George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
March 17
The Pearl of Great Price
The kingdom of heaven is like unto a
merchant man, seeking goodly pearls: who, when he had found one pearl of great
price, went and sold all that he had, and bought it--Mat 13:45-46
The Pearl in Ancient Times
Although the pearl is still held in high
esteem, it does not now occupy the place which once belonged to it. In the old
world, at any rate in the East, it was the most precious of all precious
stones. The diamond was not unknown to the ancients, but it was too rare for
effective illustration. Its introduction here would have had little meaning for
the disciples to whom this parable was spoken. The measure of value which we
give the diamond was by them associated with the pearl, and the comparison of
the kingdom to a pearl was one that they would understand at once. Many stories
were current in the East of fabulous prices being given for pearls. The most
famous of antiquity were Cleopatra's, which were valued at $400,000 apiece. And
the story of one of these is current yet, even where the queen is but a name,
for have we not all read how she dissolved it, and drank it when at supper with
her lover? It is very probable that the Old Testament ruby is in reality our
pearl. When it is said of wisdom that her price is above rubies, it is likely
that "above pearls" is the true rendering. And if this be so, it
gives an added meaning to the comparison of the kingdom to a pearl, for between
the kingdom of heaven and true wisdom there is a very slight difference indeed.
There were very curious fancies in the East, too, about the way in which the
pearl was formed. It was thought to be a drop of dew which had fallen from
heaven into the open shell. And according to the hour at which it fell, and the
brightness and the darkness of the sky then, was the perfection or imperfection
of the pearl. Now of all this Jesus Christ makes nothing, and where He makes
nothing we should not make much. His parables live because they have their
roots, not in fancies, but in simple facts. Yet, as His hearers scattered to
their homes and meditated on the story of the pearl, may there not have been
some who thought on Hosea's text, "I will be as the dew unto Israel"?
The Finder Was a Seeker
Now the first thing to impress us in the
parable is that the finder of the pearl had been a seeker. He was a merchantman
seeking goodly pearls--that was his business as it was his quest. In the
preceding parable of the hid treasure there is no mention and no thought of
seeking. The man is walking abroad one summer morning, when unexpectedly he
finds the treasure. But here there is no stroke of sudden fortune, no
unexpected joy of treasure-trove; it is the business of the merchant's life to
gather pearls, and he is a seeker before he is a finder. Probably it was his
father's trade, for callings were generally ancestral with the Jews. Or else as
a boy his fancy had been caught by the beauty of the stones in some bazaar. But
at any rate this was his calling now, and for his calling he had been nicely
trained, so that with eager heart and open eye he ranged from market to market
of the East. There was a certain nobleness about the man, too. He had no
traffic with inferior articles. It was goodly pearls he was in search of; such
as were not goodly he despised. And so in a large and honourable way, a man of
business of the worthiest kind, he gave himself to the search of what was
goodly and, searching, found a better than the best.
Now, as we look abroad on human history we
see it is so with the finding of the Kingdom. There are some who light upon it
unexpectedly; there are others who win it after weary search. How many there
are like the man who found the treasure who have been tolerably contented with
their lot. They did not ask for much, nor look for much; they were never
visited by high ambitions. They would have been satisfied to have moved on,
surrounded by the comforts of their homes, and only praying to be undisturbed
in the even and quiet tenor of their days. But God refused to leave them
undisturbed. Something happened, and everything was changed. It may have been
some message that aroused them. It may have been some trial or some sorrow. And
the old barriers were swept away, and the old contentment was no longer
possible, and the need of the living God grew very strong, and the things of
eternity grew very real. Such, for instance, was the Samaritan woman who came
up to Jesus sitting by the well. Little she reckoned on all that was to happen
when she set out with her pitcher from the village. All unexpectedly she lit on
Christ, and found in a moment a better than her best, just as the man,
sauntering in the field, lit unexpectedly on the hid treasure. Now, with such a
case as that, contrast the case of the Apostle Paul. What an unwearied search
his life had been for peace of conscience and for spiritual liberty. He was a
merchant seeking goodly pearls, unwearied and undaunted in his search; he gave
himself to the search of what was goodly and, searching, found a better than
his best.
He Found What He Was Looking For
I think, too, we must notice this about the
merchant, that it was along the line of his quest he made his great discovery.
