Tag Archives: Volume HAF5

“Holding Forth The Word Of Life” (a Lesson From An Incident.)

"Having occasion recently to take a journey by an early train, on awaking ere it was light enough to see the time by my watch, I could see quite plainly upon the wall opposite a luminous match-safe, at least the word "matches" upon it, vivid and clear. Thinking, "That is just what I need!" I groped my way to it, and felt in both sides of it, but in vain-none were there, and was about returning to bed to await other indications of the hour. Ere doing so, however, 1 took my watch, and holding it close to the window, strained my eyes to discern the figures, but once more the effort was fruitless. Just then I bethought me of a pocket match-safe I had with me, in which I knew there were some, if I could but find it; but as to this, memory gave the answer-it was in a satchel not in the room. All resources alike had failed me; -the luminous one, bearing its testimony brightly enough to itself, but a vain hope as to light for others; the light of day, which because not yet arisen, the approach of it was not sufficient; and the pocket-safe, while with plenty in it, not at hand, and so, equally useless for the time and purpose. Each and all alike had raised my hopes but to fail me and to leave me in the darkness still.

Musing over the connection of these things with lessons of the "light of life" in which the Lord would lead His beloved people, I then awaited the call of "mine host" as promised me, and a little of the result, beloved reader, I now pass on to you:-

As to the first case, have we not what fits in the apostle's word, as showing his testimony to be otherwise?-"We preach not ourselves, but Christ Jesus the Lord; and ourselves your servants for Jesus' sake " (2 Cor. 4:5), and illustrations of the same beautifully in John the Baptist, when asked, " Who art thou ? " answering," I am not the Christ;" and of Peter, saying, " Why look ye so earnestly on us, as though by our own power or holiness we had made this man to walk;" and of Paul and Barnabas, saying, " We also are men of like passions with you" (Jno. 1:; Acts 3:and 14:) The luminous safe, like much, alas! that bears the name of Christ, professed what it possessed not, and proved all confidence in it to be misplaced. As to this, how solemn the words of Scripture-"Having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof"! "They profess that they know God; but in works they deny Him, . . . unto every good work reprobate." " A name that thou livest, and art dead." " Because thou sayest,' I am rich, … be zealous, therefore, and repent." (2 Tim. 3:; Tit. 1:; Rev. 3:)

Next, as to the second case, how well we know that, both morally and physically, "the dayspring from on high " is " to give light to them that sit in darkness"! and yet in this case it did not, for the haze of the morning caused by the mists of earth came in to hinder. With how many is this the case as to their both receiving and giving out the light to others! The world, with its attractions and distractions, intervenes, and they need to hear in power in their souls that word which alone can make all bright-"Arise! shine! for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen upon thee. …. The Lord shall be unto thee an everlasting light, and thy God thy glory" (Is. 60:) " Whatsoever doth make manifest is light. Wherefore it saith, ' Awake, thou that sleepest! and arise from the dead! and Christ shall give thee light."

Then, as to the last case:alas, for the record of many, if not most of us! are we not as the match-safe-furnished, but not " ready to every good work," because often not near enough to our blessed Lord and Master, who went about doing good" ? Of how few can it be truly said that they are "scribes instructed unto the kingdom of heaven, who are like unto a householder, which bringeth forth out of his treasure things new and old"! Many of us possess no little stock as to acquaintance with the truths of Scripture, and as so often spoken, a "knowledge of divine principles," but how often only to " minister questions rather than godly edifying, which is in faith".' Oh, beloved, may we, through His grace who loved the Church and gave Himself for it, and still nourishes and cherishes it, seek to be ever " holding forth the word of life "-" ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh us a reason of the hope that is in us, with meekness and fear"-" READY to distribute, willing to communicate"-" READY to every good work." (i Pet. 3:; i Tim. 6:; Tit. 3:) Thus may we each, constrained by the love of Christ, both "persuade men," "beseech them to be reconciled to God," and as to His own dear people, that " they receive not the grace of God in vain," remembering Him who "came, not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give His life a ransom for many." B.C.G.

  Author: Benjamin C. Greenman         Publication: Volume HAF5

“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.

  Author: H. McD.         Publication: Volume HAF5

“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 !"

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

“Prayer And Fasting” matthew 17:1-21

Here we have the privileges of the saints in contrast with their failure through unbelief. A mountain is the place of privilege, and a high mountain the place of great privilege, grace, or favor-special blessing. Such a place was the Mount of Transfiguration, or "the holy mount," as Peter calls it; covered as it was with the overwhelming glory of the Son of Man. Such glory as no human eyes had ever beheld was here shown forth; and in it, with Jesus, even Moses and Elias, God's holy ones of the by-gone age, still living and panoplied in glory with the Son of Man, and holding sweet fellowship and holy converse with Him there!

To the sight of this glory, Peter, James, and John only of the twelve apostles were admitted. Jesus "taketh" them, not the nine others. Mark says, "Jesus taketh and leadeth them up into a high mountain, apart by themselves"! It was up into the place of great privilege, and it was in separation from the other apostles. It was for these alone. Why? The narrative does not say why; but let the Holy Ghost answer to our hearts, as He will, if we are abiding in Christ. We know that "According to your faith, so be it unto you " is a principle of Christianity; also, " To him that hath shall more be given," are only accessible to the highest faith.

We find the nine below in the vale, where they had not faith to use the power that Jesus had so freely bestowed upon them. " I brought him to Thy disciples, and they could not cure him." In chap. 10:8, we see that the Lord had conferred upon them power for this very work; and even more:the power to cast out devils, and even to raise the dead; but here we find them unable to use the power. The Lord's rebuke gives the reason-" O faithless and perverse generation, how long shall I be with you? how long shall I bear with you?" But plainer still when they ask Him why they could not cast him out. He says, " Because of your unbelief."

How delightful it is to know that great privileges are still open to God's saints on the earth. Every thing in and of Christianity may be said to be gracious privilege. It is all of God, and all freely given to us of Him. It is a great privilege to know your sins all put away, that you are justified before God, and that in this grace you stand, and rejoice in hope of the glory! So also is it to know that in the cross of Jesus the old sin-nature is put away also, and that we have passed out of the old standing in Adam, over into the new creation in Christ Jesus-crucified with Him, dead and buried with Him, and raised up out of death with Him by the power of God, and in Him seated in the heavenlies! (Eph. 1:19-20; 2:6.) This is the high mountain up into which the Lord Jesus Christ, now seated in glory, "taketh" and "leadeth" His faithful and obedient saints. They are God's new creation, for an eternity of fellowship with His Son in the glory, where He is. He is gone to prepare a place for them; and if He goes and prepares a place for them, He will come again and take them to Himself, that where He is, there they may be also. The substance of this blessed hope is realized here in this wilderness-world by faith, and faith is the gift of God, as all things else in Christianity, and comes in power to the submissive ones-the obedient and faithful saints (Jno. 15:7).
Oh how much of blessing, privilege, and power we lose by our unbelief! Like the nine, we remain down in the valley, and cannot go up into the place of privilege, or even use here the power so freely given for testimony ! Is power lacking? It may be power for testimony, for preaching the gospel, for teaching, or even for thanksgiving and worship, If so, it is because of our unbelief (5:20).

" But this kind goeth not out but by prayer and fasting." Prayer, true prayer, is in true dependence-a full consciousness of helplessness in ourselves, and power and grace in another. Fasting is self-denial-the end of self before God; no power, nothing good, in the flesh. The flesh done with- put away in the cross of Christ, brings us into the place of true dependence before God, where we can receive from Him. This is the place of prayer and fasting, and here alone is His power given. It is to the humble, submissive, dependent saints that power is granted for all things:it is to these that faith is given to do all things required to maintain a testimony for Him in the earth. Faith comes in the path of obedience, and our obedience is the precise and accurate measure of our faith. " And whatsoever we ask, we receive of Him, because we keep His commandments, and do those things that are pleasing in His sight." (i Jno. 3:22.)

The place of privilege-yea, even of high privilege, is therefore at our own command. Let us, then, by the help of God, yield ourselves up more unreservedly to Him, that He may the more freely and fully work in us to will and to do of His own good pleasure.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

“It Is I:be Not Afraid”

My dear suffering one, I can see only the Lord in all this which you are now passing through. I can see no enemy, no injustice of the creature, no triumph of evil, so brightly does the love and wisdom of God shine over it all.

God is perfecting that which concerns you; and these are His instruments of blessing to you, if accepted in His will and submitted to for His sake. He does not cause all this wrong-doing, but He overrules all, permits all, even causing the wrongdoing of others to be a ministry of good to His dear children. Has He not declared, and will He not perform? "No evil shall befall thee."-"All things work together for good." Did not Job say, (though all his affliction was directly from the hand of Satan, " The Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away:blessed be the name of the Lord!" Never did there seem such triumph of the powers of darkness as when Christ was crucified and laid in the tomb. Thank God, things are not what they seem. It was the hour of God's victory; it was the overthrow of Satan's kingdom ; it gave to the world a risen Christ, who liveth for evermore.

Christ feared not to go by that way to accomplish the will of God. So, beloved, fear not to go by the way He is now leading you, even unto the death of self, reputation and all, that you may rise in all the life of God.

It is not for man to appoint his steps. God in His providence has brought you by this way; accept it as God's will to you; take it as the cup the Father offers you. " The cup which My Father giveth Me, shall I not drink it?"

The crucifixion of self, and the regulation of all right desires, can only be accomplished by true and perfect submission. The will is the essence of the body of self; and in order to have it brought into perfect harmony with God's will, we must submit to all the discipline of life as it comes to us in God's causative or permissive will. We, as consecrated children, must acknowledge all as from the Lord. Be patient:believe all things:wait for the end. God will let no enemy, no wrong, triumph over us. " And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God." (Rom. 8:28.)

" My happy soul, since it hath learned to die,
Hath found new life in Thine infinity." M.E.C.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

“As An Eagle Stirreth Up Her Nest”

Just as the mother-eagle
Breaks up her birdlings' rest,
Pushing her wee ones over
The edge of their quiet nest,

Watching their trembling efforts,
With eager mother's love
She spreads her wings beneath them,
And bears them safe above.

Up toward the bright sun soaring,
O'er dizzy mountain-crest,
Showing her timid birdlings
Things better than their nest.

Thus does Thy love, O Father,
Break up our earthly nest;
In faithfulness Thou sayest,
"Rise ; this is not thy rest."

H. McD.

  Author: H. McD.         Publication: Volume HAF5

“Abba, Father”

The oneness of these two words together will have been marked by most of those who read these pages. Most will have known too that each of the words signifies the same, so that "Father, Father" would be the literal translation. One is Hebrew, or Aramean, and the other Greek, in the New Testament.

