia was the Roman province called by this name, being the west coast of what is now, for the sins of Christendom, Turkey in Asia. The churches in it were even then, though traditionally the scene of John's as in the Acts of Paul's labors, already departing from the faith and spiritual power of Christianity; and this, as we may see more hereafter, gives at once a certain character to the book. Whoever they were of whom Paul in his very last epistle says, "This thou knowest, that all they which be in Asia are turned away from me, of whom are Phygellus and Hermogenes," it is clear that Asia was thus the scene of a revolt from that "apostles' doctrine and fellowship" which it was a marked feature of the bright Pentecostal times to maintain.

The salutation shows at once the style of the book. It is not "grace and peace from God the Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ," but "from Him who is, and who was, and who is to come; and from the seven Spirits which are before His throne; and from Jesus Christ, the faithful Witness, and the First-born* of the dead, and the Ruler of the kings of the earth." *As there are many (smaller or greater) inaccuracies in the common version of the book of Revelation, I take advantage of the difference here (though not a textual one,) to say that I follow, wherever it is possible, the new revision. Wherever I may not be able to do this, I hope to note the fact, and my reasons.* Here, it is evident, we are not in the intimacy of children, but in the character of servants, according to what the previous verses have announced. The book is the book of the throne-of divine government; and that, not merely of the world, but of Christians no less. Indeed, where should divine government be more exemplified and maintained than among the people of God. " You only have I known of all the families of the earth," says God to His people of old; "therefore will I punish you for your iniquities." It is true that toward us now grace is fully revealed, and the throne is a"throne of grace," but its holiness is none the less inflexible. Would it be grace if it were not so? or do we desire to be delivered from the conditions of holiness, or from the sovereignty of God? No; grace enables for the conditions,-does not set them aside; and it sets God fully on the throne for us, makes the "shout of a King" to be in our midst. Children with the Father, where should there be whole-hearted, unreserved obedience if not among these ?

The throne here is Jehovah's throne, for " who is, and was, and is to come" is just the translation of the covenant-name of Israel's God. " Grace and peace " salute us from this unchangeable One-this eternal God. The new revelation has not displaced, nor mended, (as rationalism would have it,) the God of Israel for us! It has declared Him:displaced shadows, filled in gaps, perfected the partial and fragmentary into the glorious God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! taught us to see in the older Scriptures themselves a fullness of meaning of which those who wrote them could have no possible perception. Do David's psalms yield us less than they yielded to faith of old ? And if the New Testament has no corresponding book, is it not because, now that the Spirit of God is come, our psalmody is to be found in every book, which for us He has combined into one harmony of praise and triumphant joy?

Yes, the One who is was, and is to come. Our present God is He who from first to last abides, in every generation, amid all changes changeless; sitting on high above all water-floods; whose kingdom is an everlasting kingdom. What a resting-place for faith! "Lord, Thou hast been our dwelling-place in all generations!"

But not only are grace and peace breathed from this ever-living One, but also "from the seven Spirits which are before His throne." We all recognize at once that these seven Spirits stand for the plenitude of the Holy Spirit; and in the fourth chapter they are represented as seven lamps of fire burning before the throne, while in the fifth they are the "seven eyes" of the Lamb, "sent forth into all the earth." This, again, evidently connects with Isaiah xi, where these seven Spirits are seen to be energies of the Spirit which are found in the Man, Christ Jesus, as reigning over the earth.

"Grace and peace," then, from these-how blessed ! All the ministries of divine government upon the earth working in blessing toward us; all the course of things as guided and controlled by God, spite of all hindrances, all puzzles and perplexities, still working in one harmony of grace and peace toward His own. How easy to be bold and patient both, if we believe this!

Then also " from Jesus Christ, the faithful Witness, and the First-born of the dead, and the Ruler of the kings of the earth." "Faithful" is emphasized here, for our encouragement surely, if grace and peace are from such an One, but yet in contrast with other witness too, as that of the Church, so little faithful. Is it not a needed word for those oppressed with the sense of failure,-almost ready to give up what are His principles, because of the break-down of those who have undertaken to carry them out? In such a case, how good to remember that on the one hand we are servants and not masters, with no liberty to dispense with one even of His commandments, and on the other, that we serve One who Himself is faithful, however we have failed. Shall we go to Him and say, Master, Thy principles are impracticable for a world and a time like this"? or shall we lack in courage when results are in His hand who has never failed, and never will, while He oftentimes submits to apparent defeat. Such was the cross, the victory of victories, and we must submit, here as elsewhere, to the rule of the woman's Seed. To this are we not in fact brought in the next words? "The First-born of the dead " unites us with Him as the later-born, and resurrection is the mode of His triumph over apparent defeat. But it is divine triumph, in which not alone evil is vanquished, but God is manifested in His resources and in His grace.

Grace and peace are ours from One who is conqueror over death, and who brings us into the place into which as Forerunner He has entered, while already He is, as risen, and on the Father's throne, Ruler of the kings of the earth,-the scene through which in the meantime we are passing. In a little while, when He takes His own throne, we shall share also in this.

Thus are we furnished at the outset for present service. Placed before the living and eternal God, the energies of His Spirit ministering to us, the Captain of our salvation cheering us on with the joy of already accomplished victory, the pledge of certainty as to our own. Now for the response of our hearts to this before we start:without our hearts are in tune, and we can go cheerily into the battlefield-for it is a battlefield into which we go, and not as spectators merely,-we should only expose ourselves there to our shame. The singers must be in the forefront of the Lord's army, as in Jehoshaphat's of old, and then there will be good success. So the saints' answer to their Captain's voice here is with a song:-

" Unto Him who loveth us,
And hath washed* us from our sins
In His own blood,
And hath made us a kingdom,
Priests to His God and Father,-
Unto Him be glory and might
Unto the ages of ages.
Amen."

