George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
December 16
Contrasted Environments
I was in the isle that is called Patmos
I was in the Spirit--Rev 1:9-10
The two brief texts which I have chosen
suggest the two environments of life, and do so in a very vivid way. For John,
the one environment was Patmos, a rugged and inhospitable island where the
sound of the breakers was never far away and everything was desolate and
dreary. But along with that there was another, unseen and yet intensely vivid,
for John says, I was in the Spirit. He was moving in a spiritual world, living
in heavenly places with Christ Jesus. He was engirdled by the love of heaven
and by all the promises of God. And there is one very delightful little touch
that reveals to the discerning heart which was the real environment for John.
He does not tell us that he was in Patmos. He says he was in the isle that is
called Patmos. He had heard that name upon the lips of others, and he took it
upon their authority. But, he adds, I was in the Spirit. He needed no one's
authority for that. In this environment he was at home.
It is instructive to contrast these two
environments which have their parallels in every life. We note, for instance,
that one of them was visible and the other unseen by any human eye. When John
awakened in the morning, we can picture the scene that broke upon his
vision--the stem hills, the debris of the mines, the waves washing on the
barren shore. It was a desolate and dreary prospect, made more so by the sea,
for no Jew ever loved the sea. Had that been all, what a profound depression
would have settled down on the apostle's heart! But the beautiful thing is that
the moment he awoke he was conscious of another environment than that. And the
question for all of us is this, are we alive to that unseen engirdling when we
waken to the duties of the day? There are many people who feel a deep
depression when the routine morning breaks on them again. They have to drag
themselves out: they see nothing before them but drudgery. But what a profound
difference it makes when, with the returning of the daylight, we waken to the
spiritual environment! Still we are in Patmos. It is by the will of heaven that
we are there. I pray not, says the Lord, that Thou wouldst take them out of the
world. But the dreariest Patmos becomes bearable when the life is hid with
Christ in God. I was in Patmos ... I was in the Spirit.
Imprisoned and Yet at Liberty
Again, I note that the one environment was
not of the apostle's choosing; the other depended on himself. If John had had
the ordering of his ways, he certainly never would have chosen Patmos. He was
an old man now--his years were ebbing out--he had reached the period when rest
is sweet. He was quietly happy in his home at Ephesus, and there he had the
society of Christians. Then suddenly the mighty arm of Rome had gripped him and
carried him to exile--and he was in the isle that is called Patmos. A greater
power than he had sent him there; it was not the place of his desire. There was
no resisting that iron arm of Rome--to it the individual was as nothing. And
then in Patmos, his forced dwelling place, John moved freely into another
world, for he kept himself within the love of God. He was imprisoned and yet he
was at liberty, for where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty. In the
bitter bondage of his exile, the Son had made him free. The sharp contrast
between life's compulsion and the heart that triumphs in the midst of it, is
all in these two little sentences, "I was in Patmos...I was in the
Spirit."
For as it was with John, so is it with
every one of us: there is an element of necessity in life. We do not choose the
country of our birth, nor our parents, nor the homes where we are cradled. We
do not choose the schools where we are educated, nor perhaps the particular
places where we dwell. But how we live there, in what atmosphere, environed by
what unseen presences, all that is within the compass of our will. In Patmos we
may be in the Spirit, and the fruit of the Spirit is love and joy and peace. We
can have liberty and rest in Patmos, though we be set there by grim necessity.
How many dream that life would be far richer if they only had the wings of a
dove to flee away! But--"I was in Patmos ... I was in the Spirit."
Amid Criminals and Yet "In the
Spirit"
I note in closing that in these two
environments there was the contrast of loneliness and company. Amid the
desperate and hardened criminals incarcerated on this island, John was more
lonely than had he been alone. In the one environment he was a solitary: in the
other he had a vision of the Lord. He was in living touch with an ascended
Savior. He had a Friend who understood. And that made all the difference to him
as it makes all the difference to us amid the enforced loneliness of life. Even
Patmos became bearable for John when he realized that Christ was there. He
would move among these desperadoes as a man who has a satisfying secret. They
were in Patmos, and they hated it. There was no other environment for them. Is
there another environment for you ?
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