THE SECRET OF TRUE PEACE
"Let not your heart be troubled."--John
14:1.
The
world is full of troubled hearts; for it is full of imperfection, directly
or indirectly the result of sin and its death penalty, which for 6,000 years
has been preying upon our race, impairing our mental, moral and physical powers
and bringing us instead depravity, disappointment, sorrow and pain. If each
of us only had his own burdens he would have too much for his strength; but
additionally each is in touch with others in life, in the home, in business,
in society, in all of life's affairs; and his own weaknesses and blemishes
are augmented and his troubles increased by his contact with the idiosyncrasies
of others, their troubles, blemishes and peculiarities --mental, moral and
physical. Well did the Apostle write, "The whole creation groaneth and
travaileth in pain together." Well did the Prophet write, "Man that
is born of woman is of few years and full of trouble." --Rom.
8:22; Job
14:1.
None
know more respecting the burdens of life than do sympathetic physicians, attorneys
and ministers. The groaning creation in the time of its special perplexity
and anguish, physical, mental and moral, turns to those whose knowledge of
balms, physical and spiritual, and of legal relief are loopholes through which
the light of hope streams in a little upon the troubled soul. These three
professions, therefore, are esteemed to be amongst the most honorable and
most beneficial known; and where backed by sympathy and love they are sure
to accomplish much good, to afford great relief, to inspire new hopes. But
alas, not all physicians, not all lawyers, not all ministers are actuated
by love and sympathy! Without judging them individually we are safe to suppose
that like the remainder of the race, these men, possessing the highest opportunities
in the world for the relief of their fellows, are sharers in general of the
selfishness that has developed in the hearts of men as part of the fruitage
of sin, as a result of its partial destruction of the Divine likeness in which
man was created--a perfect image, in the flesh, of God--the God of love, "the
God of all grace."
"WONDERFUL WORDS OF LIFE"
Our
text was part of our Lord's message to His disciples just before His crucifixion.
Himself bowed with grief and exceeding sorrowful in anticipation of the shame
of the death He was about to suffer, our Lord's thoughts and comforting words
went forth to His disciples, who were perplexed and distressed. Hiding his
own sorrow He comforted them, and thus has set an example to all of His followers
who, walking in His steps and imitating Him, are at once in the world good
physicians, expounders of the Divine Law and ministers of the Divine Law of
Love. Indeed, however much we appreciate the miracles wrought by our Lord--the
healing of the sick, the awakening of the dead, the opening of the blind eyes
and deaf ears--that which appeals to us as the most wonderful manifestation
is His teaching, His doctrine. Truly did some of His day say, "Never
man spake like this man" (John
7:46); and again, "And all bare Him witness, and wondered at the
gracious words that proceeded out of His mouth"--"Beautiful words,
wonderful words of life."--Luke
4:22.
And
so must it be with the footstep-followers of Jesus. Our Lord might have spent
all of His time and all of His energy in healing the sick, in awakening the
dead. But this was not His mission. He merely in these miracles gave evidence
of the power of God residing in Him, and foreshadowed the blessings yet to
come to the world at His Second Advent--Times of Refreshing that then would
come, "Times of Restitution of all things spoken by the mouth of all
the holy Prophets since the world began." (Acts
3:19-21.) At the Pool of Bethesda were multitudes waiting for healing,
but our Lord healed only one; for this was sufficient for His purpose, and
not because of lack of sympathy. The due time had not yet come for the healing
of the woes and difficulties of the world. Those whose interest was awakened
by the physical healing had their attention promptly drawn to the Lord's readiness
to heal all the broken-hearted, to give the oil of joy for the spirit of heaviness,
and to awaken those dead in trespasses and sins to a newness of life through
faith.--Isa.
61:1-3.
Similarly
all the footstep-followers of Jesus are commissioned as His representatives
to tell the Message of Good Tidings to all who have ears to hear--to announce
to such the Divine Program, that as sin and death came by one man's disobedience,
so a redemption has been accomplished by another, by "the Man Christ
Jesus, who gave Himself a Ransom for all, to be testified in due time."