*" Washed us," I believe, is right. The Revised Version puts it, however, into the margin, and " loosed us " into the text. Most of the modern editors agree with this, and it has the weight of the oldest MS. authority in its favor, although the great mass of MSS. give " washed." The latter seems more in the apostle's manner as 1 Jno. 1:7; Rev. 7:14 (though in the latter case it is not persons, taut robes).*

This is a sweet response of loyal hearts on the edge of the battlefield. It is the good confession of His name, and of the debt we owe Him, which has made us His own forever. Good it is, the open joyful maintenance of this, which at once separates us from the world that rejects Him, and puts us in the ranks of His witnesses and followers. "By Him therefore let us offer the sacrifice of praise to God continually, that is, the fruit of our lips, confessing His name." No such wholesome, invigorating, gladdening work as is confession.

" Unto Him who loveth us," not "loved us," as the common version reads. It is a present reality, measured only aright by a past work-" and hath washed us from our sins in His own blood." Let us take care we measure it ever so! Not by our own changeful feelings or experiences, as we are so prone to do, but by the glorious manifestation of itself thus:an infinite measure of an infinite fullness ; for who knows aright the value of the blood of Christ?

" And hath washed us from our sins:" what an encouragement for those who have to go into a world full of temptation and defilement! We have known sin as sin-known it as needing the precious blood of Christ to cleanse us from its guilt, and known ourselves too as thus cleansed. If we are "idle and unfruitful in the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ," it can only be because we have " forgotten that" we were " purged from" our " old sins."

But more:He has " made us a kingdom,* priests to His God and Father." *All authorities, upon the warrant of the three oldest MSS. and some ancient versions, give this instead of the ''kings and priests" of our common one. The reference to Exodus 19:is plain, but I do not see how in either passage we have the equivalent of the other reading. A " kingdom of priests " does not convey the thought of "kings and priests," which we have, however, undoubtedly, in chap. 5:10. Is it not rather a people who own God's sovereignty, instead of being a rabble of independent and rebellious wills, as once ? Well may we praise Him who has done all this for us ! Internal criticism, however, as opposed to authorities, might suggest the defensibility of the "Received Text." The MSS. are evidently here also in some confusion.* Israel was promised, conditionally upon obedience, " Ye shall be unto Me a kingdom of priests, and a holy nation." (Ex. 19:6.) They failed in obedience, and Levi's special priesthood was the consequence of their failure, while, as part of this failed people, not even the priesthood could pass within the vail. Grace has now given us as Christians that access to God to them denied, and to God fully revealed as the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. He who has thus revealed God has given us our place in His presence-a happy, holy place of praise and intercession. " To Him be the glory and might unto the ages of ages!"

An "Amen " is added here, that we may as individuals join our voices to the voice of the Church at large. It is a blessed thing to be part of the innumerable company who have a common theme and a common joy; but it is also blessed to have our own distinct utterance and our own peculiar joy. . The more distinct the better. Would the apostle have felt it the same thing to say, "Who" loved us, and gave Himself for us," true as it might be, as to say, "Who loved me, and gave Himself for me"?Assuredly he would not. The "chief of sinners,"realizing himself that, had something which was individual to himself, and which would not be lost or overlooked in the general song. And we have, each one of us surely, special experiences to call forth peculiar praise. Note, too, that the power of the life lived to God is associated by him with this individualization:" 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."

Thus, then, the heart gives out its response to its beloved Lord. Now, then, it is qualified for testimony to Him. " If we be beside ourselves, it is to God; if we be sober, it is for your cause." The soul in company with Christ turns necessarily to the world with its testimony of Him:the Enoch-life is joined with the Enoch-witness. For it was he of whom it is written, "he walked with God, and he was not, for God took him," who "prophesied, saying, 'Behold, the Lord cometh with ten thousands of His saints, to execute judgment upon all.'" The Church it is who is called, like another Enoch, to walk here with Him whom she is soon to be called away to meet and be ever with; and the next verse in Revelation puts into her mouth her similar testimony:-

" Behold, He cometh with clouds, and every eye shall see Him, and they also which pierced Him, and all the tribes of the earth shall wail because of Him."

This is evidently not the Church's hope, but the Church's testimony. It takes up the theme of the Old-Testament prophets, with direct appeal even to their prophecies; for Daniel saw of old the Son of Man come with the clouds of heaven, and Zechariah declares how Israel look upon Him whom they have pierced, and how the tribes of the land mourn" for Him, as one mourneth for his only son, and are in heaviness as he that is in heaviness for his first-born." (Dan. 7:13; Zech. 10:10, 12.)

I do not doubt that, while the words in Revelation repeat the very language of the older prophets, -for " kindreds " in the common version is literally "tribes," and "earth" and "land" are, both in Hebrew and Greek, but the same word,-yet that in the passage before us a wider application is to be made than this. Not only shall they see who have pierced Him, but" every eye." Naturally, therefore, not the tribes of the land only, but of the earth at large, shall wail on account of Him. The testimony is neither to nor of Israel only, though including these. And while the mourning in Zechariah is unto repentance; the word here is large enough to admit of the wail of despair as well as of repentance.

The Church's testimony is addressed to all. Christ is coming; the day of grace running out; judgment nearing with every stroke of the hour. A testimony which we know from Scripture, as we may realize every day around us, wakes only the scorn of " scoffers, walking in their own lusts, and saying, Where is the promise of His coming? for since the fathers fell asleep all things continue as they were from the beginning of the creation." Whose, then, is this Voice which here solemnly confirms the testimony of approaching judgment? It is surely none other than the voice of God Himself:-

" Yea, amen:I am Alpha and Omega, saith the Lord God, which is, and which was, and which is to come, the Almighty."