Three times are the two words brought thus together, and nothing is without its importance which God has given us in His Word. In Mark's gospel, chap. 14:36, we have the first occurrence, in the Lord's intercourse with the Father in the garden; but nothing in the use of the words appears there to help us to the understanding of their import. The other two passages are Rom. 8:15 and Gal. 4:6. Both these epistles deal with the foundation-truths of Christianity. The one unfolds, in a systematic way, the grace of God visiting the two great divisions of the human family with salvation, upon the common basis of the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by which God had been pleased to meet the need alike of those under law, as well as of those Who had no law, with a righteousness of His own providing, through faith. The other, Galatians, presenting the same truths in a somewhat different way, and rescuing the truth from the perversions of enemies, or the enemy, through his agents, treats of the same things in great degree, and shows alike Jew a Gentile sharing in the blessings of the gospel faith. In both these epistles, then, we have, as the Holy Spirit's utterance in the heart of the believer -the Spirit of adoption, or sonship, these words:"Abba, Father." Surely, it is plain that this is nothing else than to teach us our common brotherhood with the family of faith, and is the cry of the Jew and the Gentile, as we read in Eph. 2:18, " Through Him we both have access by one Spirit to the Father." Not that the Jew says, "Abba," and the Gentile, "Father;" but each uses the double form, each recognizes by the words of his cry that the enmity between Jew and Gentile-that deep hatred nothing else could destroy-is gone, and in his access to a common Father, each owns the other's share in all that that name implies. Thus the gospel, as alike to Jew and Gentile-to all that are afar off as well as to those that were nigh, is given us in these precious and oft-used words. And may we not well believe that the Lord's use of these word's in Mark 14:36 is but another of the beautiful and distinctive features of that book in which Jesus our Lord is presented in His servant-character, ministering the gospel of God.

" ' Abba, Father! 'Lord, we call Thee,
(Hallowed name !) from day to day ;
'Tis Thy children's right to know Thee,
None but children 'Abba' say."

R.T.G.

  Author: R. T. Grant         Publication: Volume HAF5

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.

  Author: Benjamin C. Greenman         Publication: Volume HAF5

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."

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

Another Year

ANOTHER year is dawning!
Dear Master, let it be,
In working or in waiting,
Another year with Thee.

Another year of learning
Upon Thy loving breast,
Of ever-deepening trustfulness,-
Of quiet, happy rest.

Another year of mercies,
Of faithfulness and grace;
Another year of gladness
In the shining of Thy face.

Another year of progress;
Another year of praise;
Another year of proving
Thy presence " all the days.

Another year of service,
Of witness for Thy love ;
Another year of training
For holier work above.

Another year is dawning !
Dear Master, let it be,
On. earth, or else in heaven,
Another year for Thee!

F. R. H.

  Author: Frances R. Havergal         Publication: Volume HAF5

The Man Of God's Delight. (an Extract.)

As to the connection between psalm 1:1-3 and John 7:38, I think the first psalm is a delineation of the character, walk, and fruitfulness of the Lord Himself, the Man of God's delight. He neither walked in the counsels of the ungodly, nor stood in the way of sinners, nor sat in the seat of the scornful; but His delight was in the law of the Lord, and in it He meditated day and night, according to psalm 119:97-100. In Him God saw, and sets before us for our imitation, a Man whose delight it was to do His will as revealed in His law-1:e., the Word of God. Hence His fruitful-ness; for the secret and power of fruitfulness is subjection to God (Jno. 15:). But psalm 1:presents Him to us rather, I think, as the corn of wheat, yet abiding alone. He was indeed the tree planted by the river of water, in constant, unbroken communion with God, whose leaf faded not, and which brought forth His fruit in season. Every thing in Him delighted God. He said the right thing at the right time and in the right place. God says to us, See the Man who always pleases Me; and see Him-how He does it. He knows how and when to speak, how and when to be silent, even though Himself is defamed; He knows what to do and what not to do, when to go and when not to go, what to say and what not to say. He is neither an enthusiast nor a mere reasoner, neither elated by acclamations of praise nor dejected by the scorn and contempt of those who felt His majesty and their own inferiority. He is superior to the world, to man, to Satan; and without sin, His branches are richly loaded with the fruit that God delights in. This is the Man whose springs are in God, whose strength and sufficiency God is, and in whom God delights. But in all this strength and majesty, this rich fruitfulness in living connection with its source for man (God), He stood alone,- Himself could drink to the full from the fountain of all joy and strength, and through Him indeed came blessing to others. Still He was pent up- straightened, because He had a baptism withal to be baptized. Yet so fixed was His purpose to do the will of Him that sent Him, and to finish His work, that He could anticipate that work in its blessed results to others. He stands up in that the last great day of the feast (strange feast where were those who were athirst!), in which there was indeed the outward form of approach to the source of blessing and refreshment, but no real approach, (and the form without reality is the saddest kind of poverty,) and cries, " If any man thirst, let him come unto Me, and drink." If I mistake not, it is the only occasion (besides that on the cross) that He cries, as if the vehemence of His desire to impart blessing to those who are famishing for it while they are spending their labor for naught- as if that untellable burning love that yearned to give to the needy was only equaled in its vehemence and intensity by the intensity of the suffering that proved it to be stronger than death. " He that believeth on Me, as the Scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water." I think the allusion here is to Isaiah 32:2, with possibly Isaiah 44:3. In the psalm, we have more the effect of the river in the fruitfulness of the Tree. It is planted by the water which nourishes it. In John 7:, it is the waters that are to flow out unchecked. The tree is always, I think, what the individual is in himself and for God; and that too, I think, in nature and under the law. Christ was fruitful there, but who else? The rivers of living water flowing out of the belly is what God does in grace for man and through man. It never existed before the exaltation of Christ. "This spake He of the Spirit, which they that believe on Him should receive; for as yet the Holy Ghost was not, because that Jesus was not yet glorified." It had never been before. It was not a tree bearing fruit to God, but God opening up all the floodgates of blessing to man through man,-first, through the obedient, humbled, and now exalted Man, and in connection with Him, those who believe. Notice, the Lord does not say that every one who would like to be a fruitful tree, and would like to bring forth something for God; but seeing the real poverty and need, He says, " If any man thirst, let him come unto Me, and drink," and he shall not only have what he needs for himself, but shall become a channel of richest blessing to others. W.W.

  Author: W. W.         Publication: Volume HAF5

Bible Lessons On Matthew. Chapter 3:12-17.

Whose fan is in His hand." His judgment, though sure, and deserved by all, is met for those who have owned their place as being justly under it. "And He will throughly purge His floor " -no evil can escape Him. " Gather His wheat into the garner"-not only take His own out of all that calls for His judgment, but gather them into the place He has fitted for them."Burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire "-the wicked also "go unto their own place,"in what they have fitted themselves for-"eternal judgment," whether executed in time or in eternity. It is well to remember that in all this it is primarily the clearance of the earth for the throne of the Messiah, both here and in the Prophets, as see Ps. 21:9, 10, " The fire shall devour them, and their fruit shalt Thou destroy from the earth, and their seed from among the children of men." Unless this be carefully noted, there will be confusion as to the government of God on earth and His final judgment of the wicked in eternity. While as to the former, there is complete riddance of the wicked when He "purges out of His kingdom all things that offend, and them that do iniquity," because the "Lord reigneth," and "justice and judgment are the habitation of His throne;" yet is it true also that "after He hath killed, He hath power to cast into hell" However, "unquenchable fire " tells solemnly that it is not annihilation for in it we read, " Their worm dieth not," as well as that "the fire is not quenched." (Mark 9:44-48.)

The holy character of God being eternal, and sin being sternal also, and not only man's destruction but the violation of that character, of necessity there can be no remedy, as God " cannot give His glory to another and man in time will not, and in eternity cannot, " repent to give Him glory." Well may our hearts, in view of so solemn a subject, rise up in adoring thankfulness, to say, O God, how rich "Thy grace to bring us beforehand into judgment the cross of Christ, and of ourselves in repentance, ere the day of Thy judgment, that Thou mightest thus bless us with Thyself eternally! Marvel of divine mercy!-wondrous cross of Christ!

"Then cometh Jesus from Galilee." There found because of His people's rejection; now He comes to put Himself alongside them in their " low estate."

" Unto John, to be baptized of him"-to the preacher of repentance-taking His place, in infinite grace with those who confessed their sins, and the righteous judgment of God under which they lay. If they "justified God, being baptized with the baptism of John," then He says, "I will be with them in it." " But John forbad Him." Could truth be silent now ? No; he who was the witness of Israel's sin must also be of the excellency of Christ, and know Him as God's burnt-offering of " sweet-smelling savor," as well as the sin-offering, to be burned " outside of camp," by reason of man's guilt. John needed the grace found in Him, and Israel needed the truth of which John was the steward, and Jesus enters into all that need–owns their sins to be "as scarlet and crimson," and that the " judgment of God is according to truth," and yet comes to take His place among them, as though a sinner with them.

"Comest thou to me?" John asks; and well he might, for his was the sinners' baptism-of repentance, and unto the remission of sins; and what relations could the Holy One have to these? But one-to take their place, in bearing the judgment they deserved, and by thus identifying Himself with all who confessed its justice and their need as being under it. " The law (the measure of man's responsibility) and the prophets (the testimony of God as to his failure in answering to it) were until John;" and now, this "grace and truth " which " came by Jesus Christ," " the Sun of Righteousness, arising with healing in His wings,"-the dawning of a new day, that had not been hitherto,-" the day-spring from on high."

"Suffer it to be so now." Christ must needs suffer to enter into His glory, take the cross ere He does the crown, and this is the anticipation of it. Israel were under God's curse-the curse of a broken law and stoned prophets; and " He was made a curse, to redeem them that were under it."

"Thus it becometh us to fulfill all righteousness " -not in life, save as presenting to God the sweet savor of the true meat-offering in obedience- "good pleasure in men;" but in death, confessing sinners' sins, and attesting the righteousness of God, that could not pass over sin, but, dealing with it in His judgment, can now consistently shelter all who put their trust in Him who has met both, putting away the first, and establishing the second. "And Jesus . . . went up straightway out of the water; and, lo, the heavens were opened unto Him," etc. God could not silently let it be judged that this was Christ's place, except in grace. B.C.G.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

“The Glory Of His Grace”

The dawn of day is breaking;
Behold, it streaks the sky,
And hearts for Him are waking
Who soon shall fill each eye.
Soon, soon, in brightness beaming,
"The Day-Star" shall appear!
With glory round Him streaming,
His joyful shout we'll hear.

Our eyes are looking onward
To see the One we love,
Our feet are pressing forward
To tread those courts above ;
Our hearts exult with pleasure
As nearer comes the day
When love beyond all measure
Shall beckon us away.

Then " face to face " beholding
The One who came to die,
His glory all unfolding
Before each raptured eye.
With nothing there to hinder
The heart's deep, full employ,
But all to call forth wonder
And ceaseless bursts of joy.

There on His bosom resting,
(Oh ! deep and full repose !)
No more a time of testing-
No more to meet our foes ;
But there, in brightest glory,
To gaze upon His face,
And ever tell that story-
" The glory of His grace."

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

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.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

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 !

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

Fragment

Poor worn, tempest-tossed child of God! art thou weary? Listen. "The Lord God hath given Me the tongue of the learned, that 1 should know how to speak a word in season to him that is weary." " Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy-laden, and I will give you rest." O blessed Lord Jesus-Saviour, what rest!-a rest that comes from naught else, none other but Thee! Child of care, pillow thy weary head on that bosom, and rest for evermore. Do the trials of the pilgrimage-way discourage thee? does the great storm of temptation arise ? do the waves of sorrow beat into thy troubled bark? Listen again, as, with divine majesty, the Son of God arises from His sleep and rebukes the wind, and says to the sea, "Peace:be still!" and find thy rest in the great calm and sure haven of His breast. Art thou weary-heavy-laden? art thou sore distressed? "Come to Me" saith One; and, coming, be at rest Anon.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

My Threefold Rest.