(1
Tim. 2:5,6.) They are authorized to do the work of a good physician and
to bind up the broken-hearted. They are authorized as lawyers versed in the
Law of God to point out to those willing to hear that sin, the violation of
the Divine Law, has brought all the havoc upon our race which causes countless
thousands to mourn. They are authorized further to point out that Jesus our
Lord gave Himself a full Ransom-price, meeting the demands of the broken Law;
and that thus it is possible for all who have turned from sin, and who are
seeking to come back into harmony with God and His perfect Law of Love, to
approach Him through Christ as their Advocate, and to realize that they are
no longer condemned, but justified freely from all things through their faith
in their Redeemer and Advocate.
They
are further authorized as ministers of the Gospel, the Royal Priesthood, to
point out to those who have the hearing ear that the reconciliation accomplished
by our Lord Jesus not only covers our sins of the past, but also covers weaknesses
and imperfections of the present and of the future for the believer to the
extent that these are involuntary, disapproved, striven against. They are
authorized in the Master's name to assure all such that "the Father Himself
loveth you"; that "all things are working together for good to those
that love God, the called ones according to His purpose"; and that eventually
through the glorified Christ, Head and Body, Bridegroom and Bride, a blessed
opportunity for reconciliation to God under the terms of the New Covenant
are to be extended to "all the families of the earth"--including
those who have gone down into the great prison-house of death without having
had a full, proper knowledge of the Lord and of His Plan, such as the death
of Christ has guaranteed that all shall have ere they could die the Second
Death.--John
16:27; Rom.
8:28.
"BIND UP THE BROKEN-HEARTED"
Thus
seen the Lord's consecrated Little Flock, the Royal Priesthood, have even
in the present time gracious opportunities for serving the brethren and such
of the world as have hearing ears and a desire to become of the "brethren"
class. It is not true that God gave a commission to His ambassadors to go
through life breaking the hearts of their fellow-men. On the contrary, the
commission reads that those members of the Body of Christ who have received
the anointing of the Holy Spirit from the Lord Jesus, their Head, are commissioned
to bind up the broken-hearted, to comfort all that mourn in Zion, to preach
the acceptable year of the Lord.
If
some are disposed to object that the comforting of mourners and the binding
of broken hearts imply that God's ministers, servants of the Truth, are first
of all to break the hearts, to cause the mourning, we answer, No! It is not
thus written, and we are not to add to the Word of God. Various agencies are
at work all about us, doing the heart-breaking and the wounding. It is for
us to receive so much of the Lord's spirit that so far as possible we shall
break no hearts, wound none, but on the contrary do all in our power to effect
the proper healing of such as are within the range of our influence. Sin is
breaking the hearts of thousands. Disappointment in themselves, in their own
ambitions, in their own efforts, disappointment in their friends, in business,
in pleasure-- all of these are doing the wounding and the breaking. So many
more hearts are troubled and broken that the Lord's people can possibly heal
that we can rest well content to do the work which the Master gave us to do,
and to leave to the Adversary and those who are in outer darkness of sin and
ignorance of the Lord and His Spirit to do the heart-breaking.--Isa.
42:16.
In
our understanding the Scriptures teach that a great Time of Trouble is near
at hand--the great final trouble of this world's history, in which, during
a period of anarchy unparalleled, all human hopes and ambitions will utterly
fail. As the Scriptures declare, "There shall be a Time of Trouble such
as was not since there was a nation--no, nor ever shall be afterward."
(Dan.
12:1; Matt.
24:21.) That great trouble, as the Scriptures point out, will be the result
of selfishness reaching its limit, becoming ripe and going to seed. The world
has always been selfish; but according to the Scriptures and according to
our observation, this spirit of greed and selfishness is extending more and
more widely, and impressing almost every member of the race. Eventually it
will be true, as the Scriptures describe, that "every man's hand will
be against his neighbor" with the result that there will be "no
peace to him that goeth out or to him that cometh in."--Zech.
8:10.