The "Yea, amen," are not, as our books give them, part of the seventh verse, but commence the verse following; and the words " I am Alpha and Omega, the Eternal, the Almighty," exhibit fully the One with whom men's unbelief brings them into controversy. He challenges all unbelief. Is He not doing so to-day, when on every side signs political, ecclesiastical, moral, and spiritual warn men, if they will but attend, that the Lord is at hand? Why, the cry itself is a sign-" Behold the Bridegroom!" Can they deny it has gone forth? Call it a mistake; call it enthusiasm; call it high treason to the world's magnificent and immense progress; still it stands written,-

" And at midnight there was a cry, ' Behold the bridegroom! go ye forth to meet him!' . . . And as they went to buy, the bridegroom came."

He who speaks is Alpha and Omega, whose word is the beginning and end of all speech:all that can be said is said when He has spoken; at the beginning, who spoke all things into being, and whose word, " It is done," will fix their eternal state.

He who speaks is Jehovah, the covenant-keeping God, unchangeable amid all changes, true to His threats and to His promises alike.

And He who speaks is the Almighty, lacking no power to fulfill His counsel. This is He who says, " Yea, amen," to the testimony that He who was crucified in weakness shall come again in power, and every knee shall bow to Him, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. F.W.G.

A Wish Recalled,

I wish I were an angel bright,
To stand before the throne in light,
And join the myriads that proclaim
The honor of th' ascended Lamb.
But stop ! what loser should I be !
I could not sing, " He died for me! "

Ah, no ! I'd not an angel be :
A sinner saved's the name for me.
I'd rather debtor be to grace
Than fill e'en Gabriel's honored place,
And, washed in Calvary's precious flood,
Owe all to Christ's atoning blood.

The Mode Of Christian Warfare.* (josh. 6:6-21.)

*A chapter from "THE BOOK OF JOSHUA," a new book by H. F. Witherby, now being published by Loizeaux Brothers.*

"Looking for and hasting unto the coming of the day of God." (2 Pet. 3:12.)

The action of Israel as the army of God begins immediately after the command is given by the Prince of the host of Jehovah. Up to this point the book of Joshua describes God's work in bringing His people into Canaan, and giving them of its food preparatorily to their active service in war. So the establishment of the Christian in grace is of necessity antecedent to his being an effective soldier of Christ. God's work for the believer must be rested in, and His work in him must be unhindered, before the soldier of Christ is fit to fight for Him. A child of God doubting his sonship, or engaged in spiritual struggles with himself, is not an effective soldier for Christ. He may wear the uniform, but he is unable to take the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God, and wield it in the might of the Lord; for so long as " I" is the burden of the soul, offensive warfare is impossible. "The things that I would, I do not; and that I would not, that do I," is the expression of inward struggling to be free, and a proof that the standing in Christian liberty, without which spiritual conflict cannot be waged, is still not enjoyed.

Again, if Christian liberty be known as a matter of faith, through grace, there must be holy living in order to maintain spiritual conflict. A right state before God is requisite, as well as faith in our being blessed in Christ. Subjection to God and obedience to the Scriptures are necessities for true Christian warfare. We must walk with God if we would war for God. Suppose the Spirit, who indwells us, is striving with us because our ways are not pleasing to God, could we be truly contending for God at such a moment? Impossible. There may be a semblance of true conflict in such a case, but it will be but the semblance. Christian soldiership demands that there should be both faith in what God has wrought for us and a yielding to His working in us.

Both the blessing of the believer in Christ and the healthy state of the Christian's soul, as seen in the types and figures of our book, are preliminaries to the active warfare which now opens up. The passage of the Jordan showed us, in figure, the believer's entrance into the heavenly places, and Gilgal likewise figured his true place of liberty; while the partaking of the feast of the passover, of the unleavened bread, and the corn of the land proclaimed true feeding on Christ; and upon these great realities came the vision of the drawn sword and the commands relative to the overthrow of Jericho.

It would appear that Joshua gave his orders to Israel immediately upon receiving them from the Captain of the Lord's host. Faith is equally balanced in its energy and patience, for faith is simply-carrying out the mind of God. To the priests, the word of command was, "Take up the ark;" to the armed men, " Pass on, and compass the city; and let him that is armed pass on before the ark of the Lord."

Soldiers of Christ our Lord in heaven, let us stir up our souls to faith.' The Lord has promised the victory as He promised it to Israel. They believed Him:"by faith the walls of Jericho fell down." 'Faith grasps God's strength:"all things are possible to him that believeth." Let the soldier of Christ, at his Lord's bidding, go forth to fight for Him, and let him be as assured of victory as was Israel, before whom the ponderous walls fell down flat.

Soldiers of Christ, stir up the soul to courage! Christian courage tells upon adversaries as nothing else does. Christian courage is the first-born son of Faith. Again, let us stir up our souls to hardness. Warriors do not fight upon feather-beds, nor stretched at ease in arm-chairs, and the Christian soldier must expect hardship. Moreover, he must not entangle himself with the affairs of this life, but please Him who has called him to be a soldier. Life's duties must be honorably performed, but we are forbidden to entangle ourselves with them. There are many " indispensables," as they are called,. which are really entanglements, and which a Christian, zealous for Christ, learns to discard. He cannot afford to be occupied, during the few hours of active service he is called to on earth, with things which once engrossed his thoughts and time. Like the racer, he lays aside every weight. Weights and entanglements are sore hindrances to Christian service. Any thing that keeps the mind busy to the exclusion of Christ's interests should be suspected.

In Christian conflict, the armed men ever go on in the front, the gathering host make up the rear. God has always His front-rank men-men able to use the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God;-men, too, who expose themselves to Satan's attacks.

A good soldier loves his, profession, and a true Christian soldier loves Christian warfare; it is his joy, his delight, to take pleasure in hardships and weariness. He enjoys what feather-bed Christians regard as self-inflicted penance, or as unnecessary trouble. " Forward ! ever forward!" is his cry. It is no burden to him, but rather his happy service, to spend and to be spent for his Lord; it is heavenly rapture to him when sinners are made captive for Christ,-when Satan-bound souls are loosed, and pass from death unto life, from the power of Satan to God. Idleness and ease are a distress to the one who is fired by eternal prospects, energized by the Holy Ghost, and constrained by Christ's love, " Woe is me if I preach not the gospel," is his reply to the countless efforts to damp his ardor and to quench his zeal. Eternity ! eternity! he whispers to himself, when his weary body almost resents carrying out the orders of his soul. Such a spirit marks the front-rank men. May God bring Christ's soldiers to the front, and especially may the young Christian who reads this page be fired by the prospects of eternity, and be filled with holy zeal the entire period of his short life below.