I.
" Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy-laden, and I will give you rest." (Matt. 11:28.)

From sin and sins, dear Lord, I rest,-
Altar and Priest and Sacrifice Thou art;
By law and sin no more oppressed,
I share in Thy beatitude a part.
My yesterdays are covered by Thy blood ;
To-day, my only shelter is Thy power;
To-morrow, Thou wilt be as strong and good
As in the past most gracious hour.

II.

"Take My yoke upon you, and learn of Me; for I am meek and lowly in heart; and ye shall find rest unto your souls."(5:29.)

I rest by serving at Thy will,-
Thy yoke is easy, and Thy burden light;
And peace grows deep, and deeper still,
As my obedience proves Thy might.
I hold my powers alone for Thee,-
Use them in loving errands of Thy grace;
And calm me, though I may not see
Thy methods, as before Thy face.

III.

"There remaineth, therefore, a rest to the people of God.'' (Heb. 4:9.)

And yet the noblest rest remains
In sweet reserve for hope and love;
It hath no place for sighs or pains,
'Tis kept a glad surprise above.
Oh, rest untroubled and serene,
In Thy bright presence, spotless Lamb !
Fit me each day, by every scene,
For robe and harp, for crown and palm.

Stone

  Author:  Stone         Publication: Volume HAF5

Extract Of An Address To Christian Parents.

"For the unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife, and the unbelieving wife is sanctified by the husband:else were your children unclean; but now are they holy." (i Cor. 7:14.)

Children of God-fathers and mothers of families, here is the charta of your parental relationship:"They are holy,"-the children are holy.

The word "sanctify" in the Bible is not nearly so limited in its meaning as the word "saint" or "holy" and the same is true in modern English. We speak of the conveniences of life, of trial, of temptation from Satan, being sanctified to us, but we could not apply the word "holy" to them. The word "αγιoς" ("saint," or "holy,") just means "that which is set apart for God," and is very rarely used in a subordinate sense. It is usually applied thus:" The Holy Spirit"-"the Holy One of God"-"the holy angels"-"the holy place"-"the holy city,"-"the saints"-"a holy kiss"-"Be ye holy, for I am holy" etc. Separated unto God is just its force:your children are holy! This word is such as to embrace all our offspring; it is a word of encouragement, and an appeal to faith.

Awake, brethren! awake! let Faith do her work. Your God has told you your children are set apart to Him. How set apart?-aye, that is the word; take it to your Father. Israel was set apart, but Israel is not;-Jerusalem was set apart, but Jerusalem is trodden underfoot of the Gentiles;-the temple was set apart, but not one stone is left upon another;-the churches on earth were set apart, but what are they now but ripe for judgment?- Christendom was set apart for the bright display to it of grace and truth, heaven's light itself shining down from the person of the Lamb; but what is it now ? And how many a child of Christian parents, thus set apart for God, to be trained up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord, has instead proved a solemn warning to the neglect of godly nurture with parental authority according to the Lord! Brethren, God has appealed to you. He has given, as it were, a blank check for faith to fill up. Your children are holy. Will you say, "They are holy, so I may leave all care about them as to praying for them and instructing them " ? This is the flesh, brethren, not faith. Nay, rather, go to your Father, and without guile tell Him the lesson Himself has taught you,-taught in your souls by the Holy Spirit. Tell Him that all things are dung and dross save Jesus Christ.

Let us look a little at the exhortation to you in Scripture. In Eph. 6:4 it IS written, "Fathers, provoke not your children to wrath; but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord." Observe the word " NURTURE (paideia). This word occurs in five other places in the New Testament in the original :-

2 Tim. 3:16. All Scripture . . . is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness.

Heb. 12:5. My son, despise not thou the chastening of the Lord.

7. If ye endure chastening, God dealeth with you as with sons ;

8. But if ye are without chastisement, whereof all are partakers. , 2:Now no chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous.
Observe well these five passages, as showing what we are to understand by the word "NURTURE." In modern English, the word "nurture" seems to suggest the idea of nourishment, and, therefore, to presuppose life. The communicating nutriment to that which has inward life to enable it to be nourished thereby is just what suggests itself to the mind by the phrase, " bring up in the nurture."
Nurture, in short, is an inward application and appropriation. If we spoke of a child which had been well cared for in youth-well fed, and well disciplined, when needs be, even with the rod,-we could not apply the word "nurture" to the punishments inflicted, without the strange incongruity of the expression grating upon the ear. For there is a gentle, tender care ministering in love to the profit of the child, involved in the word "nurture." But the word "DISCIPLINE"is far otherwise, suggesting at once the thought of applications from without, the bending and conforming by the hand of another to a given standard. Let any one supply, in all six of the quoted passages, first the word"nurture"and then the word "discipline" and they will at once feel that the latter is the Holy Ghost's meaning of the word, judging from His common use of the same. The meaning is, that parents are to take the truth of God as their guide and standard, and discipline according to it. This would lead them to endeavor to fashion their little ones to truth, candor, humility, subjection, self-denial, patience, perseverance, kindness, love, etc., etc. And in confirmation, as it were, of this discipline from without, we have in the word which immediately follows, "admonition," voυθεσια, putting in mind), that which has to do with the inner man.

The force of the exhortation is this; " Provoke not your children to wrath," yet bring them up in the discipline and knowledge of the Lord,

Very similar to this is that which is written in Col. 3:2, " Fathers, provoke not your children, lest they be discouraged."

Study, then, the character of your God, and to it strive to fashion your tender charge; study the grace of your Savior, and Him, in all the fullness of His grace and truth, try to impress upon their minds. Do not deceive your own selves that the children have grace when they have it not, so deceiving their souls, or doing what you can thereto. And do not hold your responsibility in the flesh, but remember that though God's authorized evangelists to your little circles, you are still parents- fathers and mothers; accredit yourselves to them as letters of Christ, known and read of all men, seeking not theirs, but themselves, in all you do or say. And, above all, pray without ceasing.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

Present Things, As Foreshown In The Book Of Revelation.

THE ADDRESSES TO THE CHURCHES, (Continued.)

Nicolaitanism, or the Rise and Growth of Clerisy.* (Rev. 2:6,15.)

*The present paper is almost entirely a reprint of one formerly published. I feel I could add little to it.*

The address to Pergamos follows that to Smyrna. This next stage of the Church's journey in its departure (alas!) from truth may easily be recognized historically. It applies to the time when, after having passed through the heathen persecution, and the faithfulness of many an Antipas being brought out by it, it got publicly recognized and established in the world. The characteristic of this epistle is, the Church dwelling where Satan's throne is. " Throne " it should be, not "seat." Now Satan has his throne, not in hell, which is his prison, and where he never reigns at all, but in the world. He is expressly called the "prince of this world." To dwell where Satan's throne is, is to settle down in the world, under Satan's government, so to speak, and protection. That is what people call the establishment of the Church. It took place in Constantine's time. Although amalgamation with the world had been growing for a long time more and more decided, yet it was then that the Church stepped into the seats of the old heathen idolatry. It was what people call the triumph of Christianity, but the result was that the Church had the things of the world now as never before, in secure possession:the chief place in the world was hers, and the principles of the world every-where pervaded her.

The very name of " Pergamos" intimates that. It is a word (without the particle attached to it, which is itself significant,)-really meaning " marriage," and the Church's marriage before Christ comes to receive her to Himself is necessarily unfaithfulness to Him to whom she is espoused. It is the marriage of the Church and the world which the epistle to Pergamos speaks of-the end of a courtship which had been going on long before.

There is something, however, which is preliminary to this, and mentioned in the very first address; but there it is evidently incidental, and does not characterize the state of things. In the first address, to the Ephesians, the Lord says, " But this thou hast, that thou hatest the deeds of the Nicolaitanes, which I also hate " (2:6). Here it is more than the " deeds " of the Nicolaitanes. There are now not merely " deeds," but " doctrine." And the Church, instead of repudiating it, was holding with it. In the Ephesian days, they hated the deeds of the Nicolaitanes; but in Pergamos, they " had," and did not reprobate, those who held the doctrine.

The question now before us is, How shall we interpret this? and we shall find that the word "Nicolaitanes" is the only thing really which we have to interpret it by. People have tried very hard to show that there was a sect of the Nicolaitanes, but it is owned by writers now almost on all sides to be very doubtful. Nor can we conceive why, in epistles of the character which we have seen these to have, there should be such repeated and emphatic mention of a mere obscure sect, about which people can tell us little or nothing, and that seems manufactured to suit the passage before us. The Lord solemnly denounces it:" Which thing I hate." It must have a special importance with Him, and be of moment in the Church's history, little apprehended as it may have been. And another thing which we have to remember is, that it is not the way of Scripture to send us to church histories, or to any history at all, in order to interpret its sayings. God's Word is its own interpreter, and we have not to go elsewhere in order to find out what is there; otherwise it becomes a question of learned men searching and finding out for those who have not the same means or abilities, applications which must be taken on their authority alone. This He would not leave His people to. Besides, it is the ordinary way in Scripture, and especially in passages of a symbolical character, such as is the part before us, for the names to be" significant. I need not remind you how abundantly in the Old Testament this is the case; and in the New Testament, although less noticed, I cannot doubt but that there is the same significance throughout.

Here, if we are left simply to the name, it is one sufficiently startling and instructive. Of course, to those who spoke the language used, the meaning would be no hidden or recondite thing, but as ap-parent as those of Bunyan's allegories. It means, then, " Conquering the people." The last part of the word ("Laos") is the word used in Greek for "the people," and it is the word from which the commonly used term " Laity " is derived. The Nicolaitanes were just those " subjecting-putting down the laity "-the mass of Christian people, in order unduly to lord it over them.

What makes this clearer is, that,-side by side with the Nicolaitanes in the epistle to Pergamos,- we have those who hold the doctrine of Balaam, a name whose similarity in meaning has been observed by many. "Balaam" is a Hebrew word, as the other is a Greek; but its meaning is, "Destroyer of the people," a very significant one in view of his history; and as we read of the " doctrine of the Nicolaitanes," so we read of a "doctrine of Balaam."

You have pointed out what he " taught " Balak. Balaam's doctrine was, "to cast a stumbling-block before the children of Israel, to eat things sacrificed to idols, and to commit fornication." For this purpose he enticed them to mixture with the nations, from which God had carefully separated them. That needful separation broken down was their destruction, so far as it prevailed. In like manner we have seen the Church to be called out from the world, and it is only too easy to apply the divine type in this case. But here we have a confessedly typical people, with a corresponding significant name, and in such close connection as naturally to confirm the reading of the similar word, " Nicolaitanes," as similarly significant. I shall have to speak more of this at another time, if the Lord will. Let us notice now the development of Nicolaitanism. It is, first of all, certain people who have this character, and who (I am merely translating the word.) first take the place of superiors over the people. Their " deeds" show what they are. There is no "doctrine" yet; but it ends in Pergamos, with the doctrine of the Nicolaitanes. The place is assumed now to be theirs by right. There is a doctrine-a teaching about it, received at least by some, and to which the Church at large-nay, on the whole, true souls have become indifferent.
Now what has come in between these two things, -the " deeds " and the " doctrine "? What we were looking at last time-the rise of a party whom the Lord marks out as those who said they were Jews and were not, but who were the synagogue of Satan :the adversary's attempt (alas! too successful) to Judaize the Church.

