George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
January 27
Summer and Winter
"Thou hast made summer and
winter." Psa 74:17
I suppose there are few who seriously doubt
that the maker of summertime is God. There is something in every summer's glory
that tells us of the touch of the divine, for here indeed we see the handiwork
of God. But notice that in our text it says a great deal more than just that
God hast made the summer. It says "Thou hast made the summer and the
winter."
It was an old belief which is still held by
multitudes that rival deities had been at work on nature. It was not the
handiwork of one god; it was the handiwork of two gods. And all the sharp
antagonisms of the universe and all the contrasts amid which we live were
tokens of their mutual enmity. Had one made the glory of the day and the other
the darkness of the night? Had one cheered us with the genial heart and the
other cursed us with the bitter cold? It was one power that made the radiant
morn, and another that made the deepening shadow. There were millions of people
who believed that once, and there are millions who still believe it.
How different, how superbly different, is
the spiritual vision of this singer of the Psalms! It was the God of Abraham
who made the summer, and it was his God who made the winter, too. The very hand
that decked the summer meadow and cast the mantle of green upon the forest
touched that summer glory and it died. Thou hast made the summer and the
winter. Thou hast clothed and thou hast stripped again. Thou hast lengthened
out the shining hours, and thou hast crushed them into a little space. Thou hast
created the gentle breath of evening that falls on man with benediction, and
thou the bitter and the piercing blast.
The Summer and Winter of the Heart
Now I want you to carry that great truth
into regions which the eye has never seen. I want you to believe that one God
has made the summer and winter of the heart. There are experiences which come
to every man which are tingling with the touch of heaven. They are so radiant
and so delightful that we never doubt the hand which gave them to us. It is
good to be grateful for such recurring gladness, but more is needed for a life
of victory. He who would conquer must have faith to say, "Thou hast made
the summer and the winter." God is not only gracious when the sun shines,
He is just as gracious when the wind is sharp. He gives the glory and He strips
the glory, and on His vesture is the name of Love. He who can trace His hand
when it is winter--who can still say He loves me and He knows--has won the
secret of that abiding peace which the world cannot give and cannot take away.
What a summertime the patriarch Job
enjoyed! How the sun shone on him for many days! There was no one like him in
the land of Uz for health and wealth and happiness and peace. And then there
fell on him the blast of winter, and he was desolate and deathly cold, and
"The Lord hath given and the Lord hath taken away," said Job,
"blessed be the name of the Lord."
Do you remember what his wife advised him?
His wife advised him to curse God and die. Do you remember what his friends
advised him? It was to confess that he had played the hypocrite. But Job was
far too big a man for that. "Though he slay me yet will I trust him,"
he said. The faith in which he conquered was just this, "Thou hast made
the summer and the winter."
Winter Is the Loom on Which Summer Is
Made
And now another question arises: How does
God make the summer? What is the unseen loom on which He weaves that garment of
beauty which we see Him by? Don't consider me as being mystical when I reply
that winter is the loom. It is a truth which science will corroborate that out
of the winter He hath made the summer. When a child rises in the morning, what
an exuberance of life there is! The eyes are bright and the feet swift to run
and play; and all that life, so wonderful and glad, has been created in the
womb of sleep.
We say that in winter everything is dead.
That is what they said of Jairus' daughter. And then came Christ and looked at
her and said, "The maiden is not dead, but sleepeth." So we learn
that in the dead of winter--and we never talk about the dead of summer--what we
call death is but the child's sleep. Life has not vanished even though the eyes
are closed. And then comes morning with all its joy and renewed life, all
because of the quiet sleep of wintertime. There is no thrilling beauty of
springtime without the chill of December. God needs the one if He would make
the other. He fashions glory out of decay.
Consider that truth then and carry it to a
higher sphere. It is as true of us as of the earth that winter holds the secret
of the summer. Out of December, God will fashion June. Out of the cross, He
fashions the crown. Out of the trial that was so hard to bear, He brings the
beauty of the saintly character. "God be merciful to me a
sinner"--that is the winter of our discontent, and yet when a man has
cried that prayer of despair, he is preparing for his summer and his song.
There came to Glasgow, not so long ago, a
pianist with an excellent reputation. I read the Herald's criticism of him, and
there was one thing in it that I especially noted. The Herald said that he had
been always brilliant--always been wonderful as an executant--but now there was
a depth of feeling in him that had never been present in his work before. A day
or two afterwards while preaching in a suburb, I met a relative of the pianist.
As we began to discuss him and the Herald's criticism of him, the relative said
to me, "Did you notice that? And do you know what was the secret of the
change? It was the death of his mother eighteen months ago." He was an
only son, unmarried, and had been simply devoted to his mother. And then she
died and he was left alone, and all the depths were broken up in him. And now
he played as only he can play who knows what life and death are and what sorrow
is--and out of the winter God had made his summer.
Perpetual sunshine may make men brilliant,
perhaps, but never deep. They don't understand. They never know. They
condescend, for they cannot sympathize, for much that is beautiful in men and
women springs from the season when the tree is stripped. All that is fairest in
the world rises from the darkness of the cross. My brother, that is also how He
leads us, for to our hearts the world is but the shadow. He will never leave us
nor forsake us.
Why Did God Make the Summer and Winter?
There is only one answer that can be given
to that question in the light of all that we have learned. Not just for their
own sakes has He made them--not for their sublimity or beauty merely. Through
night and day, through sunshine and through storm, God has His purpose which is
never baffled. And that one purpose--how shall we describe it? Put in simple
language it is this: It is the purpose of every living thing that after summer
there should be the harvest. Of course, God has made purposes in every thing
and every season. Undoubtedly when He made the summer beautiful, He meant it to
give pleasure to His children. But there is one thing deeper than all others,
and that is the mellowing of the harvest field. Nothing is beautiful in nature
for its own sake. Beauty is a trust for other's sakes. Summer and winter look
beyond themselves to the time when the flower shall wither and the fruit shall
come. He that liveth to himself is dead. There is he that scattereth and yet
increaseth. Our gifts----our summer sun and winter storm--these have an end to
serve in other lives. We are not here simply to be happy. We are here to serve
and be a blessing. And "Thou hast made our summer and our winter"
that we may have the joy of harvest time.
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