Expectation is the offspring of faith:small expectations are born of small faith; but where God is before the soul, expectation of blessing exists, and result follows. We do not say immediate result is always visible; but working for God without expecting Him to bless is like sowing seed without looking for the harvest, or firing at a fortress without hoping to hit it.

An army without faith in its leaders is sure to be discomfited:without faith in their Lord, Christ's soldiers strike no good blows. Alas for the pointless, aimless, self-satisfied routine which goes by the name of fighting for God! Such parade-duty is not warfare. The untutored eye may consider both very much alike; however, when men fall down wounded, and cry for mercy, we know it is not the effect of mere human energy, but the work of God the Holy Ghost.

Joshua gave orders for the day only:" Pass on, and compass the city, and let him that is armed pass on before the ark of the Lord." So all work of faith is day-by-day work, step-by-step progress; and this is the only true and happy way of living for God. In the happy satisfaction that they had obeyed God, Israel's first day ended; a comfort which we trust may be ours, each one, daily; and as to the rest, let the men of Jericho think as they please.

Early in the morning of the second day, Joshua arose, and the priests took up the ark of the Lord.

A fresh fact is now presented, and one which is of practical moment. The seven priests "went on continually and blew with the trumpets." No voice was uttered by Israel, and the only sounds the army gave forth were the continual tramp of its many feet and the loud and penetrating blast of its trumpets–the grand herald-notes of the kingdom of God. We may fairly assume that such a mode of warfare, such a continual trumpeting, was to the men of Jericho, shut up and secure within their defenses, as consummate folly as is the joy of the gospel to the infidel world. A huge army betaking itself to marching round a strong city, and ever giving out such joyful sounds, was, to the eye and ear, fanaticism. No casting up of mounds, no construction of battering-rams, no scaling-ladders,- nothing but the trumpets of jubilee! And what their blasts meant, the men of Jericho knew no more than does the world to-day understand the joy of the acceptable year of the Lord and of the coming kingdom of Christ,

The notes of our trumpets of jubilee, like those of Israel, are few and simple:"Christ is coming!" "Christ is coming!" But they are joy-notes, uttered from the heart by true souls who long for the Lord and His return. Let the world man its great walls of infidelity and superstition, let it boast in its improvements and development; Christ is coming! Let reasoners say, "Since the fathers fell asleep, all things continue as they were;" Christ is coming! Let scoffers cry, " Fanaticism!" be the life-answer of the Christian to all the arguments of unbelief, these notes of love and joy,-Christ is Coming! H.F.W.

Answers To Correspondents

Q. 33.-"Was Judas a Christian ? "

Ans.-No, not in the true sense of the word; he was a disciple, which implies, "follower of Christ," but not a "disciple indeed," or he would have continued in Christ's word (Comp. Jno. 8:31). From what motive he became such, we are not told, but nevertheless clearly shown that from the beginning he was "without part or lot in the matter." Being in the ranks of the disciples, he was chosen by Christ to be an apostle; thus given power with the others to work miracles and cast out devils in His name. All this, however, was quite possible without being "born of God" (as our Lord took men up on the profession they made), and was merely official,-1:e., related to the place he was in, not to the state of his heart toward God (See Matt. 7:22, 23).

The following statements are made concerning him by Him "who trieth the reins and the heart;" and as to them, there can be but one meaning:-

He was (1) An unbeliever.. . ;„; . , ., v (Jno. 6:64, 70.)

(2) A devil.

(3) A thief. (Jno. 12:.6.)

(4) Unclean. (Jno. 13:10, 11.) -,,(5) The son of perdition. (Jno. 17:12)

(6) The traitor, or betrayer. (Matt. 26:48.)

(7) A murderer. (Acts 1:25.)

In the last scripture given, his fall is shown to be, not as Peter's -"falling into sin" through unwatchfulness, from which the Lord's grace restores (Luke 22:31,32); nor " falling from grace," to which all Christians are liable, as the Galatians, returning to the bondage of the law (chap. 5:4); but "falling away," or apostasy, from a place or position of light and privilege into which we may Lave entered in the Christian profession. In order to the "rightly dividing of the word of truth," we need to carefully distinguish between being in the sphere of Christianity and having the power of it in us. Alas! how many now, as in former times, are content with but the first,-"having the form of godliness, but denying the power thereof"-" a name to live, while dead." B.C.G.

“At His Feet”

PENITENTS, DISCIPLES, SUPPLICANTS, WORSHIPERS.

(Read Luke 7:36-50; 10:38-42; Jno. 11:28-46; 12:1-9.)

In the first of these cases, we have one with no name is Scripture save that of sinner, thus suiting each of us who, through grace, have learned to judge ourselves as such. But she is "at His feet" who, in that very time and place, and to herself, and in the presence of enemies round about, declared Himself Saviour, and of her "whose sins were many." How blessed, then, to be there, and in such a case as proved by her that day, and by how many since with like result!

Sins were alone her title-sins great and many; and coming thus, He would not, could not spurn her,-"in no wise cast her out;" but " at His feet" would teach her that sins brought there were sins "forgiven." Blessed fact! A sinner’s sins and a Saviour’s love can thus meet together, and to such an end, for "He is faithful, and cannot deny Himself."

There she weeps tears of penitence, doubtless realizing that "the sacrifices of God are a broken and a contrite heart He will not despise." (Ps. 51:17.)

