George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
March 25
The Cross and the World -- Part II
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
The Answer for a Universal Need
In the next place, the death of Christ
interprets and answers a universal longing. It meets with perfect satisfaction
the deepest need of all the world.
One of the great gains of this age of ours
is that it has drawn the world together so. There is now an intermingling of
the nations that but a few decades ago was quite impossible. Thanks to the
means of transport we possess, and to the need of expansion on the part of nations;
thanks to the deathless spirit of adventure, to the gains of commerce and to
the march of armies, there is a blending now of the whole earth such as was
undreamed of once. Now one result of all that intermingling has been a new
sense of the oneness of humanity. No longer do we delight in travellers' tales,
such as captivated the Middle Ages. Men push their way into untravelled
forests, and they come to us from Arabia and Tibet, and under all that is
strange they bring us tidings of the touch of nature that makes the whole world
kin. We realise today as men have never done, how God has made all nations of
one blood. Deeper than everything that separates, there are common sorrows and
elemental hopes. There is one common heart by which we live; one common life in
which we share; one common enemy awaiting all, when the pitcher is broken at
the fountain.
But especially has this oneness of humanity
been made evident in the religious life. That has been one incalculable gain of
the modern study of comparative religion. It has investigated a thousand rites,
and found at the back of them a common longing. It has touched the foundations
of a thousand altars, and found they were built upon a common need. It has
gathered from Africa, from India, from China, the never-failing story of
religion, and always at the very heart of things it has discovered one
unchanging element. It is not enough to say that all men have religion. That is
now an accepted commonplace. Something far more wonderful and thrilling has
been slowly emerging into prominence. It is that under a thousand different
rites, from those of Patagonia to those of China, there lies the unquenchable
desire of man to get into right relationship with God. Deeper than all sense of
gratitude, though gratitude is very often there--deeper than unreasoning
terror, though heathen religion is always big with terror deeper than that,
this fact stands out today, based on exhaustive and scientific study, that the
deepest longing in the soul of man is the longing to get right with God. It is
that in the last analysis which explains sacrifice, and where is the heathen
tribe that does not sacrifice? It is that which explains the sway of heathen
witchcraft, of which the evils can never be exaggerated. The religious life is
the deepest life of man, and in that life, over the whole wide world, the one
determining and vital question is, how can mortal man get right with God?
My friend, I almost ask your pardon for
having taken you so far afield. But you see, I think, the point which I am
driving at, and from which there is no possible escape. That very question, so
vital to humanity, is the question which the atonement answers. It answers the
cry that is rising to the heavens from every heathen rite and heathen altar. It
tells men in language that a child can grasp, yet with a depth that angels
cannot fathom, how sinful man by an appointed sacrifice can be put right with
the eternal God. I believe with all my soul in educational missions, but at the
heart of missions is more than education. I believe with all my soul in medical
missions, but at the heart of missions there is more than healing. Christ never
said, "My teaching shall draw all men," nor yet, "My healing
power shall draw all men"; He said, "I, if I be lifted up, shall draw
all men, and this spake He of the death that He should die." That means
that in the atoning death there is the answer to man's deepest need. It means
that the deepest cry of all humanity is answered in the message of the cross.
And I venture to say that all we have learned today in the modern study of
comparative religion, corroborates, and authenticates, and seals that certainty
upon the lips of Jesus.
The Necessary Step before the Comforter
Could Come
Then, lastly, we have the thought that the
death of Christ has liberated His influence. It has opened the window of the
ark, if I might put it so, that the dove might fly abroad over the waters.
"It is expedient for you that I go away," He said, "for if I go
not away the Comforter cannot come." Now the Lord is that Spirit, says the
apostle--it is that same Jesus glorified and liberated. So by the lifting up
upon the cross Christ was set free from local limitation, to pass into a
spiritual ministry that should be co-extensive with the world. No longer can
any village of far Galilee claim the present monopoly of Christ. No longer can
loving hearts in Bethany say, "He is our guest and ours only for
tonight." He is at present now by the lake shores of Africa as He is
within the house of God where you worship--because He lived and died. We often
talk of the story of the cross as if in that story lay the world's redemption.
But I beg of you to remember that while that is true, it is far from being all
the truth. Christ spoke not a word of the story of the cross. He said,
I--persisting through the cross--I, the living Christ, will draw the world--I
whom death is powerless to hold. In other words, when our missionaries go
forth, they go with something more than a sweet story. They go with Him of whom
the tale is told, so wonderful, so unspeakable, so moving. They go with Him
who, having tasted death, is now alive and lives for evermore, and who is able
to save unto the uttermost all who come unto God by Him.
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