George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
December 7
What to Do With Our Cares
Casting all your care upon him; for he
careth for you. Be sober, be vigilant.--1Pe 5:7-8
The cares of which the apostle speaks were
those associated with persecution. He was writing to those who might, at any
moment, be exposed to the fury of the populace. A great deal of pagan trade was
intimately bound up with idolatry. Wherever the Gospel came and took a grip, it
began to interfere with trade. And for that, as for many other reasons,
Christians were never safe. Their life was one of continuous anxiety. Such
anxieties are gone now where the populace is nominally Christian. But care
remains, haunting the human heart and robbing life of the gladness of the
sunshine. And so to us, in a land that is called Christian as well as to those
sojourners in paganism, comes the message of the great apostle. The question,
then, for all of us is this: How does a man cast his care on God? That I should
answer by asking another question: How does a man cast his care on anybody? Our
Lord was very fond of that procedure, arguing from the lesser to the greater,
and reaching heavenly things through things of earth.
We Cast Our Cares on Someone by Relying
on Him
In human life, then, we cast our cares on
anybody when we confidently rely on him. We can illustrate that by the captain
of a ship. When a wild storm falls upon a vessel, the passengers are naturally
anxious. Children cry; women begin to tremble; men look grave and often become
silent. And then they see the captain on the bridge relaxed, smiling as he
talks to his officer, and they remember he never lost a ship and is reputed the
finest captain in the service. The moment they see that their anxieties begin
to vanish. Trusting the captain when the storm is raging, they find that they
have cast their cares on him. And whenever anyone trusts God and quietly puts
his confidence in God, he awakens to the same discovery. "Thou wilt keep
him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on Thee," and then the prophet
adds, "because he trusteth in Thee." Trust is the great antidote to
care. It is by simple, quiet, unswerving confidence that we cast our cares on
anybody, and just so do we cast our cares on God.
By Talking We Share Our Care
Once again we cast our cares on anybody
when we go to him and talk things over frankly. That is one of the benefits of
friendship. The chief office of friendship, says Lord Bacon, is the ease and
discharge of the swellings of the heart. And then he adds that the man who has
no friend is a cannibal of his own heart. That is to say, he eats his heart out
because he has no one to whom he can resort to speak of the anxieties that gnaw
him. People often approach me for advice, and frequently go away without it.
And yet they thank me when they go away and say that everything looks different
now. You see, what has helped them isn't my advice; it is just that they have
talked the matter over with one who feels for them and is a friend. Friendship
is like a lancet; it opens the abscesses which are very painful. And as it is
with a true friend on earth, so is it with our truest Friend in heaven. When we
go to Him and tell Him all, opening our hearts to Him in quiet communion, how
wonderfully do we discover that we have really cast our cares on Him! Be
careful for nothing, says St. Paul, but in everything let your requests be made
known unto God. And then what happens? Are your requests granted? The wise
apostle says nothing about that. But he does say, and it is always true, that
the peace of God which passeth understanding shall keep your hearts and minds
through Jesus Christ.
In Faithful Duty We Find Security
Once again we cast our cares on anybody
when we do our duty by him faithfully. I think of the public servants of
Glasgow Corporation. The dustmen who pass my windows in the morning have their
cares just like other men. They are married and have to feed and clothe their
wives and children. And yet so long as they do their duty faithfully, they have
no need to worry about that. They cast their cares upon the Corporation. Is not
that precisely what our Savior meant when He was speaking about care and worry?
"Seek ye first the kingdom of God, and all these things shall be added
unto you." Put God first, be loyal to Him daily, live for the happy
service of the kingdom, and will God do less than the Glasgow Corporation? If
any man is living for self, he has no warrant to cast his care on God. But if
he lives for service and not self, he can lean his weight upon the word of
Jesus. There is a deeper meaning than we think of in that word of our Lord
beside the well, "My meat is to do the will of him that sent me."
What Does God Expect of us?
And then when our cares are cast on God,
what kind of life does God expect of us? It is here that Peter displays a
heavenly wisdom, for he says, "Be sober and be watchful." It is a
perilous thing to have a load of cares. It is fraught with manifold temptation.
It may make a husband very cross and irritable as many a wife knows. But never
forget that to be free from cares may be as perilous as to be burdened with
them, and that's why Peter adds, "Be sober and be watchful." I have
known people suddenly freed from care by some large legacy of fortune--and that
freedom has sometimes been their ruin. God does not make His children carefree
in order that He may make them careless. Surely better a thousand cares than
that. He makes them carefree that with undivided heart they may give themselves
to the service of their brother and to the glory of His blessed name.
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