But not only are er tears shed upon Him, but for Him as well. He who "receiveth sinners" such as she has no welcome where she finds Him. A feast is spread, 'tis true, but not for a Saviour's heart; and there she scans with love's sensitive eye the neglect with which He has been treated, and supplies the lack unbidden. Her heart poured out in tears will wash His feet, her hair (a glory to her) serves to wipe them, her lips press their kisses upon them, and her hands anoint them.

This, Simon had not done ;-asked Him to " eat with him," but had not received Him to his heart, as witnessed thus:"no water for His feet," as to a guest-no kiss in greeting, as to a friend-no anointing, as to one he delighted to honor. But a sinner supplies all, and better far than Simon's hands and lips could, even had they performed it as their task.

Thus we view her, sinner above sinners, " at His feet," and with what blessed results ! He declares her, before all, to be forgiven-" frankly forgiven " -many sins forgiven, and to herself what words!

" Thy sins are forgiven ",…,….,… Pardon.
"Thy faith hath saved thee".,…… .Salvation.
" Go in peace ",….,..,,,.,.,,..,., Peace.

All hers; for " where sin abounded, grace did much more abound;"-unsearchable riches of Him who "though rich, for her sake became poor, that she through His poverty might be rich."

2. Next, Mary of Bethany sitting " at His feet," a learner. Martha had "received Him into her house," so it is not the question of a Saviour here; and she too is busy serving, so it is not that of owning Him as Master, but of receiving from Him as Benefactor and Friend. And Mary "sat at His feet, and heard His word," thus choosing "that good part, which shall not be taken away from her."
Blessed though it be to trust Him as our Saviour, or seek to serve Him as our Lord, yet happier still to give Him His "better" place of Giver, and we to be receivers of His grace, who had come from heaven, not to be enriched by us, but to impart treasures of eternal good. Mary realized this fact, saw that He had come, "not to be ministered unto, but to minister,"-owns that He, whose place was the Father's bosom, has come amongst us, not to receive from, but to enrich us; and thus takes her place and gives Him His-"the less to be blessed of the better."

Oh, to learn well her lessons!-"sitting at His feet," one looking up into His face, expectant from Him, "hearing His word;" thus learning what is in His heart, and what is His will concerning us, through being in communion with Himself. How truly "that good part" estimated so by our Lord Himself, and yet, alas! how often missed by many of us (equally dear to His heart, and welcome to be as near,) we may truly own! Oh, that we may reach it more and more, earnestly desiring His approval and this place where alone we can learn what merits it, " receiving with meekness the ingrafted Word," "as newborn babes, desiring the sincere milk of" it; "nourished up in the words of faith," " sanctified and cleansed with the washing of water by "it, having it "discern the thoughts and intents of the heart," and "dwell in us richly in wisdom and spiritual understanding."

3. Again, Mary of Bethany, but sorrow and death overcast with gloom the scene which now we view, as often it may be with us. Lazarus, the brother of Martha and Mary, has been sick, and their yearning hearts send word to Jesus that he whom He loved was sick; but He has failed to come to them. " Two days still He abode in the same place where he was," and delayed His journey. At last He comes, but to find Lazarus asleep in death, and the sisters bowed in their deep sorrow ; but yet herein only to find the more fitting occasion to display His tender love and mighty power. Martha meets Him first, but failing to enter into His thoughts, runs to tell Mary, " The Master is come, and calleth for thee;" and at once, on hearing this, she goes forth hastily to meet Him. Casting herself "at His feet" she weeps out her tale of sorrow, as Martha previously, and in answer, hears His groans and sees His tears of blessed sympathy, and later, His power to deliver.

Such are the sorrows of our pathway through this world. Sorrows we cannot miss, and happy are we if found, as Mary, " at His feet," while passing through them. Be they of what character they may, this is the place to bring them all, pouring out our hearts " in prayer and supplication, making our requests known unto Him." Have we not too beloved ones who are sick, or still unsaved, who lie heavy on our hearts, and sorrows of many kinds in which to seek His sympathy and learn His love? Have we not many too who, though " alive from the dead," are bound in garments of death-entangled by the world ? Let us, then, also cry unto Him who is able to deliver, on their behalf, and prove His readiness to hear and answer, honoring all the faith that trusts Him.

4. Again, at Bethany, and surrounded by those His grace has befriended, a feast is made for Jesus. Lazarus is seated at the table with Him, Martha serving Him, and Mary once more "at His feet"- not now to hear as a learner, to supplicate as a mourner, but impart as a worshiper, "anointing His feet with ointment, and wiping them with her hair." The dark shadow of the cross is forecast upon this happy scene, dark plans of enemies, who hate Him for all His love. Mary's heart, with the true instinct of love, can recognize, and now feels she must use this moment to express her heart's affection ere it pass, and the opportunity has fled.

How long it may have taken this lowly and devoted heart to gain her precious treasure, with which she now "anoints Him for His burial," we may not know; but, with the full wages of a laborer, it would take a year; and for her, a woman, and in such humble circumstances, how much longer still! But this we know, precious and costly though her treasure is, now must it be given, put into the grave, as it were, with Jesus, and yet willingly she yields it up. Some may find fault, and charge her with waste, and neglect of others; but He absorbs her heart, and her action and devotedness of love well suits His own. "Let her alone," is His stern rebuke for those who interfere with so sacred expression of her love and appreciation of His worth ; "against the day of My burying hath she kept it." His loving commendation of her faith as well, that knew " when to keep and when to cast away;" and thus He sets honor upon the grateful outpouring of our heart's love and adoration, whether now or then.

Thus may we be led to find our place, from first to last of our journey here below, from the moment of our souls' trusting Him as Saviour, until received to Himself above, as penitents, learners, supplicants, and worshipers "at His feet " and to Him be all the praise! B.C.G.

Extract From “Earth’s Earliest Ages”

"And the Lord had respect unto Abel and to his offering; but unto Cain and to his offering He had not respect." (Gen. 4:4, 5.)