All his days had been spent in seeking pearls, and it was a pearl of great
price he found at last. Many must have been the rarities he saw as he travelled
among the riches of the Orient. In India, when his journeys took him there, his
eye would be sated with barbaric splendours. Yet to all that our Lord does not
refer, nor does He indicate that the man so much as saw them. The merchant's
object was procuring pearls, and it was a pearl of great price he found at
last. Now we might draw from that the simple lesson that we commonly see what
we are looking for. It is he who has eyes for every common flower who will
detect the rarity upon the hedge-bank. But I think that we may read a deeper
lesson, and it is that if we are seeking what is goodly, then the Kingdom of
Jesus Christ, when we discover it, will be found in the direction of our quest.
Christ Jesus never contradicts the best. He comes to crown and to complete the
best. He never says to any earnest seeker, "That weary search of yours is
all in vain." It is not in vain if it be for goodly pearls, for the final
blessing also is a pearl, the very same as has been sought so long, yet pure
and precious beyond the highest hope. In the first ages of the Christian Church
we light on a deeply interesting figure. His name was Justin, and from the
death he died he is known to history as Justin Martyr. Well, Justin has told us
how he came to Christ, and never was there a more fascinating story. Hungering
for peace and spiritual liberty, he passed from school to school of the
philosophers. And some were cheats with an eye upon his fees, and others bade
him study mathematics, and the best of them, for all their wisdom, were
powerless to give him the peace for which he longed. And then one day as he
walked by a lake shore he met with an aged and venerable man. And the man,
reading his trouble in his face, entered into conversation with him. And he
spoke of Christ, and of the work of Christ, till the heart of Justin began to
glow within him, and he saw that here was all he had been seeking, and what
others had been so powerless to give. Justin had been seeking goodly pearls; he
had scorned delights and lived laborious days; and now he had discovered the
great pearl, and in that finding all his past was crowned. For all he had
sought for with such painful toil, and all he had hoped to win by his
philosophy, and all he had struggled for through weary years, became his own
when he discovered Christ. A man is always on the Kingdom's avenue when he is inwardly
true to what is highest. Let him have worthy and unselfish aims, and his face
is always set towards Jerusalem. And that is why, when in the chill of doubt, a
man's first duty is to be living nobly, for only when one is seeking goodly
pearls does the best lie along his line of search.
The Absence of the Mention of Joy
It is notable also that in this parable our
Saviour does not say anything of joy. That is one of the minute, and I think
intentional, differences between our parable and the preceding one. When the
man has found the treasure in the field, immediately for joy he goes and acts.
It is such a surprise he can scarce believe it real, and his heart throbs with
the wonder of it all. Now here there is a thing of equal value and an act of
similar and swift decision, and yet the joy that thrills in the one parable is
not mentioned in our parable at all. I do not think that means that it was
lacking. It means that the joy was of a different kind. In the one case it was
tumultuous joy. In the other it was very quiet and deep. In the one case there
was excitement in it, and the swift surprise of unexpected fortune. In the
other there was the inward satisfaction that what had been long dreamed of had
come true. The first was the joy as of a day in spring after a season of dark
and wintry weather, when the contrast so intensifies the joy that the whole of
nature seems to thrill with it. But the other was the quieter, fuller joy of a
perfect morning in the height of summer, when for days the earth has been very
warm and beautiful, and the sunset has given promise of the morn. Now in the
realm of spiritual experience we are often conscious of a kindred difference.
Sometimes when men have suddenly found Christ there has been a gladness about
them that nothing could restrain. But when discipleship has come as the last
stage of a long period of quiet preparation, then there is less disturbance of
the feelings and fewer outward signs of the great change. When the lame man was
healed at the Gate Beautiful he leapt and ran, he was so full of gladness. His
healing was such an unexpected thing that his joy was overwhelming in
intensity. But had it come to him as the last stage of a long period of medical
attention his gladness would have been not less real, but of a quieter and less
obtrusive kind. Let no one then doubt his being in Christ because the
acceptance was very quietly made. The vital thing is making the decision; it is
not the feelings that go with the decision. Our greatest decisions oftentimes
are made in such a strange quietness of the heart that none could ever tell
what was transacting save by the results of subsequent days.