We were looking but a little while since at what the characteristics of Judaism are. It was a probationary system, a system of trial, in which it was to be seen if man could produce a righteousness for God. We know the end of the trial, and that God pronounced " none righteous-no, not one." And then alone it was that God could manifest His ' grace. As long as He was putting man under trial, He could not possibly open the way to His Own presence and justify the sinner there. He had, as long as this trial went on, to shut him out; for on that ground, nobody could see God and live. Now the very essence of Christianity is that all are welcomed in. There is an open door, and ready access, where the blood of Christ entitles every one, however much a sinner, to draw near to God, and to find, in the first place, at His hand, justification as ungodly. To see God in Christ is not to die, but live. And what, further, is the consequence of this? The people who have come this way to Him,-the people who have found the way of access through the peace-speaking blood into His presence, learned what He is in Christ, and been justified before God, are able to take, and taught to take, a place distinct from all others, as now His, children of the Father, members of Christ-His body. That is the Church, a body called out, separate from the world.

Judaism, on the other hand, necessarily mixed all together. Nobody there can take such a place with God:nobody can cry, "Abba, Father," really; therefore there could not be any separation. This had been once a necessity, and of God, no doubt; but now, Judaism being set up again, after God had abolished it, it was no use, it is no use, to urge that it was once of Him; its setting up was the too successful work of the enemy against this gospel and against this Church. He brands these Judaizers as the "synagogue of Satan."

Now we can understand at once, when the Church in its true character was practically lost sight of, when Church-members meant people baptized by water instead of by the Holy Ghost, or when the baptism of water and of the Holy Ghost were reckoned one, (and this very early became accepted doctrine,) how of course the Jewish synagogue was practically again set up. It became more and more impossible to speak of Christians being at peace with God, or saved. They were hoping to be, and sacraments and ordinances became means of grace to insure, as far as might be, a far-off salvation.

Let us see how far this would help on the doctrine of the Nicolaitanes. It is plain that when and as the Church sank into the synagogue, the Christian people became practically what of old the Jewish had been. Now, what was that position? As I have said, there was no real drawing near to God at all. Even the high-priest, who (as a type of Christ,) entered into the holiest once a year, on the day of atonement, had to cover the mercy-seat with a cloud of incense that he might not die. But the ordinary priests could not enter there at all, but only into the outer holy place; while the people in general could not come in even there. And this was expressly designed as a witness of their condition. It was the result of failure on their part, for God's offer to them, which you may find in the nineteenth chapter of Exodus, was this:"Now, therefore, if ye will obey My voice indeed, and keep My covenant, ye shall be a peculiar treasure unto Me above all people; for all the earth is Mine; and ye shall be unto Me a kingdom of priests, and a holy nation."
They were thus conditionally offered equal nearness of access to God,-they should be all priests. But this was rescinded, for they broke the covenant; and then a special family is put into the place of priests, the rest of the people being put into the background, and only able to draw near to God through these.

Thus a separate and intermediate priesthood characterized Judaism, as on the other hand, for the same reason, what we should call now missionary-work, there was none. There was no going out to the world in this way, no provision, no command, to preach the law at all. What, in fact, could they say ? that God was in the thick darkness ? that no one could see Him and live? It is surely evident there was no "good news "there. Judaism had no true gospel. The absence of the evangelist and the presence of the intermediate priesthood told the same sorrowful story, and were in perfect keeping with each other.

Such was Judaism; how different, then, is Christianity ! No sooner had the death of Christ rent the vail, and opened a way of access into the presence of God, than at once there was a gospel, and the new order is, " Go out into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature." God is making Himself known, and " is He the God of the Jews only?" Can you confine that within the bounds of a nation? No; the fermentation of the new wine would burst the bottles.

The intermediate priesthood was, on the other hand, done away; for all the Christian people are priests now to God. What was conditionally offered to Israel is now an accomplished fact in Christianity. We are a kingdom of priests; and it is, in the wisdom of God, Peter, ordained of man the great head of ritualism, who in his first epistle announces the two things which destroy ritualism root and branch for those who believe him. First, that we are "born again," not of baptism, but "by the Word of God, that liveth and abideth forever;" and this, " the Word which by the gospel is preached unto you."Secondly, instead of a set of priests, he says to all Christians, " Ye also, as living stones, are built up a spiritual house, a holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ." (2:5.) The sacrifices are spiritual, praise and thanksgiving, and our lives and bodies also (Heb. 13:15, 16; Rom. 12:i); but this is to be with us true priestly work, and thus do our lives get their proper character:they are the thank-offering service of those able to draw nigh to God.

In Judaism, let me repeat, no one drew really nigh; but the people-the laity (for it is only a Greek word made English,)-the people not even as the priest could. The priestly caste, wherever it is found, means the same thing. There is no drawing nigh of the whole body of the people at all. It means distance from God, and darkness,- God shut out.

Let us see now what is the meaning of a clergy. It is, in our day, and has been for many generations, the word which specially marks out a class distinguished from the " laity," and distinguished by being given up to sacred things, and having a place of privilege in connection with them which the laity have not. No doubt in the present day this special place is being more and more infringed on, and for two reasons. One is, that God has been giving light, and, among Protestants at least, Scripture is opposing itself to tradition,-modifying where it does not destroy this. The other is a merely human one-that the day is democratic, and class-privileges are breaking down.

But what means this class ? It is evident that as thus distinguished from the laity, and privileged beyond them, it is real and open Nicolaitanism, if Scripture does not make good their claim. For there the laity has been subjected to them, and that is the exact meaning of the term. Does Scripture, then, use such terms? It is plain it does not. They are, as regards the New Testament, an invention of later date, although, it may be admitted, as imported really from what is older than the New,-the Judaism with which the Church (as we have seen,) was quickly permeated.

But we must see the important principles involved, to see how the Lord has (as He must have) cause to say of the deeds of the Nicolaitanes, " Which I also hate."We too, if we would be in communion with the Lord in this, must hate what He hates.

I am not speaking of people (God forbid!):I am speaking of a thing. Our unhappiness is, that we are at the end of a long series of departures from God, and as a consequence, we grow up in the midst of many things which come down to us as "tradition of the elders," associated with names which we all revere and love, upon whose authority in reality we have accepted them, without ever having looked at them really in the light of God's presence. And there are many thus whom we gladly recognize as truly men of God and servants of God in a false position. It is of that position I am speaking. I am speaking of a thing, as the Lord does:"Which thing I hate." He does not say, Which people I hate. Although in those days evil of this kind was not an inheritance, as now, and the first propagators of it, of course, had a responsibility, self-deceived as they may have been, peculiarly their own. Still,, in this matter as in all others, we need not be ashamed or afraid to be where the Lord is;-nay, we cannot be with Him in this unless we are; and He says of Nicolaitanism, " Which thing I hate."

Because what does it mean ? It means a spiritual caste, or class,-a set of people having officially a right to leadership in spiritual things; a nearness to God, derived from official place, not spiritual power:in fact, the revival, under the names, and with various modifications, of that very intermediate priesthood which -distinguished Judaism, and which Christianity emphatically disclaims. That is what a clergy means; and in contradiction to these, the rest of Christians are but the laity, the seculars, necessarily put back into more or less of the old distance, which the cross of Christ has done away.

We see, then, why it needed that the Church should be Judaized before the deeds of the Nicolaitanes could ripen into a " doctrine." The Lord even had authorized obedience to scribes and Pharisees sitting in Moses' seat; and to make this text apply, as people apply it now, Moses' seat had of course to be set up in the Christian Church; this done, and the mass of Christians degraded from the priesthood Peter spoke of, into mere " lay members," the doctrine of the Nicolaitanes was at once established.

Understand me fully, that I am in no wise questioning the divine institution of the Christian ministry. God forbid! for ministry in the fullest sense is characteristic of Christianity, as I have already in fact maintained. Nor do I, while believing that all true Christians are ministers also by the very fact, deny a special and distinctive ministry of the Word, as what God has given to some and not to all-though for the use of all. No one truly taught of God can deny that some, not all, among Christians have the place of evangelist, pastor, teacher. Scripture makes more of this than current views do; for it teaches that every true minister is a gift from Christ, in His care, as Head of the Church, for His people, and one who has his place from God alone, and is responsible in that character to God, and God alone. The miserable system which I see around degrades him from this blessed place, and makes him in fact little more than the manufacture and the servant of men. While giving, it is true, a place of lordship over people which gratifies a carnal mind, still it fetters the spiritual man, and puts him in chains; every where giving him an artificial conscience toward man, hindering in fact his conscience being properly before God.

Let me briefly state what the Scripture-doctrine of the ministry is-it is a very simple one. The Assembly of God is Christ's body; all the members are members of Christ. There is no other membership in Scripture than this-the membership of Christ's body, to which all true Christians belong:not many bodies of Christ, but one body; not many Churches, but one Church.

There is of course a different place for each member of the body by the very fact that he is such. All members have not the same office:there is the eye, the ear, and so on, but they are all necessary, and all necessarily ministering, in some way or sense, to one another.

Every member has its place, not merely locally, and for the benefit of certain other members, but for the benefit of the whole body.

Each member has its gift, as the apostle teaches distinctly. " For as we have many members in one body, and all members have not the same office; so we, being many, are one body in Christ, and every one members one of another. Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us," etc. (Rom. 12:4-6.)

In the twelfth chapter of first Corinthians, the apostle speaks at large of these gifts; and he calls them by a significant name-" manifestations of the Spirit." They are gifts of the Spirit, of course; but more, they are " manifestations of the Spirit;" they manifest themselves where they are found,-where (I need scarcely add that I mean,) there is spiritual discernment,-where souls are before God.

For instance, if you take the gospel of God, whence does it derive its authority and power? From any sanction of men? any human credentials of any kind? or from its own inherent power? I dare maintain, that the common attempt to authenticate the messenger takes away from instead of adding to the power of the Word. God's Word must be received as such:he that receives it sets to his seal that God is true. Its ability to meet the needs of heart and conscience is derived from the fact that it is " God's good news," who knows perfectly what man's need is, and has provided for it accordingly. He who has felt its power knows well from whom it comes. The work and witness of the Spirit of God in the soul need no witness of man to supplement them.

Even the Lord's appeal in His own case was to the truth He uttered:" If I say the truth, why do ye not believe Me?"When He stood forth in the Jewish synagogue, or elsewhere, He was but in men's eyes a poor carpenter's son, accredited by no school or set of men at all. All the weight of authority was ever against Him. He disclaimed even" receiving testimony from men." God's Word alone should speak for God." My doctrine is not Mine, but His that sent Me."And how did it approve itself? By the fact of its being truth. " If I speak the truth, why do you not believe Me?" It was the truth that was to make its way with the true." He that will do God's will shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or whether I speak of Myself."He says, " I speak the truth, I bring it to you from God; and if it is truth, and if you are seeking to do God's will, you will learn to recognize it as the truth."God will not leave people in ignorance and darkness, if they are seeking to be doers of His will. Can you suppose that God will allow true hearts to be deceived by whatever plausible deceptions may be abroad? He is able to make His voice known by those who seek to hear His voice. And so the Lord says to Pilate, " Every one that is of the truth heareth My voice." (Jno. 18:37.) " My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me;" and again, "A stranger will they not follow, but will flee from him; for they know not the voice of strangers." (Jno. 10:27, 5.)

