George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
January 31
Drink From the Depths
"He... gave them drink as out of
the great depths." Psa 78:15
The psalmist is here reviewing the
providence of God that sustained the children of Israel in the desert. That
providence had made a deep impression on him, and he delights to dwell upon its
wonders. There is a sense, I believe, in which the poet is really the best of
all historians. He sees by the gift of a trained imagination into the hearts of
men and the character of movements. And though he may lack the minute and
critical knowledge that is in the keeping of laborious students, yet he often
brings us nearer to the truth than the man who discovers and refutes his
errors.
One often feels that it is so with the
psalmist, and especially when he is dealing with the Exodus. For him the
miracles that marked that journey were not isolated and solitary splendors.
They were rather the discoveries of that power which is everywhere present and
everywhere upholding; only in other lives they dealt with small numbers of
people while here in the Exodus they are with large numbers.
Take for example the water from the rock of
which the psalmist is speaking in our text. The wonder that God gave them water
as out of the great depths comes to him in a flash. He sees the Israelites
crowding around the rock and saying in their hearts, "This cannot last long."
He sees them watching for the supply to fail as, of course, coming from a rock,
it must soon do. And then he sees their look of wild surprise when it dawns on
them that the stream is inexhaustible and is fed by channels they know nothing
of, from boundless and unfathomable reservoirs.
What the people crave for is a draught of
water, and God in His mercy gives them their desire. But He fills their cups,
not from a little cistern, but as from some illimitable ocean. And the psalmist
knows that that is always true, for whenever the Almighty satisfies His
creatures, He gives them to drink as out of the great depths.
All Nature Depends on God's Goodness
Think, then, for a moment of the world of
nature as it unfolds itself in all its beauty around us. There is not a bird or
beast, there is not a tree or flower, but is ministered to in the way our text
describes. I take the tiniest weed that roots among the stones--the flower in
the crannied wall of which the poet speaks--and I ask, What does it need to
live; what does it need that it may flower and fruit? The answer is that it
needs a little warmth; it needs an occasional moistening with rain.
Now in a certain measure that is true, but
you can never stop there in this mysterious universe. At the back of the warmth
which it needs, there is the sun; and at the back of every raindrop, there is
sky and ocean. And it takes the sun and sea and the white cloud of heaven to
satisfy that tiniest weed among the stones, which may come to its delicate
beauty only to be unregarded and perhaps crushed by a passing foot.
Try to explain the light that a rose needs, and you are carried
into the depths of solar energy. Look at the raindrop on the hedge--has it not
been drawn "out of the boundless deep"? And so there is not a rose in
any garden nor a leaf that unfolds itself on any tree that is not ever
whispering to the hearing ear, "He gave me drink as out of the great
depths."
Again, think of our senses for a
moment--think of our sight and hearing, for example. One of the plainest facts
about our senses is the different way they translate what they receive. To one
man a rose is just a rose and no more. To another, in the smallest flower there
are thoughts that often lie too deep for tears. And it is not the eye alone
that differentiates, it is the life that is hidden deep behind the eye; He
giveth them drink as out of the great depths.
Two men may listen to a piece of music, and
one, as he listens, is profoundly stirred by it. There seems to pass before
him, as he listens, visions of what is high and fair and beautiful. And he
hears the calling of his brightest hopes and the cry of regret for all his
wasted years and the stooping over him again of faces that he has loved long
since and lost awhile. All this is kindled in some hearts by music--this
burning of hope and haunting of regret; yet play that very piece before
another, and it is sound and fury, signifying nothing.
Is not the ear of a dead person perfect? Is
not every membrane and convolution there? Yet call to it or whisper to it
passionately, and will it play its part and carry the news of love? Yesterday
there would have been a smile of recognition; there is not a flicker of response
today. So at the back of every sense we have there is a depth that can
never be fathomed. All that a man is, looks through his eyes. All that his soul
is, listens through his ears. If the eye could speak or if the ear could speak,
would they not echo the language of the text, "He gave us drink as out of
the great depths?"
The Common Joy and Sorrow of Mankind
Again let us think for a moment of God's
ways in providence--in the ordering and discipline of our lives. One of the
lessons we learn as we grow older is that our discipline is not exceptional.
When we are young our joys are all our own; we never dream that others could
have known them. When we are young we take our little sorrows as if there were
no such sorrows in the world. And much of the bitterness of childish trial lies
in its terrible sense of isolation; in the feeling that in the whole wide world
there is no one who has had to suffer just like us. It seems as if God has cut
a special channel for us out of which no other life has ever drunk. In joy and
grief, in sunshine and in shadow, we seem to move apart when we are children.
But as life advances and our outlook broadens, and we learn the story of the
lives around us, then we see that we are not alone but are being made to drink
of the great depths.
It is not by exceptional providence's that
we live. It is not by exceptional joys we are enriched. It is not by anything
rare or strange or singular that we are fashioned under the hand of God. It is
by sorrows that are as old as man, by trials that a thousand hearts have felt,
by joys that are common as the wind is common that breathes on the palace and
on the poorest street. By these things do we live; by these we grow; by love
and tears, by trials, by work, by death; by the things that link us all into a
brotherhood, the things that are common to ten thousand hearts. And it is when
we come to recognize that truth and to feel our comradeship within a common
discipline, that we say, as the psalmist said of Israel, "He gave us drink
as out of the great depths."
The Everlasting Word of God
Now there is one thing that always arrests
me in the Bible. It is that the Bible is such an ancient book, and yet is so
intensely modern and practical. Think of the ages which have fled since it was
written and how "heaven and earth have passed away" since then; think
of our cities and of the life we live in them and of the stress and strain
unknown in the quiet Bible times. To me it is wonderful, when I reflect upon
it, that the Bible should be of any use at all now, and should not rather have
moved into the quiet of libraries to be the joy of the unworldly scholar.
But if there is one thing certain it is this---the
Bible meets the need of modern life. In spite of all criticism, as a practical
guide there is no book to touch it. There is not a problem you are called to
face and not a duty you are called to do; there is not a cross you are
compelled to carry and not a burden you are forced to bear, but your strength
for it all shall be as the strength of ten if you make a daily companion of
your Bible. Now this is what you feel about the Bible, that it never offers a
draught from shallow waters. You do not find there a set of petty maxims, but
you find the everlasting love of God there. You do not find any shallow views
of sin there, but a Lamb slain from the foundation of the world. And that is
the secret of the Bible's permanence, when our little systems have had their
day and ceased to be, then for sin and sorrow and life and death and duty, it
gives us to drink as out of the great depths.
The Depths of Jesus Christ
And think for a moment upon Jesus---of
Jesus in relation to His words. If ever words were as water to a thirsty world,
surely it was the words that Jesus spoke. How simple they were, and yet how
deep! How tender and full of love, and yet how searching! They seemed to pierce
into the very heart till a man felt that his secret thought was known. Now
there are men whose lives so contradict their words that when you know the men
you cannot listen to them. And there are men who are so much less than their
own words that when you come to know them you are disappointed. But what people
felt about Jesus Christ was that when all was uttered, the half was never told,
for at the back of all His words there was Himself, deeper unfathomable than
His deepest speech. That is why the words of Christ will live even when heaven
and earth have passed away. You can exhaust the cup or drain the goblet dry,
but you cannot exhaust the spring fed from the deeps. And just because the
words of Jesus Christ spring from the depths of that divine humanity, they will
save and strengthen the obedient heart to the last recorded syllable of time.
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