The reason of this difference is fraught with the deepest interest to us; for there are many in these latter days who, according to the prophecy of Jude, have gone "in the way of Cain." The theology of the first murderer is that of a large and increasing school of our times. He neither denied the existence of God, nor refused to worship Him, -nay, he recognized Him as the Giver of all good things, and brought an offering of the fruits of the ground as an acknowledgment of His bounty. But he went no further than this; and therefore, though he may have passed among his fellows as a good and religious man, he failed to satisfy God. For being yet in his sins, he presumed to approach the Holy One without the shedding of blood; he was willing to take the place of a dependent creature, but would not confess himself a sinner guilty of death, and only to be saved by the life of a substitute. He is a type of the many in these times who will descant upon the benevolence of the Creator, and are ever ready to laud Him for those attributes. and claim the benefit of them without any reference to their own unworthiness and sinful condition,-without a thought of that perfect holiness and justice which are as much elements of God's character as love itself. But the Most High did not accept the sacrifice of Cain; for none may approach to worship Him except through the shedding of blood, even the blood of the Lamb which He has provided.

The sin-offering must come first, then the thank-offering. We can enter into the Holy of Holies, and cast ourselves before the mercy-seat, only by passing through the rent vail of the flesh of Jesus Christ, God’s Son.

Christians.

Exhortations from an old Christian to younger ones.

Never neglect daily, private prayer; and when you pray, remember that God is present, and that He hears your prayers. (Heb. 11:6.)

Never neglect daily, private Bible-reading; and when you read, remember that God is speaking to you, and that you are to believe and act upon what He says. I believe all back-sliding begins with the neglect of these two things. (Jno. 5:39.)

Never let a day pass without trying to do something for the Lord. Every night reflect on what He has done for you, and then ask yourself, What am I doing for Him? (Mark 5:15-19.)

If ever you are in doubt as to a thing being right or wrong, go to your room, and kneel down and ask God's blessing upon it (Col. 3:17). If you cannot do this, it is wrong. (Rom. 14:23.)

Never take your Christianity from Christians, or argue because such-and-such people do so-and-so, that therefore you may (2 Cor. 10:12). You are to ask yourself, How would Christ act in my place? and strive to follow Him. (Jno. 10:27.)

Never believe what you feel if it contradicts God's Word. Ask yourself, Can what I feel be true if God's Word is true? and if both cannot be true, believe God, and make your own heart the liar. (Rom. 3:4; i Jno. 5:10, 2:)

Extract Of Letter.

MY dear —:I was very glad indeed to hear from you again, and my heart went to
God in thanksgivings as I read your letter. This scene we are passing through is to us what the desert was to Israel-a place where they were made to prove that their only resource was in God. But if He was their only resource, He was a never-failing one:The manna never failed, the water was ever ready to flow, their garments wore not out, and their foot swelled not. All this telling a story of infinitely deeper things about us who are ' blessed with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places.' But there too they learned themselves, and that is the dark side of the picture. However, it is not so dark after all to learn self when we know it is no more a question of acceptance with God, but of acquaintance with Him. Our acceptance was forever settled by the cross-the blood on the door-post, and the crossing of the sea. The first covering our sins, the second our old man, from the eye of God. Thus the only question which remains is, Am I anxious now to get acquainted with the God I have found ? -a God who is light and love !If so, I must taste the lessons of the wilderness. I must learn to 'glory in tribulation, knowing,' etc. (Rom. 5:3-11.)

" In reading Gen. 1. yesterday, I was struck with ver. 15, and the answer it called forth from Joseph at the end of ver. 17. So perfectly was their sin passed from his heart that to recall it made him weep. How comforting when we reflect that this is but the shadow of the heart of Christ toward us! May we learn to think His thoughts. They are Manna indeed. But we sometimes have to pass through great sorrows, to humble us, and put us in a moral condition where we can turn from ourselves and our sins to feed upon the love of God, and lay hold of Himself and His glory through the forgiving and restoring grace He makes known to our souls. Thus our lives, in connection with God, are not, cannot be, lives of ease; but rest-the rest of God is near. ' The coming of the Lord draweth nigh.' What incentive to persevering energy and patience of faith!"

Are We Clear?

Can we look at the ignorance that abounds and say we are clear ? Indeed, indeed we cannot We too often forget that the actions of time have a solemn bearing on eternity; hence we are exhorted not to be "weary in well doing," and are assured that "in due season we shall reap, if we faint not." And again, " Redeeming the time, [or buying up the opportunity,] because the days are evil." The present is the seed-time of eternity. Now we are "to go forth bearing our precious seed,"and though often we may be compelled to weep while we sow, we shall "doubtless come again with rejoicing, bringing our sheaves with us." Our opportunities at best are but few, they are therefore invaluable. Buy them up, let the price be what it may. Supposing we can do good to souls at the expense of personal ease-worldly respectability, or the good opinion of our worldly friends, still we should go forth. The opinions of men are of small consequence, and almost sure to change. Devotedness to God is of the greatest moment, and will be honored by our gracious Lord.

When the second temple was building, by Ezra, a most lovely sight was presented, for every one was at his work; not only did every one work, but every one did his own work. So there is a place in the body of Christ for every believer, and we read of "the effectual working in the measure of every part" and each one should aim to be in his own proper place, for there he may be useful and happy, but in no other. There is work for every one, and every one should be at his own work, and do it; for in so doing, he will be honorable and valued-by the Lord at least.

And now, let us inquire of conscience, Am I at work for God daily? Do I work as immediately under His eye? Do I work from love to Jesus, and pity for the souls of men? Are my motives pure -am I doing "all in the name of the Lord Jesus"? Am I working as one that must " give an account to God"? Do I know what is meant by "travailing in birth for souls"? A.E.B.

Present Things, as Foreshown In The Book Of Revelation.

