(Luke 15:8.)
What woman having ten pieces of silver, if she lose one piece, doth not light a candle, and sweep the house diligently till she find it?"
We were recently asked at a Bible reading what the broom means in this parable. But, as this useful instrument is not mentioned in the verse, I had not given it much thought. However, as it is evident, that the woman must use a broom to sweep with, the inquiry was not out of place.
We believe the "woman " here refers to the Holy Spirit, and the "house " to the house of Israel. God had lighted "a candle" in sending His Son into the world (cf. John 1:9), and the Spirit of grace in Christ was seeking the "lost sheep" amid the rubbish and filth of Judaism (cf. Matt. 15:24).
The Son of God has returned to heaven and sent down the Holy Spirit to continue the work of grace until He shall return. The sphere of activity has widened out to the whole world, and the Divine Worker needs many brooms. This suggests Rom. 10:14. "How shall they hear without a preacher?" And if the broom is a convenient instrument for the housewife to sweep with, so must the Holy Spirit use instruments wherewith to draw out from their hiding-places the precious souls buried in sins and iniquity, the price of whose redemption, as the ‘’silver " here suggests, was "the precious blood of Christ" (cf. i Pet. 1:18, 19). Are you willing then, to be a broom,-to be worn out in such lowly service as He requires? A broom, you know, must be well made and fitted to the hand of the user, and thus ready for use when wanted. The thrifty housewife pays the price for one, and consecrates it to her service. So we have been " bought with a price"; and God has "created us in Christ Jesus unto good works" (Eph. 2:10). And we are told in Rom. 6:to "yield ourselves unto God, as those that are alive from the dead, and our members as instruments of righteousness unto God." It does not suit the natural pride of our hearts to be assigned to so lowly a place as that of a broom, but this shows how we unfit ourselves for effective service by allowing high thoughts. You might like the fame of Paul, but are you willing to suffer in like manner, and then be "defamed" and "made as the filth of the world and the off scouring of all things "? (i Cor. 4:13).
In our text the "one piece of silver "is emphasized, showing how God values one lost soul. God feels His loss, and is willing to pay the cost of its redemption. It is not hard here to read John 3:16 into the context. The lighted candle is now the word of God with which we are illumined (cf. Luke 11:36). The diligent seeking and sweeping sets forth the perseverance of divine love-"till she find it." But the humble instrument used in this loving search is not mentioned. Are you willing to give up reputation (cf. Phil. 2:5, 7), and "present your body a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God," as His servant? Saith the self-emptied apostle, "Who then is Paul, and who is Apollos but ministers (servants) by whom ye believed?" (i Cor. 3:Are you willing then, in fellowship with the love of God, to be a broom:to be jammed into the filthy corners of the earth, through scorching heat or piercing cold; to be crushed and bruised; to die, if need be, in order that the grace of eternal life may be carried into the haunts of sin, and to the precious souls for whom God gave His Son; that His heart may be filled with joy over one repenting sinner? Are you willing "for Jesus’ sake " to be a nameless broom? C. E. B.