George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
March 24
The Cross and the World -- Part I
I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of
the house of Israel--Mat 15:24
I, if I be lifted up...will draw all men
unto me--Joh 12:32
Christ Came to and for Israel
We have but to read the record of the
Gospels, to find confirmation of the former of these texts. The whole activity
of Christ on earth shows Him as sent to the lost sheep of Israel. Within the
boundaries of Israel He was born, and within the boundaries of Israel He died.
With the one exception of the journey here recorded, He never in His maturity
left the Jewish land. His twelve disciples were of the Jewish faith; His
friends were inhabitants of Jewish homes; His enemies were not the Romans, but
His own, to whom He came and they received Him not. For His teaching He sought
no other audience than the men and women of the Jewish villages. For His
retirement He sought no other solitude than that of the Galilean hills. And all
His miracles, with rare exceptions, which were recorded because they were
exceptional, were wrought for the comforting of Jewish hearts, and for the
drying of tears in Jewish eyes. The whole story of the Gospel, then, is a witness
to the truth of our first text. In the fulfilling of His earthly ministry
Christ confined Himself to Jewish limits. And He did so because of His
assurance, that He was sent to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.
Christ, However, Anticipated a Wider
Ministry
But as we study the words of our Redeemer,
one thing gradually grows very clear. It is that He anticipated a ministry that
should be wider than these Jewish limits. I am not thinking just now of any
words He spoke after He was risen from the dead. I am thinking only of His
recorded utterances in those crowded years before the cross. And what I say is
that no reasonable man can study the discourse of the historic Jesus without
discovering that He foresaw a ministry which was to be as wide as the whole
world. There is, for instance, the second of our texts today--"I will draw
all men unto me." There is that beautiful word of an earlier chapter,
"Other sheep I have which are not of this fold." There is that
utterance at Simon's table, when the woman broke the alabaster box,
"Wheresoever this gospel shall be preached in the whole world, this that
she hath done shall be told of her." I ask you to observe that these great
sayings have stood the test of the most searching criticism. They are so
germane to the mind of Christ that they have come triumphant through the fires.
And they tell us this, that through the earthly ministry, confined as it was
within the house of Israel, Christ had the outlook of an approaching lordship over
the nations of mankind.
The Cross and the Worldwide Empire
But these utterances tell us more than
that, and to this I specially invite attention. They tell us that in the mind
of Jesus His death and His worldwide empire were related. So far as we can
learn about the mind of Christ, we can with reverence say this about it. It was
when the cross was clearest in His thought that the worldwide empire was most
clear to Him. If you will think of the texts which I have cited, and consider
the occasion of their utterance, you will understand quite easily what I mean.
Take for instance that most beautiful word, "Other sheep I have which are
not of this fold." What are the words which immediately precede it?
"The good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep." At the very moment
when the thought of shepherding kindled the vision of the shepherd's death, at
that very moment there flashed upon the Lord the vision of the sheep beyond the
fold. Take again the scene at Simon's feast where Jesus spoke of a Gospel for
the world. "Wheresoever this gospel shall be preached in the whole world,
there this deed that she hath done shall be remembered." And what was it
that the woman had done under the interpreting eyes of `Jesus Christ? She had
anointed His body for its burial. In other words that womanly act of hers had
spoken to Jesus of His coming death. Over the table where the guests reclined,
it had cast the awful shadow of the cross. And it was then, anointed for His
burial by an act which no one else could understand, that Christ in vision
lifted up His eyes and saw the Gospel preached to the whole world. Clearly,
then, Christ looked upon His death as the great secret of a worldwide empire.
When the one grew vivid in His thought, there rose on Him the vision of the
other. And that to me is a matter to meditate on, as one of the most momentous
of all truths, by every man and every woman who is interested in the world
empire of the Lord. Now the question is, can we follow out that thought, and
see even dimly where the connection lies? It is that which I should like to
attempt to do.
The Motive of Missionary Enterprise
In the first place, it is the death of
Christ which supplies the motive of missionary enterprise.
We must ever remember that when we speak of
the death of Christ, we speak of a death different from our own. Our death is
the cessation of activity; Christ's was the crown and climax of His life.
"I have power to lay it down," He said, and that is a power no other
man has shared. We die when our appointed hour comes, and when the hand of God
hath touched us, and we sleep. But Christ never looked upon His death like
that, as something inevitable and irresistible. He looked on it as the last
free glorious service of a life that had always been a life of love. Here in
one gleam, intense and vivid, was gathered up the light of all His years. Here
in one action which we name His dying was gathered up the love in which He
wrought. And it is just because of the power of that action, concentrating all
the scattered rays, that Christ could say, "I, if I be lifted up,...will
draw all men unto me." How true this is as a fact of history we see in the
story of the Christian Church. There is the closest connection in that story
between the death of Christ and missionary zeal. There have been periods in the
Church's history when the death of Christ was practically hidden. The message
of the cross was rarely preached; the meaning of the cross was rarely grasped.
And the Gospel was looked on as a refined philosophy, eminently fitted for the
good of men, inculcating a most excellent morality, and in perfect harmony with
human reason. We have had periods like that in Scotland, and we have had
periods like that in England. God grant that they may never come again with
their deadening of true religion. And always when you have such a period, when
love is nothing and moral law is everything, you have a period when not a hand
is lifted for the salvation of the heathen world. For it is not morality that
seeks the world; it is religion centering in love. It is a view of a divine
love so wonderful that it stooped to the service of death upon a cross. So
always, in evangelical revival, when that has been apprehended in the wonder of
it, the passion to tell it out has come again, and men have carried the message
to mankind.
And may I say that it is along these lines
that the road must lie to a deepening of interest. To realise what it means
that Christ died, is to have a Gospel that we must impart. There are many
excellent people who, in their secret heart, confess to a very faint interest
in missions. They give, and it may be they give generously, and yet in their
hearts they know that they are not interested. They know almost nothing about
mission-fields, and are never seen at missionary meetings, and take the
opportunity to visit a sister church when a missionary is advertised to preach
in theirs. With such people I have no lack of sympathy, for I think I
understand their position thoroughly. I have the gravest doubt if any good is
done by trying excitedly to lash up their interest. But I am perfectly
confident that these good people would waken to a new and lively interest, if
only they realised a little more the wonder of the love of God in Christ. What
think you, my brother and my sister, is the most wonderful thing that ever
happened? It is not the kindling of the myriad stars, nor the fashioning of the
human eye that it might see them. It is that once the God who is eternal
stooped down from heaven and came into humanity, and bore our burdens, and
carried our sorrows, and died in redeeming love upon the tree. Once realise
what that means, and everything else in the world is insignificant. Once
realise what that means, and you must pass it on to other people. And that is
the source of missionary zeal--not blind obedience, nor any thoughts of terror,
but the passing on of news so wonderful that we cannot--dare not--keep it to
ourselves.
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