The Book and Its Subject. (Chap. 1:1-3.)
The book of Revelation is the one only book of New-Testament prophecy. As the completion of the whole prophetic Scriptures, it gathers up the threads of all the former books, and weaves them into one chain of many links which binds all history to the throne of God. As New-Testament prophecy, it adds the heavenly to the earthly sphere, passes the bounds of time, and explores with familiar feet eternity itself. Who would not, through these doors set open to us, press in to learn the things yet unseen, so soon to be for us the only realities? Who would not imagine that such a book, written with the pen of the living God Himself, would attract irresistibly the hearts of Christians, and that no exhortation would be needed for a moment to win them to its patient and earnest study?

It should be so, assuredly. How little it is so, the book in its first words is witness to us ; for no book is so full of just such exhortation. And especially the first part, with which we are to be for the present occupied, abounds with solemn warnings to attention, regularly appended to its several sections:"He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches." Why is it that just here, where at first sight we have only addresses to the churches of far-distant times, these calls should be multiplied? Why but because there was just this danger to be guarded against? why but because the Spirit of God foresaw that a generation of men, most blind to their own interests when most wedded to them, would slight the very words of Christ Himself unless thus directly made over to them? What shall we say of those who with all this warning slight them still?

Scripture is thus ever prophetic, not in its plain predictions merely, but in its manner also. Why should Peter be the one to tell us that all Christians are "a holy priesthood," but in view of those who should misuse his name in after-times? or why should he be the one to announce to us that we are born again by the word of God, which is preached in the gospel, thus with two blows destroying ritualism to its foundations? or why should Mary never prefer a request to her Son and Lord but to be checked for it, save for an after-rebuke to those who should think to avail themselves of the Virgin's intercession?

So too is not the very title of this book, with its subject announced, and encouragement both to reader and hearer? How could words be better suited to rebuke the neglect, into which so many have fallen, in which so many still are found, of what is Christ's own " revelation," given to Him by God, "to show unto His servants things which must shortly come to pass"? Does a "revelation" hide, or reveal ? Is that which is revealed to servants, to be kept (5:3) by them in their service to their Lord, given in so doubtful a manner as to be more perplexity than guidance? Is not this an accusation of Him who has forbidden to His people doubtful paths, because " whatsoever is not of faith is sin "?

Strange is the mistake that " the Revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave unto Him means His "appearing," because His appearing is the central theme of the book! No doubt it is so, and that His appearing is spoken of elsewhere as His revelation; but here, that "which God gave unto Him, to show unto His servants things which must shortly come to pass," is plainly the book itself, and defines its character. It is not simply an inspiration, as all Scripture is, but something revealed for the instruction of the saints. Many are too little clear yet as to the difference between the two. But revelation is that in which is a direct communication from God to man-a fresh discovery of truth otherwise unknown; while inspiration is that which preserves from error, and assures that all that is written is for true profit and blessing to man.

" Jesus Christ's revelation " emphasizes the book before us, as what is from the Lord Himself in a peculiar way, of special importance and value where all is of value; and it is received by Him from God, as One who all through takes the place of Man, and as such is exalted of God, never exalts Himself. True pattern for His servants! He asks them to walk in no other path than He has trodden, and where they may have fellowship with Him.

This book is the servant's book. So it is plainly stated:"To show unto His servants." We may not expect, therefore, to be shown, except we come under this title; and indeed every child of God has the responsibility and privilege of service,-has something, no doubt, of the reality of it, as the Lord says, " He that hath My commandments and keepeth them, he it is who loveth Me"(Jno. 14:21). And so the apostle:" This is the love of God, that we keep His commandments" (i Jno. 5:3). Both passages maintain that the only right measure of love is that of practical obedience. Emotional glow, warm feelings, are indeed to be desired- nay, to be expected, from those conscious of redemption by the blood of Christ; but these vary with different natures, vary in the same person at different times, may even deceive very much the subject of them, while obedience is the test of the judgment-seat itself. Words and deeds we read of then as alone in question.

Yet there is need of a counter-check here too; for how much frequently goes under the name of service which is in truth even disobedience and self-will! How much also is there of legal drudgery and pretentious claim, which the light of God's holy presence will shrivel into nothing! " Lo, these many years do I serve thee" is the language of one to whom the music of the father's house was a strange and unaccustomed sound; and " I fast twice in the week, I give tithes of all that I possess," was said by one less acceptable to God by far than the despised publican, who could only groan out in His presence, " God be merciful to me the sinner!"

The service of love and the service of claim are opposites. " He died for all, that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves, but unto Him who died for them and rose again." This is the moral power of Christianity-the fruit of grace, and only that. For if still there is a possibility of condemnation in the day of judgment, fear stirs me to self-interest, I work for myself to escape the condemnation. "Faith worketh by love"-an entirely opposite principle. Such service is necessarily freedom, the more so the more it rules me, and entire happiness. In exact proportion to love will be the desire to serve the object of our love:as we read of the "work of faith," so we do of the " labor of love." But earnest and self-sacrificing as this labor may be, it can never be drudgery, never aught but joy. If such is our service, the thankful offering of those knowing themselves washed from their sins in the blood of Christ, then Revelation, with its survey of the whole field of labor, and its communication of the mind of Christ as to all,- Revelation, with its windows open toward Jerusalem, and its eternal sunshine for our souls,- Revelation, with its throne of God and the Lamb, and the stimulation of its encouraging words to the overcomer,-is the very book for us, surely. We shall enter with rapt hearts into the truth of this:" Blessed is he that readeth, and they that hear the words of the book of this prophecy, and keep the things that are written therein."

It is the book for all servants. We have many and different fields of service, it is true; and happy as well as important it is to recognize this fact. There are high positions and lowly ones; positions before the eyes of multitudes, and positions hidden from almost all eyes, save His who are in every place. But every where it is a joy to know that we are accepted, not according to the place we are put in, but the way we fill it-the way we do the Master's work there. Lowliness and obscurity will be no discouragement to those in the communion of the Father and the Son:they cease to have meaning there. And publicity and prominence are how unspeakably dangerous, if the soul is not correspondingly before God; like the tree which spreads its branches and lifts its top toward heaven, if its roots are not proportionately deep in the unseen depths below.