Such is the nature of truth, then, that to pretend to authenticate it to those who are themselves true is to dishonor it, as if it were not capable of self-evidence, and so dishonor God, as if He could be wanting to souls, or to what He Himself has given.

Nay, the apostle speaks of " by manifestation of the truth commending ourselves to every man's conscience in the sight of God " (2 Cor. 4:2); and the Lord, of its being the condemnation of the world, that " light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil" (Jno. 3:19). There was no lack of evidence:light was there, and men owned its power to their own condemnation, when they sought escape from it.

Even so in the gift was there "the manifestation of the Spirit," and it was "given to every man to profit withal." By the very fact that he had it, he was responsible to use it-responsible to Him who had not given it in vain. In the gift itself lay the ability to minister, and title too; for I am bound to help and serve with what I have. And if souls are helped, they need scarcely ask if I had commission to do it.

This is the simple character of ministry-the service of love, according to the ability which God gives, mutual service of each to each and each to all, without jostling or exclusion of one another. Each gift was thrown into the common treasury, and all were the richer by it. God's blessing and the manifestation, of the Spirit were all the sanction needed. All were not teachers, still less public teachers, of the Word; still in these cases, the same principles exactly applied. That was but one department of a service which had many, and which was rendered by each to each according to his sphere.

Was there nothing else than that? Was there no ordained class at all, then? That is another thing altogether. There were, without doubt, in the primitive Church, two classes of officials, regularly appointed, or (if you like) ordained. The deacons were those who, having charge of the fund for the poor and other purposes, were chosen by the saints first for this place of trust in their behalf, and then appointed authoritatively by apostles mediately or immediately. Elders were a second class,- elderly men, as the word imports,-who were appointed in the local assemblies as "bishops," or " overseers," to take cognizance of their state. That the elders were the same as bishops may be seen in Paul's words to the elders of Ephesus, where he exhorts them to " take heed to …. all the flock, over which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers." There they have translated the word, " bishops," but in Titus they have left it- " that thou shouldest ordain elders in every city, as I had appointed thee; if any be blameless, …. for a bishop must be blameless." (Acts 20:28; Tit. 1:5, 7.)

Their work was to "oversee," and although for that purpose their being " apt to teach " was a much-needed qualification, in view of errors already rife, yet no one could suppose that teaching was confined to those who were " elders," " husbands of one wife, having their children in subjection with all gravity." This was a needed test for one who was to be a bishop; "for if a man know not how to rule his own house, how shall he take care of the Church of God?" (i Tim. 3:1-7.)

Whatever gifts they had they used, as all did, and thus the apostle directs-" Let the elders that rule well be counted worthy of double honor, especially they who labor in the Word and doc-trine (5:17). But they might rule, and rule well, without this.

The meaning of their ordination was just this, that here it was not a question of " gift," but of authority. It was a question of title to take up and look into, often difficult and delicate matters, among people too very likely in no state to submit to what was merely spiritual. The ministration of gift was another thing, and free, under God, to all.

Thus much, very briefly, as to Scripture-doctrine. Our painful duty is now to put in contrast with it the system I am deprecating, according to which a distinct class are devoted formally to spiritual things, and the people-the laity-are in the same ratio excluded from such occupation. This is true Nicolaitanism,-the "subjection of the people." F.W.G. (To be continued.)

  Author: Frederick W. Grant         Publication: Volume HAF5

“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."

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

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.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

Alone With God – Poem

Alone with Him ! how sweet the rest!
While in His presence, I am blest;
When but Himself, none else I see ;
I "sup with Him, and He with me."

'Tis fellowship of sweetest sort:
To Love's own banquet I am brought,
While in "His hands" and "visage marred"
I read my title to "my Lord."

'Tis peace! The spear had opened the way,
The blood to flow-the wrath to stay
My sins deserved ; and God doth please
To own the work, and give me peace.

Communion too with both in one-
The Father and His blessed Son,
The Holy Ghost the link between
The " Man called Jesus " and the throne.

Ah ! this is rest sublimely sweet!
A sinner with his God to meet
In Jesus ! and in Him alone,
With Him at rest, with Him at home.

C.E.H.

  Author: C. E. H.         Publication: Volume HAF5

Present Things, As Foreshown In The Book Of Revelation.

THE ADDRESSES TO THE CHURCHES. (Continued)

Thyatira:the Reign of the World-Church. (Rev. 2:18-29.-Continued.)

Rome it surely is, drawn with the few bold strokes of a master-pencil,-Rome as the Lord Himself sees and judges it. Good it is, and necessary, to take our estimate of her from the Word of God itself rather than from the judgments of men, shifting and unstable as they have ever proved. The judgment of God abides, and the day that is coming will only affirm its decisions, unutterably solemn as indeed they are. How dare we indulge the false liberality so common in this day in presence of the awful threatenings of the passage before us ?

" And I gave her space to repent of her fornication, and she repented not. Behold, I will cast her into a bed, and them that commit adultery with her into great tribulation, except they repent of her deeds. And I will kill her children with death; and all the churches shall know that I am He that searcheth the reins and hearts; and I will give to every one of you according to your works."

Thus the pitiless persecutor of God's people shall find sure doom from His hand at last; and with that judgment all heaven will be in sympathy:"I heard as it were the voice of a great multitude in heaven, saying, 'Halleluiah! Salvation and glory and power unto the Lord our God, for true and righteous are His judgments; for He hath judged the great whore, which did corrupt the earth with her fornication, and hath avenged the blood of His servants at her hand.' And again they said,' Halleluiah !' And her smoke riseth up forever and ever."

No true charity can possibly soften down the terms of divine judgment here pronounced, but will rather echo the call of mercy in the meantime:" Come out of her, My people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye receive not of her plagues."

Yet it is quite possible to judge Rome without hesitation, and to partake, nevertheless, in what are the works of Rome. We must remember, therefore, that Rome is the " mother of harlots and abominations of the earth." Principles can be received and followed which are essentially Romish, while we reject the full development of them in the canons of the Council of Trent or the creed of Pope Pius IV. The features of popery, if carefully noted here, will often be found under the guise of Protestantism. And there is a tendency in them to reproduce themselves together. Take Irvingism, in which, in the most startling manner, all the doctrines of popery (without the pope) have sprung up into a precocious maturity:and here, even the claim of infallibility is found though the pope is not:there is the voice of the woman calling herself a prophetess, whether the woman's name be " Jezebel" or not.

But in modified forms, the features of Rome may be found where there is no pretension to infallibility, and none at all to worldly supremacy for the Church as such. Wherever the teaching of the Church is maintained as authoritative, though it be over a body of Christians who make no claims to catholicity, or to succession after the Romish manner, and who do not propose to add to the Word of God, but to be guided by it,-still, even here the voice of the woman is heard, although the woman's name be certainly not " Jezebel." Yet here, not only the churches of the Reformation, but all churches almost, stand. Nay, it is considered even that there is no sure guarantee for orthodoxy where this is not so. And indeed it cannot be denied that the abolition of creeds has been very often loudly urged by those who desired latitude as to the most positive doctrines of the Word itself. The deniers of eternal punishment have contended for it; the men who put the inspiration of Scripture on the same footing with the inspiration of Shakespeare; the people who to retain Christianity must leave out Christ. All these, in their various pleas against the stiffness of a creed that they refused, have furnished the most convincing arguments for its necessity. Nor do I now propose to deal with these arguments ; they will come before us properly elsewhere. It is nevertheless true that, according to Scripture, the Church never teaches. God teaches by His Spirit, and the one authoritative teaching is that of the inspired Word,-truly authoritative, because absolute truth itself. This much is true in Jezebel's false claim, that infallible teaching alone can demand obedience, as alone it can implicit faith. Allow that the guide may lead astray, and how can you require men to follow her? " If the blind lead the blind, shall they not both fall into the ditch?"

But the creeds are to be submitted to because they may be proved by Scripture, " by most certain arguments," it is said. Well, if Scripture be so certain and so authoritative, what need of any thing else? I believe indeed that it is certain and all-sufficient, and thus the argument proves too much. Why seek to make certain what is already so, or give authority to what is already and only authoritative? In so doing, Scripture is dishonored in the very method by which you would honor it. Its own testimony is, that it is "given by inspiration of God, and profitable for doctrine, for correction, for reproof, for instruction in righteousness; that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works." But the authoritatively imposed creed actually takes away the appeal to Scripture, becoming itself the only permissible appeal. If there be error in the creed, it will have to be maintained as carefully as the truth in it. If there be defect in the creed, the Scripture cannot be allowed even to supplement it. It is, in short, completely displaced from its rightful supremacy over men. The conscience is not allowed to be before God, and the most godly are just those who will be forced most into opposition against the human rule thus substituted for the divine.

This we shall have to look at further at another time, however. But it is evident that Jezebel is right thus far, in that she connects her right of rule over the people of God with the infallibility of the prophetess. She displays, however, the falsity of her pretension by her refusal to submit her claims in this respect to be judged by that which she owns herself to be the Word of God. Her infallibility must not be tested, but received:whereas Scripture itself, with a claim no less absolute, on that very account submits to every possible test, assured that the more complete the test, the more will this claim be manifested and made good. The true coin fears not the test which would at once expose the counterfeit. Faith in Rome is credulity and superstition only:faith in Scripture is intelligent, reasonable, and open-eyed.

In Scripture, the Church does not teach at all. The prophets speak, and the rest "judge." The Word itself is the rule by which all is judged, and the conscience is kept directly in the presence of God Himself. All are exercised as to what is spoken:they are to take heed what they hear, as well as how they hear. This exercise is necessary to maintain the soul in vigor and in dependence. Vigilance, the constant habit of reference to God, and walking before Him are to be ever emphasized and insisted on. We tend continually to follow human authorities and traditional teachings, which God has continually to break through for us, sending us afresh to His Word, that our faith may not stand in the wisdom of men, but in the power of God. Thus alone true spiritual health is realized and preserved.

Church teaching is one mark, then, of what in Rome has only come to full maturity. The seed is scattered widely, and found in the most diverse places. Another thing often to be met with independently is yet, quite similarly to this, the germ of what is fully developed only in Rome. This is, the claim for the Church of rightful supremacy over the world.

In Rome, it is outspoken and defiant. Jezebel reigns as a queen, and is no widow, and shall see no sorrow. With her foot upon the necks of kings, she can apply to herself the words which belong to Christ,-" Thou shalt tread upon the lion and the adder; the young lion and the dragon Thou shalt trample underfoot." This needs, of course, no comment ; but how many are there, on the other hand, who sincerely believe that Christians should have their place in the government of the world,-nay, should control it! Who, in fact, so fitted? and what could be so desirable for the world itself?

