George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
December 19
The Setting of the Pearl
The book of the generation of Jesus
Christ--Mat 1:1
The Fact of Jesus--Mark's Gospel
It is generally agreed that the Gospel of
St. Mark is the earliest of the four Gospels, and it is notable that in this
earliest Gospel there is no genealogy at all. St. Mark does not give the
ancestry of Christ, nor does he say a word about His lineage. He stands beside
the flowing river, and never seeks to trace it to its source. St. Mark, from
the very outset, has his gaze fixed upon the Savior, and brings the reader face
to face with Him. There is no attempt to explain the fact of Christ, by relating
it to the long past. All that will come in season, for unrelated facts can
never satisfy. The first thing is to have Jesus shown us, to be confronted with
Him as a living person, and that is the divine office of St. Mark.
His Relation to the Old Testament--St.
Matthew's Gospel
But just because man is a reasonable being
he can never find rest in isolated facts. And in the next Gospel, the Gospel of
St. Matthew, you have our Lord related to the past. St. Mark plunges into the
heart of things. He confronts you with the Savior. He says: "If you want
to understand the Lord the first thing is to fix your gaze on Him." Then
St. Matthew takes that isolated fact, and traces it back to David and to
Abraham; Christ is "the son of David, the son of Abraham" (Mat 1:1).
St. Matthew is thinking out what Christ implies, the Christ who had changed his
life down to the deeps, and the great truth which dawns on him is this, that it
takes David and Abraham to comprehend Him. In other words, St. Matthew says
that if you want to understand the Lord, you must take in the whole of Jewish
history. To St. Matthew, Christ is the crown of Jewish history. Without Him it
is inexplicable. It was to Him that the sacrifices pointed. It was of Him that
all the prophets wrote. That is why, for all its difficulties, we never can
dispense with the Old Testament. Christ is the son of David, who is the son of
Abraham.
His Relation to Adam--Luke's Gospel
Then you come to the Gospel of St. Luke, and
in St. Luke you have a larger setting. St. Luke does not trace the lineage to
Abraham. He traces it right back to Adam: "which was the son of Seth,
which was the son of Adam" (Luk 3:38). Beyond the parent of the Jewish
race stands the parent of the human race. Beyond the representative of Israel
stands the representative of man. And St. Luke sees that to comprehend the Lord
calls for more than the history of Israel; it calls for the long story of
humanity. Much in Christ will always be unintelligible, unless you know the
page of the Old Testament. But it takes more than the page of the Old Testament
to reach His full significance. Christ is the son of Adam, says St. Luke. He is
vitally related to humanity. He is in living touch with all mankind. St. Matthew
says: "If you want to understand Him, you must lay your hand upon the
Jewish heart."
St. Luke says: "If you want to
understand Him, you must lay your hand upon the human heart." And one of
the beautiful features of St. Luke's Gospel is the stress it lays upon that
larger setting--on Christ as the Savior of mankind. The Gospel is full of
tender human touches, such touches as make the whole world kin. Roman officers
march across its avenues. The Good Samaritan is there. In the Christ of St. Luke
there is neither Jew nor Greek, barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free. He is the
son of Adam.
His Relation to God--John's Gospel
Lastly we come to the Gospel of St. John,
the last of the four Gospels, written after years of ceaseless brooding on
everything the Lord had meant. How then does St. John begin? What is the
lineage he gives? Is he content to trace Christ back to Abraham, or to set Him
in relationship to Adam? "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was
with God, and the Word was God, and the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among
us." St. Mark gives the fact of Christ, and bids us start by contemplating
that. St. Matthew relates that fact to Jewish history; St. Luke to the whole
history of man. Then comes St. John, after the lapse of years, and says,
"All that-is not enough. If you want to understand the Lord you must
relate Him immediately to God." That is the final setting--that the
ultimate relationship. The glory of the Man St. John had known is that of the
only-begotten of the Father. He comes from Abraham. He comes from Adam. Yes,
says St. John, but there is another lineage: "the Word was with God, and
the Word was God, and the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us."
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