The
world, ignorant of God and of the Plan He has prepared for the blessing of
all the nations during the Millennium, will feel the Time of Trouble most
keenly. But the Scriptures give us to understand that their sorrows, woes
and heart-breakings will eventually be favorable to them, so that that general
plowing of the world with the plowshare of trouble and the perplexity of that
time, when all its hopes will be dissipated, will work for good to them eventually,
and draw their attention away from the false hopes which many of them had
long been vainly chasing--to the better, the true hope which the Lord has
provided, the center of which is Christ's Kingdom and the ground of which
is His Ransom-sacrifice at Calvary.--1
Tim. 2:5,6.
THE FUTURE WORK OF BLESSING
How
wise is the Divine arrangement that those who are to be associated with the
Lord Jesus during His Millennial Reign in the work of uplifting and helping
mankind over their difficulties and out of their various degradations are
to be the same ones who gain practise in this matter now by binding up the
broken hearts of the comparatively few, and who have the ear to hear and the
desire to respond to the grace of God during this Gospel Age. Thus we see
illustrated the statement elsewhere given us in the Scriptures that we are
in the School of Christ, in preparation for future usefulness. Thus we see
that, as physicians and nurses are given a training for their future work,
so those whom the Lord has called to the glorious "Royal Priesthood"
of the future for the blessing of mankind are now given a practise-work in
their own hearts, in their own families, amongst their own kin and in the
Household of Faith.
What
a thought, that our future graduation and the possibility of our sharing in
the Kingdom work is dependent upon how we shall learn now the art of binding
up the broken hearts of those with whom we are in contact! Not that the skill
is the important matter, but the love. He who loves much and who now sees
the broken and troubled hearts around him will be led to "do good to
all men as he may have opportunity, but especially to the Household of Faith."
If, on the contrary, his love and sympathy do not go out toward these troubled
ones, if his best energies are spent on money-making or in some other selfish
channel, how dwelleth the love of God in him? Let us remember the words of
Scripture, "The Lord your God doth prove you whether ye do love the Lord
your God with all your heart or not." (Deut.
13:3.) For, as the Apostle tells us, he who loveth not his brother whom
he hath seen, how can he love God, whom he hath not seen? (1
John 4:20.) The test then upon us all is Love--"He that dwelleth
in love dwelleth in God, and he that loved not is not begotten of God."
Here
we note that, with sympathetic minds, some are improperly, injuriously binding
up broken hearts. It has become the general message of what is termed the
New Thought and the New Theology that there is no exclusiveness in God's Plan--that
all mankind are children of God, that our Lord Jesus made a great mistake
when He declared to some, "Ye are of your father the Devil." (John
8:44.) It has become with many a stock phrase, the "Fatherhood of
God and the brotherhood of man." But we warn all that there is no Scriptural
authority for such teaching, but that on the contrary they are drawing away
the hearts of men from the good Physician and the Divinely given balm; for
"there is none other name given under Heaven and amongst men whereby
we must be saved," but the name of Jesus. There is none other, therefore,
qualified to speak true peace to the troubled soul or to properly bind up
the broken heart.
"ONLY JESUS WOULD I KNOW AND JESUS
CRUCIFIED"
Our
Lord forewarned us of these various theories of salvation through another
channel than that which God has provided. He declared Himself to be the only
Door into the sheepfold, and that all who attempt to get into it otherwise
are thieves and robbers--that no man can come unto the Father save through
Him. (John
14:6.) We therefore warn against every theory which attempts to present
mercy and restoration to Divine favor otherwise than through faith in Christ's
sacrifice. And we denounce as unscriptural all those teachings, growing increasingly
prevalent because of the Evolution theory, which present the thought that
there was no original sin, no original sentence, and hence no need of a Redeemer
and no need of an uplift by Restitution, such as God has promised and made
provision for, and which He assures us will be accomplished during the Millennial
Age, when Satan shall be bound. We hold forth as God's olive branch, as His
message of peace, the invitation that all the "called" may come
unto the Father through the Redeemer--through the merit of His sacrifice,
and, coming, may realize their sins forgiven, their restoration to Divine
favor, the Lord's loving interest in all of their affairs, and His willingness
and ability to make all things work together for their good, and His promise
that, if faithful, ultimately they shall be made sharers with their Lord in
the blessings of the resurrection of the just-- glory, honor and immortality;
and that by and by, during the Millennium, all those now blind and deaf may
taste of Divine grace.