They do not see that the world is never to be subject to Christ until He take possession of it with the rod of iron; that Satan is its prince and god, never to be cast out until the Lord comes Himself from heaven; that the world remains, therefore, in steadfast opposition to what is of God, and Christianity, if it root itself in it, only becomes corrupted by it, and not its purifier. The yoke with unbelievers, which these principles of necessity bring about, is what at the start forfeits for the child of God the enjoyment of the child's proper place. " For what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness? or what communion hath light with darkness ? or what concord hath Christ with Belial? or what part hath he that believeth with an unbeliever ? and what agreement hath the temple of God with idols? For ye are the temple of the living God, as God hath said,' I will dwell in them and walk in them, and I will be their God, and they shall be My people. Wherefore come out from among them, and be separate; and touch not the unclean thing, and I will receive you, and will be a Father to you; and ye shall be My sons and daughters, saith the Lord Almighty.' "

In Jezebel, the full maturity of these principles is reached, and the Church attains its rule over the world; but in so doing, it has entirely changed its character. It is no longer the true Church, but the false, although in historical succession with the true. The world's principles have leavened it; it shelters the unclean "birds of the air," the followers of the " prince of the power of the air;" the true followers of Christ are hunted down and destroyed ; and their only hope is here the coming of the Lord Himself, which now for the first time in these addresses becomes the Star of promise. " But unto you I say, even unto the rest in Thyatira, as many as have not this doctrine, and which have not known the depths of Satan, as they speak; I will put upon you none other burden:but that which ye have already hold fast till I come. And he that overcometh, and keepeth My works unto the end, to him will I give power over the nations:and he shall rule them with a rod of iron; as the vessels of a potter shall they be broken to shivers; even as I received of My Father. And I will give him the morning star."

Here is, plainly, the attitude of faith declared in contrast with Jezebel's claim of rule. Rule! yes, we are to have it when the Lord comes,-not before. The reign of the saints is to be with Christ, and although it is true that He now reigns, it is upon the Father's throne-a throne which cannot be shared with men. It is impossible, therefore, that Christians can reign now. When as Son of Man He takes His own throne, then indeed they shall be associated with Him. This is in the promise to the overcomer in Laodicea:"To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with Me in My throne, even as I also overcame, and am set down with My Father in His throne."

It is in that day the rod of iron will be in His hands, which, as we see here, He promises to share with His people. This is a direct reference to the second psalm, where Christ is seen, as in the purpose of God, "set" upon the "holy hill of Zion." It is not a heavenly, but an earthly, throne. And thereupon Christ's own voice is heard declaring the decree which establishes Him in possession of the earth:" I will declare the decree; the Lord hath said unto Me, ' Thou art My Son, this day have I begotten Thee. Ask of Me, and I will give Thee the heathen for Thine inheritance, the uttermost parts of the earth for Thy possession.'" This is often quoted to show the gradual spread of the gospel over the earth, but how, in fact, is Christ's claim upon the nations to be made good? "Thou shalt rule them with a rod of iron; Thou shalt dash them in pieces like a potter's vessel."

This is plainly not the grace of the gospel. It is as plainly the exercise of the power in which He associates the saints with Himself. It is again referred to, when in the nineteenth chapter of this book the white-horsed Rider, whose name is called the Word of God, comes forth from heaven, attended by His armies, to the judgment of the nations banded still, as in the second psalm, "against the Lord and against His Christ." " And out of His mouth goeth a sharp, two-edged sword, that with it He should smite the nations, and He shall rule them with a rod of iron, and He treadeth the wine-press of the fierceness and wrath of Almighty God."

Thus the time of this rule is fixed definitely, and its character it would seem impossible to mistake. Till then, "overcoming" is in patience and long-suffering, keeping Christ's works unto the end.

But the promise of the morning-star goes beyond this, even; and we must look at it with corresponding attention. We have here the Lord's own interpretation, and in the same book. When the whole roll of prophecy has been unfolded and come to an end, He returns to explain to us this significant word. "I Jesus have sent Mine angel to testify unto you these things in the churches. I am the Root and the Offspring of David, and the bright and Morning-Star" The Revelation, and thus the New-Testament as a whole, closes with this announcement. It is striking, therefore, to find the Old Testament closing, in Malachi, with a contrasted announcement, which yet applies to the same glorious Speaker, who thus takes His place in connection with the promises of both parts of the Word. The Old Testament, with its earthly promises, closes with this:" Unto you that fear My name shall the Sun of Righteousness arise with healing in His wings." The New Testament, with its heavenly promises, speaks, not of the Sun of Righteousness, but of the Morning-Star.

The Old-Testament promise may seem the fuller thing. It is more to have the sun rise, surely, one would say, than the morning-star,-to have the day than the promise of the day. And this is true from the Old-Testament point of view:the star shines out of heaven, does not brighten the earth at all; but in its own sphere it is bright nevertheless. And this is the key to its New-Testament use. The Star shines its welcome for us out of those heavenly places in which our blessings as Christians are. Christ is coming to bring the day to the whole earth. The glory of the Lord, like the solar radiance, is going to cover it, as the waters cover the sea. It shall rise upon Israel, and the Gentiles come to the light, and kings to the brightness of its rising. But before this, our eyes shall have beheld Him; and when this comes, our higher, better place shall be already with Him. For His promise to us is, " I will come again, and receive you unto Myself, that where I AM,"-in His own eternal home,- "there ye may be also."

How beautiful this reminder, then, here, where the glitter of earthly rule and dignity seeks to attract and ensnare the saints of God! Like the Lord's words to the seventy when they returned to Him again with joy, saying, " Lord, even the devils are subject unto us through Thy name! " With His face toward the very scenes of which we have been speaking, He replies, " I saw Satan as lightning fall from heaven! Behold, I give you power to tread on serpents and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy; and nothing shall by any means hurt you. Notwithstanding,"-and here is the parallel so complete,-"in this rejoice not, that the spirits are subject unto you, but rather rejoice because your names are written in heaven"

Though our reign be over the earth, and when He appears we shall appear with Him in glory, yet our " mansions"-our abiding-places, as the word means,-are not on earth, but in the Father's house, of which the temple, with its "patterns of things in the heavenlies," was the type and presentation upon earth. "My Father's house" was Christ's name for the temple. This had its temporary apartments for the priests, as they came up in their courses to fulfill their service at Jerusalem. And is it not in designed contrast that our Lord designates our places in the Father's house above, not as temporary, but abiding-places? To "abide," "continue," is one of the characteristic words in John's gospel, and it is in perfect harmony with the gospel of Christ's deity that it should be so; all that belongs to Deity abides ; and _here, in the place of the presence of God, are our not temporary but eternal abodes.

But " the Morning-Star " is more than our abode. The abode we shall have, to enjoy it, but Himself it is we are called to enjoy, "I am the bright and Morning-Star." "Father, I will also that those whom Thou hast given Me be with Me where I am; that they may behold My glory, which Thou hast given Me; for Thou lovedst Me before the foundation of the world."

How blessed to be forever where this glory is displayed, and where the eye will be perfect to let in the light! " We know that, when He shall appear, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is." And in order to see Him as He is, we must be like Him. The passage is often read the reverse way; as if it were the sight of Him that would change us into His likeness:but I do not believe that to be the thought. The truth is, that as we must have the divine nature to know God, so we must be in Christ's moral image to apprehend Him. Man knows man by reason of the common nature; here, where all obstruction is at last removed, and we enter into life as our abiding and exclusive condition,-the " body of death" gone forever,-here we shall be at last face to face with Christ indeed. And this will seal and perfect the blessedness of a life always in us essentially dependent. We shall still and ever, now with no inner obstruction to prevent its realization, be "complete" (or "filled full") "in Him."

The Morning-Star anticipates the day, and we shall be gathered up to Christ before He appears for the judgment yet deliverance of the earth. Then, those who have suffered will reign with Him. When judgment shall return to righteousness,- the rod, no longer a serpent, returns to the hand of that great Shepherd of whom Moses was but the fore-shadow,-we shall be with Him, to take joyful part in that" restitution of all things " which He comes to effect. When the Sun of Righteousness arises, " then shall the righteous shine forth as the sun, in the kingdom of their Father." The rod will then be the irresistible " rod of iron," but how beneficent shall be its sway! " Then, judgment shall dwell in the wilderness, and righteousness remain in the fruitful field; and the work of righteousness shall be peace; and the effect of righteousness, quietness and assurance forever. And My people shall dwell in a peaceable habitation, and in sure dwellings, and in quiet resting-places." For now, as never yet, " a King shall reign in righteousness, and princes shall rule in judgment. And a Man shall be as a hiding-place from the wind, and a covert from the tempest; as rivers of water in a dry place, as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land."

The word, then, to the overcomer is, " Hold fast till I come!" The night-watch is not over; nor will the failed Church recover itself. The watchword of comfort is, " Until I come." The true are but a remnant, and Rome's catholicity is but a decisive proof of the general departure. Revivals there may be, but no return. Good it is for those who accept humbly the lesson, which stains forever the glory of man. "The corruption of the best thing is the worst corruption." We have had God's "best thing" nearly two thousand years in hand:what have we done with it? Shall we do better now? It is easy to judge Rome; to judge, in Rome, our own utter and ruinous failure, is that to which God calls, and in which alone blessing is. Then, blessed be God, the Morning-Star rises in the darkened sky:"At midnight there was a cry made, ' Behold, the Bridegroom! go ye out to meet Him.'" " He that hath an ear, let him hear what the Spirit saith unto the churches!" F.W.G.

  Author: Frederick W. Grant         Publication: Volume HAF5

Present Things, As Foreshown In The Book Of Revelation.

THE ADDRESSES TO THE CHURCHES, (Continued)

Pergamos:the Church united with the World. (Rev. 2:12-17.)-Continued.

It will be a relief to turn to Scripture, and to examine what we have there upon this subject. It is very simple; There was no organized machinery for supporting churches ; none for paying ministers; no promise, no contract upon the people's part, as to any sum they were to receive at all. There were necessities, of course, many, to be provided for, and it was understood that there was to be provision. The saints themselves had to meet all. They had not taken up with a cheap religion. Having often to lay down their lives for it, they did not think much of their goods. The principle was this:" Every man as he is disposed in his heart, so let him give; not grudgingly, or of necessity; for God loveth a cheerful giver." It was to be to God, and before God. There was to be no blazoning it out to brethren, still less before the world. He that gave was not to let his left hand know what his right hand was doing.

It is true there were solemn motives to enforce it. On the one side, "he that soweth sparingly shall reap also sparingly, and he that soweth bountifully shall reap also bountifully;" but on the other side, most powerful, most influential of all, was this:" Ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, who, though He was rich, yet for your sakes became poor, that ye through His poverty might become rich."

Such was the principle, such was to be the motive. There was no compulsory method of extraction if this failed. If there was not heart to give, it was no use to extract.

So as to the laborer in the Word,-it was very clearly announced, and that as what God had ordained, that " they which preach the gospel should live of the gospel," and that "the laborer is worthy of his hire." But although here also God used the willing hands of His people, it was not understood that they " hired " him, or that he was their laborer. What they gave, it was to God they gave it, and his privilege was to be Christ's servant. His responsibility was to the Lord, and theirs also. They did not understand that they were to get so much work for so much money. They did not pay, but "offered." There is a wonderful difference; for you cannot "pay" God, and you do not "offer" (in this sense of offering,) to man. The moment you pay, God is out of the question.

