George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
December 20
The Wise Men and the Star
There came wise men from the east to
Jerusalem, saying, Where is he that is born King of the Jews? for we have seen
his star in the east, and are come to worship him--Mat 2:1-2
God Speaks Our Language
One of the first lessons of this passage is
that God speaks to men in ways they can understand. These Chaldeans had been
stargazers from childhood; the study of the nightly heavens was their passion.
They had watched the stars with a patience and an accuracy such as are never
suffered to go unrewarded. And now by the aid of the stars they loved so well
and on which they had meditated with such unwearied devotion, they are brought
to the feet of the Infant in the manger. The shepherds were not Chaldeans, they
were Jews. They had been trained in the doctrines of the angels. I dare say
they never went out to the pasture at night without hoping to see some shimmer
of angel's wings. So it was by the long expected voice of angels that the
shepherds received the tidings of the Christ. But the Chaldeans had not learned
the lore of angels; it was the lore of stars they were familiar with; God spake
to the separate companies in separate voices, but the voices were those that
each could understand. That is always true. His voice is as the sound of many
waters. He is a Father, and you never heard of a father who took his children
on his knee and answered their questions in Latin or in Greek. We shall never
understand the Bible truly, nor shall we ever value aright all that we learned
in childhood, until we have grasped this simple yet profound truth, that God
speaks to men in ways they can understand.
People Led to Christ in Unlikely Ways
Another lesson of this passage is the
unlikely ways in which men may be led to Jesus. We know that the prophets
pointed to Jesus; so did the law--Christ was the end of the law. So did the
sacrifices on the Jewish altars, and the stern summons to repentance of the
Baptist. All these things were intended and adapted to guide men into the
presence of Messiah, and multitudes journeyed to His presence so. But a
star--do you think that was a likely leader? Is that the duty and the function
of a star? Yet by a star, as surely as by the angels, were men conducted to
Bethlehem. Let us be taught, then, that by unlooked-for ways men may be led to
light and love and liberty. Let us never limit the power of the Almighty in
opening up avenues to Jesus' feet. There are men who have heard a thousand
sermons, and been deaf to the whole range of evangelical appeal, who have yet
been won for Christ by a stray word in passing, or by some act of
self-sacrificing kindness. There are women whom all the praise of the sanctuary
has not moved, but who have been turned to God by the ceasing of childish
laughter. The star is a type of the strange and unlooked-for ways in which men
are led to the feet of Jesus Christ.
The Intense Curiosity of the Wise Men
A third lesson of this passage is the
intense curiosity of these men about the King. Nothing would satisfy them but
that they must leave home and kindred, and set out on a long and toilsome
journey, and brave a hundred dangers on the road, all for the sake of
worshipping Christ. Had it been a king of the whole East who had been promised
them, I could have better understood their curiosity. For there is a strong
desire in the heart of a loyal subject to get a glimpse of his own future sovereign.
But it was not a king of Chaldea they were seeking--"Where is He that is
called King of the Jews?" And when I think of that passionate inquiry for
the unknown monarch of an alien race, and how they traveled hundreds of miles
to see Him--and how they troubled Jerusalem about Him, and would not be baffled
nor beaten in the search, I am amazed at the mysterious interest excited by the
new-born Savior. The strange thing is that from that hour to this, that
curiosity has never died away. In the whole of history Jesus is the supremely
fascinating figure. More thoughts are directed to Jesus in one day than to
Caesar or Napoleon in ten years. More books are written about Jesus now than
about any hundred of earth's greatest men. There is an inexplicable mystery and
charm about that simple Galilean figure; and the world is still as curious
about Him as were the wise men when they saw His star.
Anxious Inquiries by Those Far Away
Again, the most anxious inquirers about
Jesus were men who were very far away from Him. I wish you to compare these
pilgrims from the East with the men gathered in the inn at Bethlehem. The
Chaldeans were many a long mile away, and the company in the inn were at the
manger. Yet it was not the latter band, it was the former, who were eager about
the newborn Savior.
There were ninety-and-nine that safely lay
In the shelter of the
fold,
But some were out on the hills away,
Far off from the gates
of gold.
Away on the mountains wild and bare,
Away from the tender
shepherd's care--
yet who were the nearest to Jesus Christ
that night--was it not those who were so far away? That is a parable of what
often happens. At home, in the bosom of a Christian country, we are always in
danger of careless unconcern. We are exposed to that worst indifference that
springs from the dying of the sense of wonder. Meantime, from distant countries
like Chaldea, come tidings of the kingdom being taken by violence. Once again
the most anxious seekers are men whom we should say were far away.
The Apparent Insignificance of What They
Found
Lastly, let us not fail to observe the
apparent insignificance of what they found. When the Queen of Sheba set out
from Arabia, and entered with her fine retinue into Jerusalem, she saw such
lavish glory there that her heart sank under the wonder of it. But when the
wise men from the East came to the inn, expecting perhaps some sight of royal
majesty, they found in happy innocence--a Child. I wonder if they felt a touch
of disappointment? Was it worthwhile to make that tedious journey, and
this--this little Babe--the end of it? We know now that it was well worthwhile;
that Infant of days was the eternal Lord. So there come times to everyone of us
when we are tempted to ask, "Is all our effort worthwhile?" We pray
and serve and struggle through the darkness, and the end of it all seems (as it
were) a manger. But for us, too, the eternal dawn is coming when the King in
His beauty shall meet us with a welcome; and I think we shall find then, like
the wise men from the East, that the journey to Bethlehem was well worthwhile.
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