Another
error which we should warn against is that of acceptance of Jesus and a hope
in Him contrary to the presentation of the Scriptures. Some tell us that they
reject the thought that Jesus died to be man's Redeemer, but that they, nevertheless,
accepted Christ as their Teacher and Example. Our reply is that as our Teacher
the Master taught us that He "came into the world to give His life a
Ransom for many"--for all. If His life was not a Ransom, or Corresponding-Price,
then He falsified in so stating; and those who believe that He did falsify
could not consider Him a proper teacher. Furthermore, if He came into the
world merely to be our Exemplar and not to be our Redeemer, our Ransomer,
then His mission was a failure; for no one since His coming has been able
to follow the example He set. To view our Lord as merely as Example for proper
living for the world would be an absurdity, since no one of the fallen race
can possibly live up to the perfect standard which our Lord set in sacrificing
all of His rightful interests as a man.--Matt.
20:28.
The
Scriptures present the opposite view--that mankind are all imperfect through
the fall, and under the death sentence; and that "Jesus Christ by the
grace of God tasted death for every man"--"gave Himself a Ransom
for all, to be testified in due time." They teach that this sacrifice
for the sin of Adam, and applicable through him to the sins of the whole world,
was necessary for the meeting of the Divine sentence before Divine forgiveness
and restoration to eternal life and favor would be possible. They represent
that for the majority of mankind such a restoration will be effected during
the Millennial Age. They represent that to a very small minority, even "as
many as the Lord your God shall call," our Lord was not only a Redeemer
but an Exemplar: that these called to a separation from the world to walk
in the narrow way of self-sacrifice are to copy Christ's example as far as
possible, though admittedly they will never be able to come up to His standards.
The Scriptures assure us that the best endeavors of this class, covered by
the merit of Christ's sacrifice, will be acceptable and reckoned to them as
though they were perfect sacrifices, and that thus they may have their share
with their Redeemer in the glory, honor and immortality of His Kingdom, and
be participants with Him in the great work of bestowing upon the world during
the Millennium the blessing of Divine forgiveness and favor secured through
the sacrifice of Christ.
"YOUR HEARTS NOT TROUBLED"
We
come finally to the application of our text to the Apostles and those who
have believed through their word. The hearts of these are not to be troubled
under any circumstances. They are no longer of the world, because separated
from the world through their acceptance of the Lord and His acceptance of
them. While still sharers in the trials, difficulties of the world in general,
these have now the consolations of the Scriptures to offset these troubles
and to make of them "light afflictions"--not worthy to be compared
with the glories promised to be revealed in us. (2
Cor. 4:17; Rom.
8:18.) Indeed, it is not an unusual thing for the Lord to permit trials
and difficulties to come upon His faithful much more severe than those which
fall to the lot of the world.--Heb.
12:6-11; Rev.
3:19.
Yea,
as the Apostle says, so it should be with us all that "none of these
things move me"--none of these experiences in life cause anxious thought.
Why? The Apostle tells us, "Because the love of God is shed abroad in
our hearts." (Acts
20:24; Rom.
5:5.) We have not only learned that God has forgiven our sins, that He
is our Father and our best friend, that He is merciful to our imperfections,
that He has called us to glory and association with our Redeemer, but that
these blessings are to be ours at the Second Coming of our Lord, the resurrection
of the just and the establishment of the Kingdom. Additionally also, we have
now the peace, the joy, the blessed hope which these gracious promises afford.
These the world can neither give nor take away.
What
wonder if the hearts of this class are not troubled! Their Father knoweth
the things they have need of. Day by day they are learning more distinctly
than ever before that He who cares for the sparrows and for their necessities,
He who clothes the grass of the field, is much more interested in them, will
be much more careful of their interests, so that figuratively speaking not
one hair of their heads could fall without Divine attention. "Nothing
shall by any means hurt you," is the Master's assurance. (Luke
10:19.) Why then should we be troubled? Surely anxiety on the part of
such would be a lack of faith, a lack of confidence, or else ignorance of
the Divine promises, character and arrangement.