Do you think this is perhaps a little unfair on both sides? that it is right that there should be something more of an equivalent for the labor he bestows,-for the money you give? That is good law, bad gospel. What better than simony is it to suppose after this fashion-" that the gift of God can be purchased with money "? Would you rather make your own bargain than trust Christ's grace to minister to your need? or is it hard for him that he who ministers the Word should show his practical trust in the Word by looking to the Lord for his support? Ah, to whom could he look so well ? and how much better off would he be for losing the sweet experience of His care?
No; it is all unbelief in divine power and love, and machinery brought in to make up for the want of it. And yet if there is not this, what profit is there of keeping up the empty profession of it? If God can fail, let the whole thing go together; if He cannot, then your skillful contrivances are only the exhibition of rank unbelief.

And what do you accomplish by it? You bring in the Canaanite (the merchantman) into the house of the Lord. You offer a premium to the trader in divine things,-the man who most values your money and least cares for your souls. You cannot but be aware how naturally those two extremes associate together, and you cannot but own that if you took the Lord's plan, and left His laborers to look to Him for their support, you would do more to weed out such traffickers than by all your care and labor otherwise. Stop the hire, and you will banish the hirelings, and the blessed ministry of Christ will be freed from an incubus and a reproach which your contracts and bargainings are largely responsible for.

And if Christ's servants cannot after all trust Him, let them seek out some honest occupation where they may gain their bread without scandal. In the fifteenth century before Christ, God brought out a whole nation out of Egypt, and maintained them forty years in the wilderness. Did He? or did He not? Is He as competent as ever? Alas! will you dare to say those were the days of His youth, and these of His decrepitude?

So serious are these questions. But the unbelief that exists now existed then. Do you remember what the people did when they had lost Moses on the mount awhile and lacked a leader? They made a god of the gold which they had brought out of Egypt with them, and fell down and worshiped the work of their own hands. History repeats itself. Who can deny that we have been looking on the counterpart of that?

Is there any measure, it may be well to ask here, of the Christian's giving, for one who would be right with God about it ?

The notion of the tithe or tenth has been revived, or with some two tithes, as that which was the measure of an Israelite's giving. Jacob has been propounded to us as an example, as he stood before God in the morning after that wonderful night at Bethel, when God had engaged to be with him and to be his God, and to multiply his seed, and bring him again into the land from which he was departing. " If God will be with me," he says, " and will keep me in the way that I go, and will give me bread to eat and raiment to put on, so that I come again to my father's house in peace; then the Lord shall be my God; and this stone, which I have set for a pillar, shall be God's house, and of all that Thou shalt give me, I will surely give the tenth unto Thee."

God's ways are so little like our ways, His thoughts so little like our thoughts, it is not very wonderful man does not understand them. But surely Jacob does not here enter into the blessedness of God's thoughts.

I need not dwell now upon his case, but only notice it to say that for a Christian at least the whole principle is a mistake. You are not to ransom nine-tenths from God by giving one. You are bought with a price-you and yours. In a double way, by creation and redemption too, you belong, with all you have, to God. Many people are acting upon the perfectly wrong idea that whether as to time, money, or whatever else, God is to have His share, and the rest is their own. They misunderstand the legal types, and do not realize the immense difference that accomplished redemption has brought in with it.

Before " Ye are bought with a price " could yet be said, it was impossible to deduce the consequences that result from this. Grace goes beyond law, which made nothing, and could make nothing, perfect. The very essence of the surrender of the life to God is that it must be a voluntary one. Like the vow of the Nazarite, which was a vow of separation to the Lord, and which reads, " When any one will vow the vow of a Nazarite," that surrender must be of the heart, or it is none. Nor is it a contradiction to this that there were born Nazarites-Nazarites from the womb, as Samson and the Baptist. We are all born (new-born) to Nazariteship, which is implied and necessitated (in a true sense) by the life which we receive from God. But the necessity is not one externally impressed upon it; it is an internal one. "A new heart will I give you," says the Lord; but the new heart given is a heart which chooses freely the service of its Master.

A legal requirement of the whole then would have been unavailing, and a mere bondage. " Not grudgingly, or of necessity," is, as we have seen, the Scripture-rule. But that does not at all mean what people characterize as " cheap religion." It does not mean that God will accept the "mites" of the niggard as the Lord did those of the woman in the Gospels. Christ does not say now, Give as much or as little as you please:it is all one. No:He expects intelligent, free surrender of all to Him, as on the part of one who recognizes that all is really His.

If you will look at the sixteenth chapter of Luke, you will find the Lord announcing very distinctly this principle. The unjust steward is our picture there,-the picture of those who are (as we all are as to the old creation) under sentence of dismissal from the place they were originally put in, on account of unrighteous dealing in it. Grace has not recalled the sentence, " Thou mayest be no longer steward." It has given us far more, but it has not reinstalled us in the place we have thus lost. Death, in fact, is our removal from our stewardship, although it be the entrance, for us as Christians, into something which must be confessed " far better."

But grace has delayed the execution of the sentence, and meanwhile our Master's goods are in our hand. All that we have here are His things, and not ours. And now God looks for us to be faithful in what is, alas! to men as such (creature of God as indeed it is,) "the mammon of unrighteousness,"-the miserable deity of unrighteous man.

Moreover, grace counts this faithfulness to us. We are permitted to " make friends of this mammon of unrighteousness" by our godly use of it, whereas it is naturally, through our fault, our enemy and our accuser. It must not be imagined that the " unjust steward " is to be our character literally all through. The Lord shows us that this is not so when He speaks of "faithfulness" being looked for. No doubt the unjust steward in the parable acts unjustly with his master's goods, and it must not be imagined that God commends him, it is " his lord " that does so,-man as man admiring the shrewdness which he displayed. Yet only so could be imaged that conduct which in us is not injustice but faithfulness to our Master,-grace entitling us to use what we have received, for our own true and eternal interests, which in this case are one with His own due and glory.

But then there are things also which we may speak of as "our own." What are these? Ah, they are what the Lord speaks of as, after all, " the true riches." " If ye have not been faithful in the unrighteous mammon, who will commit to your trust the true riches? And if ye have not been faithful in that which is Another's, [not 'another man's,' but of course God's,] who will give you that which is your own ? "

Thus our own things are distinct altogether; and I must not tell Christians what they are. I need only remind you that if you have in your thoughts as men down here, a quantity of things, your own possessions, to be liberal with or to hoard up,-in both cases you misapprehend the matter. You have as to things here your Master's goods, which if you hoard up here, you surely lose hereafter, and turn into accusers. On the other hand, you are graciously permitted to transfer them really to your own account, by laying them up amid your treasure, where your treasure is-" in heaven."

The rich man in the solemn illustration at the end of the chapter was one who had made his Lord's " good things " his own after another fashion, and in eternity they were not friends, but enemies and accusers. "Son," says Abraham to him, "remember that thou in thy lifetime receivedst thy good things." That was all, but what a solemn memory it was! How once again the purple and fine linen and sumptuous fare met the eyes they had once gratified and now appalled! Lazarus had been at his gate, but it was not Lazarus that accused. And oh, beware of having things your own down here! There was a man who had " his good things " here, and in eternity what were they to him ?

I know this is not the gospel. No, but it is what, as the principle of God's holy government, the gospel should prepare us to understand and to enter into. Have you observed that the most beautiful and affecting story of gospel grace, the story of the lost son received, is what precedes the story of the unjust steward? The Pharisees who in the fifteenth chapter stand for the picture of the elder son are here rebuked in the person of the rich man. Will not the prodigal received back to a Father's arms be the very one who will understand that he owes his all to a Father's love? Is not "Ye are bought with a price" the gospel? But then "ye are bought:ye are not your own."

Put it in another way. You remember that when God would bring His people out of Egypt, Pharaoh wanted to compromise,-of course by that compromise to keep the people as his slaves. Three separate offers he makes to Moses, each of which would have prevented salvation being, according to God's thought of it, salvation at all. The first compromise was, " Worship in the land."

"And Pharaoh called for Moses and for Aaron, and said, 'Go ye, sacrifice to your God in the land.'"

And still the world asks, "Why need you go outside it? You are entitled to your opinions, but why be so extreme? Why three days' journey into the wilderness? Why separate from what you were brought up in, and from people as good as you?" Ah, they do not know what that three days' journey implies, and that the death and resurrection of Christ place you where you are no more of the world than He is! Egypt,-luxurious, civilized, self-satisfied, idolatrous Egypt,-and the wilderness! what a contrast! Yet only in the wilderness can you sacrifice to God.

Then he tries another stratagem:-

"And he said unto them, ' Go, serve the Lord your God; but who are they that shall go ?'

"And Moses said, ' We will go with our young and with our old, with our sons and with our daughters, with our flocks and with our herds we will go; for we must hold a feast unto the Lord.'

"And he said unto them, ' Let the Lord be so with you, as I will let you go and your little ones:look to it, for evil is before you. Not so:go now ye that are men, and serve the Lord; for that ye did desire.'"

By their little ones he had them safe, of course,- a perfectly good security that they would not go far away. And so it is still. How many are brought back into the world by the children they did not bring with them out of the world!

One last hope remains for Pharaoh:-

"And Pharaoh called unto Moses, and said, ' Go ye, serve the Lord; only let your flocks and your herds be stayed; let your little ones also go with you.'"

"Leave your possessions," he says; and how many leave their possessions! Themselves are saved:but their business, their occupation, these are still not sacred things, they are secular; what have these things to do with the salvation of the soul?

But God says, No:bring them all out of Egypt:yourselves, your families, your property,-all are to be Mine.

And in point of fact, His it must be if we would ourselves keep it, for we cannot keep it of ourselves. The man out of whom the devil went is our Lord's own illustration of the fact that an empty house will never lack a tenant. The sweeping and garnishing and all that, will not keep out the devil, but perhaps only make him more earnest after occupation. Nothing will save from it but the positive possession of it by another, who will not and need not give it up. So we must bring Christ into every thing, or by that in which He is not we shall find we have but made room for another,-Christ's Opposite. The parable has application in many ways and in many degrees to those who are Christ's people, as well as to those who are not. Our really idle hours are not idle. Our useless occupations have a use, if not for Christ, then against Him. Our so-called recreations may be but the frittering away of energy, as well as time, and not only distraction, but the seed of worse distraction.

We are in a world where on every side we are exposed to influences of the most subtle character; where corruption and decay are natural; and where all thus is not permeated by divine life, it becomes the necessary and speedy subject of decay and death. To a beleaguered garrison, a holiday, may be fatal. We cannot ever here ungird our loins or unbuckle our armor. It is not enough to withstand in the evil day; but having done all, still you must stand. So if you leave Christ at the door of the counting-house, you will have to contend alone with (or give place to) the devil within the counting-house.

Does this startle you? does it seem to require too much? It requires that you should be with Christ in constant companionship, at all times and on all occasions. Is that narrow,-a rigid, an uncomfortable view of matters? Does it distress you to think of giving Him such a place as that? There are those who believe that he is the picture of a converted man, who complains he never got a kid to make merry with his friends. Do you realize that? Do you sympathize with such a view? Have you friends that you would like to run away to for a while out of Christ's scrutiny or company? Beloved, when you think of heaven, is it of a long monotony of being " ever with the Lord" ? You startle at that suggestion; and no wonder. But if you will find eternal joy then, and now can think of it as that, to be ever with Him there, is it less happy to think of being always with Him here?