Whatever the field of service, the book of Revelation is for all. All need alike the warnings, all need alike the encouragement. From the most hidden retirement, He whom we serve in love would have our hearts with Himself, busy with all that is of interest to Him. In the place of intercession Himself above, He would have us in fellowship with Him below; our prayers rising up for all parts of the earth His Word is visiting, and where the true " irrepressible conflict" is going on between the evil and the good; our praises, too, returning to Him for all He is daily accomplishing. In Revelation is given us the one "mind of Christ" about all, that our prayers may be the intelligent guiding of the Holy Spirit, and our hearts giving their sympathies aright, our energies going forth in channels of His own making. Little indeed, in many of the systems of interpretation of this book, may be found, it is true, such help as this; and quite unable we may be to extract the spiritual blessing to be found in seals or trumpets which speak only of Alaric the Goth, or Attila the Hun:but for the simple ones who believe God, the mere direct label of this book for Christ's servants may certify that there is something deeper while simpler than all this for souls that seek it. There the words stand for faith to receive and rejoice in,-"Jesus Christ's revelation, which God gave unto Him, to show unto His servants things which must shortly come to pass." Join us in prayer, beloved reader, ere we pass on, that we may give His people from these pages real help and blessing drawn from this precious book!

" Things which must shortly come to pass." This would now no doubt impress us, as we look back from the end of eighteen centuries fulfilled since it was written, with the belief that already some, if not much, of what is here spoken of must already have come to pass. And this we shall find confirmed fully in the sequel. But two things we should guard here carefully,-the possibility on the one hand, and the profit on the other, of tracing with certainty, in the light of the prophetic Word, things which have not come to pass, and even will not while we are upon the earth. These two things, it is plain, hang very much together; for if there be not profit in it, it would seem clear that God would not enable us to do it; while of course there can, on the other hand, be no profit to us in a thing we cannot do.

But this impossibility of knowing can only be meant seriously as applying to details, and to a certain extent every Christian would allow this. Events are not so mapped out and put together for us as to make us able to see otherwise than "through a glass darkly "-the apostle's own emphatic word. We can see only as one behind a window, and in twilight, and are apt to fall into mistakes. Many have been thus made, which have thrown the study of future prophecy, for some, into utter disrepute. Yet who would say, or think the apostle meant to say, that" through a glass darkly " nothing, or nothing to the purpose, could be seen? The uncertainty applies mainly to the smaller features; there is much certain, much that grows always clearer as we look upon it. Who that would use the mistakes that have been made for discouragement from prophetic study has ever been a student of it ? I dare to say, none. Granted, the mistakes:let us use them for humility, use them as arguments to more prayer, more careful searching, then, after all, they will be helpful in the end. We can see already why and how many of them came about; we can see how better to avoid them also in the future, and that the Word was not to blame, is not the less trustworthy, because we made them. We see that we trusted it too little, trusted ourselves too much.

Then as to the profit. All our blessings lie in the field of unfulfilled prophecy. What are all our promises but this? And then as to the earth, and what is to take place upon it, it is true that such interpretations as are common in many popular books leave one with the profound sense that they minister rather to spiritual dissipation than to profit. What can be supposed more unprofitable than the question if the antichrist is to come of the Napoleon family ?-a great and grave point with many for years past; or whether the stars falling from heaven might be fulfilled in a shower of meteors ? Such things seem to be utterly barren, and unworthy of a book so solemnly announced, so commended to us as is this.

Surely "he that prophesieth speaketh to the church to edification and exhortation and comfort" might not be an inapt word to condemn such profitless speculation; and there is abundance of it in popular commentaries. But here the question is really not of fulfilled or unfulfilled prophecy. Such supposed fulfillment may be brought forward to vindicate Scripture-which has no need of it-or a certain system of interpretation, which it more justly would set aside. But unfulfilled prophecy, as we find it in the Word of God, even when it speaks of earthly events, and such as cannot be while we are upon the earth, always gives them morally; as what can be more practical for us than to trace out in the future, as men are constantly seeking to do, the results of the present ? In this way we may find the scriptural fall of stars to have the deepest significance.

That all here is in the fullest way practical is very clear, from the blessing pronounced on those who " keep the things which are written" in the book. This "keeping" is observing them in such a way that our practical conduct shall be governed by them. Indeed we shall find that the wisdom of them we must be content to " buy," with what men would call many a sacrifice. There are costs to be counted if we would possess it really. And this is the demand that all truth makes upon us. It requires subjection to it as the first thing. We must not trifle with the words of our Lord and Saviour, nor set Him limits as to how far we shall obey Him. It is this, however little avowed, that darkens the minds of saints, diminishing all spiritual perception. It is this that is at the bottom of all doctrinal heresy. We will not have the truth, and seek out inventions to cover our nakedness; or at least we have not the soldier's " virtue," which is courage, and so cannot "add to" our "virtue knowledge."

I would warn my readers that the book of Revelation makes great demands upon those who keep its words. But I may assure them, on the other hand, that the more the demand the greater the blessing. Can it be otherwise when Christ it is who is speaking to us of that easy yoke and that light burden, in which, as we take them, we find rest to our souls? Will any that know their Lord charge Him with being a "hard man," or a taskmaster? Our givings up are here in reality only gains. We have that in Him which we are never called to give up, and which the more we prove the more its sufficiency is found for all conditions; the more we give up for it the deeper the endless joy. But submission there must be. Absolute submission is what He rightly calls for; and it is well to search our hearts, to see if our desire and purpose are, to give Him that without reserve. How blessed to be among those who in uprightness of heart can say, " I esteem all Thy precepts concerning all things to be right, and I hate every false way" (Ps, 119:128). F.W.G.

(To be continued.)