Seeking Many, Found One
Once more, while this merchant was seeking
many pearls, it is notable that he was led at last to one. The crowning
possession of his lifelong search was not a multitude of things, it was one
thing. With the treasure hid in the field it was not so; that treasure would
consist of many things. Armlets and necklets and jewel-hilted swords would lie
in the chest beside the hoard of coin. But in our parable the thought is
different. It is not a string of pearls that is discovered; one pearl rewards
the seeking of a lifetime, and one pearl gives perfect satisfaction. Now,
brethren, in the Kingdom of our Lord we see what at once recalls to us both
parables. No treasure hidden in any field can be more various than the
Kingdom's riches. And yet the joy of the Kingdom is just this, that all its
riches are treasured up in Christ, and that everything that the heart needs for
satisfaction is to be found in Him and Him alone. What are some of the things
that a man needs if he is to have the secret of sweet peace? He needs the
pardon of his sins. And he needs fellowship. And he needs a love that will not
let him go. And he needs to be assured in his dark hours that there is some
hidden meaning in the burden. And he needs to learn that death is not the end,
but that everything shall be perfected beyond. At different times of life these
needs arise. They vary in urgency with varying hours. We pass from the call of
one need to another, as we pass from winter to the call of spring. And the
wonderful thing about Jesus Christ is this, that as these needs successively
arise the man who looks to Him to have them satisfied never in any hour looks
in vain. In Him is all the pardon of our sin. In Him is the strength made
perfect in our weakness. He is the way, the truth, the life, the resurrection,
the Shepherd, the vine, the door, the hope of glory. He is all we need and more
than all we want. He is wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, redemption. All
that we need is treasured up in Christ, who is the fullness of the Godhead
bodily.
And this is the reason why in Jesus Christ
there is such satisfaction for the soul. For we are never at rest until our
life is unified, and till our many searchings become one. There is no peace for
the man whose life is broken; whose objects are many and whose aims are
diverse. If he has to go hither and thither on his quest, he must ever lack the
secret of stability. It is only when life is harmonised and unified, and when
one Lord can satisfy the soul, that in the busiest round there is a peace which
the world cannot give and cannot take away. That was one of the failures of old
pagan-ism-men were distracted by their many gods. That was one of the triumphs
of the Jew--his life was one, because his God was one. But in Christ the secret
of the purest Jews has become the choicest treasure of the humble, for there is
not a thing we set our hand to but we can do it heartily as to the Lord. All
seeking outside of Jesus Christ is the seeking here and there of goodly pearls.
It is a noble search, but at its noblest it leaves a man unsatisfied and restless.
"Come unto me,...and I will give you rest." Art thou careful and
troubled about many things? One thing is needful. This one thing I do. There is
one pearl. We are complete in Christ.
To Gain the Pearl, Great Sacrifice Was
Needed
In closing, let us notice this, that to
gain the pearl great sacrifice was needed, yet even from the standpoint of a
business man that sacrifice was perfectly reasonable. It was not a wild and
heady speculation. It was not an unwarrantable plunge into the dark. The man
sold all that he had for the one pearl, yet it was a sane and rational
transaction. He had not been trained through all these years for nothing. He
saw at a glance the value of the one. Had you spoken to this merchant about
sacrifice, I think he would hardly have thanked you for your sympathy.
"Sacrifice," he would have said, "I never thought of that. I
suppose that in one sense it is a sacrifice. Yet if you knew half as much as I
do about pearls you would congratulate me on the best bargain of my life."
Brethren, I do think that sometimes we put too strong an accent upon sacrifice.
We dwell on what we would lose by being a Christian. We dwell too little on all
that we would gain. For this is certain, that whatever has to go, and whatever
sacrifice one may be called to make, the hour in which a man comes out for
Christ is the hour of the best bargain of his life. Like Peter, he may have to
give up his nets, or like the rich young ruler, his great fortune. Like Paul,
he may have to give up his legal righteousness; like Augustine, the darling
object of his passion. Yet, like Peter and Paul and Augustine and Livingstone,
the man who has won the pearl by what he gave will find that all he has
sacrificed is nothing compared with the infinite worth of what he won. "He
that keepeth his life shall lose it." Hold to it miser-like, and it is
gone. "But he that loseth his life for my sake shall find it," unto
life eternal. So does the figure of sacrifice retire, till God shall have
decked her in a bridal garment, and she come forth again, all joy and praise,
with life eternal written on her brow.
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