At any rate, you cannot alter the reality by all your thoughts about it. None of our thoughts can change the nature of things. You cannot find in all this world a clean corner in which you can be apart from Christ and yet apart from evil. And if you could, the very idea of being so would of itself pollute it with evil. No; Christ must be a constant Savior as to every detail of our walk and ways. Communion with Him is the only alternative of communion with evil. The wisdom that has not Him in it, will be " earthly, sensual, devilish ;" if it come not from above, come it will from below.

Thus you see how important it is to be right here. It is not a mere question of points of detail; it is a question of truth of heart to Him, which affects every detail,-the whole character and complexion of our lives indeed. So you must not wonder at a question of cattle being concerned with a deeper question of "salvation" itself; looking at salvation as not merely being from wrath and condemnation, but of salvation from the sin also which brings in these. God gives it us thus in the typical picture here, and it is not a blot or deformity in the picture, but rather an essential part. Be persuaded of it, beloved friends, that only thus can we find, in the full power of it, what salvation is.

We have been looking at this from the side of responsibility. Surely it is good to look at it also from the side of salvation. Until you are clean delivered in these three respects, you cannot be happily with God, nor even safe. Of course I am not talking about reaching heaven; you may be safe in that respect. But whatever you have that is not Christ's, that is the world's still, and it will drag you back into the world. You are keeping it back from Him; you have a divided interest; how can this but affect all your intercourse, all your happiness (or what you ought to have) with Him?

Can you go to your business and shut the door upon Him and He not feel it, and you not feel it? Can you say to Him, "Lord, Sunday is Yours and Monday is mine," or "Lord, there is Your tenth, and these nine are mine," and feel perfectly satisfied that all is right with Him?

And practically, it gets to be much less. He gets a part of our superfluity, and that is all. We must dress like our neighbors, live up to our rank of life, put a little by for a " rainy day," and something for our children. " We must be just before we are generous," we think. And then, with some reserve for recreation, and some for miscellaneous trifles, all the rest shall be the Lord's. It may be but a " mite," but did not He accept a mite? So the very narrowness of our dole to the Lord who has saved us links us with her who had His special commendation.

Better keep it all back than give it in that fashion. For the amount given just hinders from realizing where we are. We give it ungrudgingly, perhaps:we think it has the Lord's approval therefore. We do not think how much it is that we can give ungrudgingly.

Ungrudgingly it must be. Love it must be. Though I give all my goods to feed the poor, except it be love that does it, it will be utterly contemned. But if our love is measured by what we give to Him, how serious is the question raised!

In this great world of sorrow and of evil, Christ has interests dear to His heart,-how dear, no one of us has perhaps a notion of. Souls lie in darkness to whom His Word would give light, and in bondage to whom it would bring deliverance. He says to us, " I count upon My people to do this." How can we answer to Him for this confidence He has placed in us? Shall we say, "Lord, I have had to keep up with my neighbors, to provide for the future, to do a great many things, which I thought of more importance"? or shall we say, "Lord, Thou art so great, so high, so powerful, Thou surely canst not want my help in a matter like this!" or, again, "Lord, Thou art so gracious, I am sure Thou wilt accept any thing I may bring:I would not suppose Thee a hard Master, to want me to bring Thee much" ? Alas, what shall we say? Shall we not rather own with broken hearts how little we have valued Him ?

The "doctrine of Balaam" thrives upon the heartlessness of God's own people. Do not let us imagine, because we denounce the mercenary character of what is current all around, that we can have no share in upholding what we denounce. It is far otherwise. If we have given cause, are giving cause, to those who sneer at the advocates of "cheap religion," we are giving it the most effectual possible support. In words, you denounce ; in deeds, you justify. You tell them that it is vain to trust to the power of Christ's love in Christians,-that your own barn is practically dearer to you than all God's house; and they can point to you triumphantly as proof of the necessity of all that they contend for.

Beloved, I have done. I have spoken out my heart, and I must pray you bear with me. Who that looks around with a heart for Christ upon all the abominations practiced in His name but must be led to ask, Did not all this evil spring out of the failure of His own people-of those who at heart loved Him? And further, how far are we perhaps now unsuspectingly helping on the very evils we deplore? Do we not pray for Him to search out our hearts? and shall we shrink from having them searched out? If the search detects nothing, we need not fear it:if it shows us unanticipated evil, it is well to realize that the truthful judgment of the evil is ever the truest blessing for our souls. It will cost us something, no doubt, to walk in what is ever a narrow way. A race, a warfare, call for energy and self-denial. But ah, beloved, it will cost us more, much more, to have Christ walk as a stranger to us because our paths and His do not agree. How few, when they speak of cost, put this into their balance-sheet! Yet, " if I wash thee not," He says, " thou hast no part with Me." Are there not many trying to keep up appearances, when that is the inward trouble of their souls ?

But the door is open, beloved, to came back. He has never shut it. The one thing so greatly lacking now is whole-hearted integrity;-so few without some secret corner in their hearts that they would not like to have searched out by Him. That corner must be searched out, for He must be a Savior after His own fashion; and if we would not have it, we can have little apprehended the fullness and reality of His salvation. Not alone does He save from wrath:He saves from sin. It is in subjection to His yoke that we find rest. From our own will and ways and thoughts, in His blessed will, His thoughts, His love.

God grant it to us for His name's sake, even now. F.W.G. (To be continued.)

  Author: Frederick W. Grant         Publication: Volume HAF5

Fragment

The Word Of God is adapted to man, though he be hostile to it-adapted in grace (blessed be God!) as well as in truth. This is exactly what shows the wickedness of man's will in rejecting it. And it has power thus in the conscience, even if the will be changed. This may increase the dislike of it, but it is disliked because conscience feels it cannot deny the truth. Men resist it because it is true. Did it not reach their conscience, they would not need to take so much pains to get rid of and disprove it. Men do not arm themselves against straws, but against a sword whose edge is felt and feared.- J.N.D.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

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.

  Author: E. S. L.         Publication: Volume HAF5

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.

  Author: Frederick W. Grant         Publication: Volume HAF5

Profits Of Afflictions.

We are told that the Lord "doth not afflict willingly, nor grieve the children of men." It is certain, however, that all those who have been raised up to excel in any thing good, and to be useful among men, have always had an uncommon portion of trials, reproaches, persecutions, and sufferings. But what would have been the consequences to themselves and others had they not experienced these things, or had a less portion of them fallen to their lot? How little of that goodness found in them would have existed had they not had these trials! and how much less useful would they have been to others! Not a particle of trouble or affliction was appointed to them, or permitted to come upon them, but what was necessary for their well-being, or that would turn to their benefit and advantage.

Why was it that the apostle Paul underwent so great afflictions? and why was it that a thorn was given to him in the flesh, the messenger of Satan, to buffet, or (as it signifies) to strike him with the double fist? which was so painful and annoying to him that he "besought the Lord thrice that it might depart from him." The apostle tells us the reason why this grievous trial was permitted to him. "Lest" says he "I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of the revelations." How good and beneficial, then, was this affliction to the apostle, though painful and distressing to him in the extreme. And so it will be with every trial and affliction that shall come upon a sincere person. They all tend to his benefit and advantage, and are permitted to come upon him only for his furtherance in what is right, and are but evidences of the Lord's gracious and merciful intentions toward him. No truth is more certain or more fully supported by scriptures than this. " For whom the Lord loveth" says the apostle, " He chasteneth ; " and he tells us, moreover, that He chastens us "for our profit, that we may be partakers of His holiness." Hence it is that the Scriptures so repeatedly speak of the blessedness of trials and afflictions, and so many under the New-Testament dispensation have been enabled to rejoice in them. " My brethren," says the apostle James, " count it all joy when ye fall into divers trials, knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience. But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing." The apostle Paul also exhorts to be "patient in tribulation," and in writing to the Romans says, " We glory in tribulation also; knowing that tribulation worketh patience; and patience, experience; and experience, hope."

The apostle Paul, after he learned for what reason the messenger of Satan was permitted to buffet him, says in reference to it, " Most gladly, therefore, will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me. Therefore, I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in distresses for Christ's sake; for when I am weak, then am I strong." (2 Cor. 12:10.)

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

Prayer.

The more spiritual the soul is, the more prayer-ful it will be, because it is then the most occupied in heart and desire about the things of God. Our prayers will be few and feeble if our walk with God be of a low character. If we have narrow views of God and His purposes, our prayers will be also narrow and confined. If we are unstable, unbelieving, and unspiritual, our prayers may return unanswered. Faith, a good conscience, a large heart, knowledge of the mind and will of God, and a sense of our utter weakness, are the proper prerequisites of prayer. Not many words are needed:the desires of the Spirit in our hearts, with groanings that cannot be uttered, God will attend to. He that searcheth the heart, and knoweth the mind of the Spirit, will give heed to the feeblest cry. It is far more important to consider the condition of our souls, and the truthfulness of our requests, than the mode of utterance or form of speech. In prayer, we have to do with the divine ear, and not with man's.

  Author:  UNKNOWN         Publication: Volume HAF5

One Touch.

One touch-one little, scarce-felt touch-
Amid so many! 'Twill only be as though
A leaf had fluttered down upon His robe
From one of these tall sycamores,-as though
One snowflake more had fallen noiselessly
Upon those far, calm heights of Lebanon,
So light, so gentle !And for me-for me
It will be life! The Master will not know;
And I shall lay aside this weight of woe,-
This vestiture of hopeless suffering,
Which hath been mine so long, and shall be whole.
I will not wait, methinks, to kneel to Him,
Till the great multitudes have passed away;
Though in the twilight, when the shadows fall,
Unnoticed I might creep unto His feet;
Nay, I will touch His sacred raiment now;
How many have been straightway healed thus !
It may be with that touch I shall be whole.
The Master will not know that one so vile,
So sin-defiled, is near. I need not fear-
The quivering palm-leaves will not tell Him,
Nor the sycamores which grow beside the way:
I think God set them there lest the hot sun
Should smite upon His Servants's face to-day."

So she came nearer-mingled among those
Who followed closest round Him in the crowd.
A moment more, and her worn hand had touched
The border of His robe :its azure hem
Lay for one moment 'neath those fingers frail,
Which came in contact with its wondrous blue
So quick, so tremblingly !And then she knew,
With one wild throb of joy, that she was whole !
But straightway wonderingly the Master turned,
And looking on the eager, restless crowd
Which pressed around His sacred form,
He asked, "Who touched My clothes?"
Then, heeding not their words,
Nor yet the questionings of those He loved,
He sought her where she stood, and looked on her
With one sweet look, which told her He knew all;
And bade her, irresistibly, to rise
And come to Him. Yes, He knew all. As well
Might mother be unconscious that the babe,
O'er which in speechless agony she bent
To see it die, was given back to her
By God ; as well might she not heed its smile,
Nor yet the first light touch upon her cheek
Of the small baby-fingers. So she came-
Rejoicingly, yet tremblingly, she came-
And, kneeling low at His dear feet, she told
How great had been His grace. And then, in words

Which breathed naught but tenderness, He filled
Yet fuller to the brim her cup of joy-
Sealing her trembling gladness with His word,
" Thy faith hath made the whole :go in peace."

J.S.P.

  Author: J. S. P.         Publication: Volume HAF5