George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
March 6
The Sending of the Sword
I came not to send peace, but a
sword--Mat 10:34
Christ Came to Bring Both Peace and a
Sword
There seems to be a glaring contradiction
between this word and some other words of Jesus. Some of the most familiar
Gospel words--words that shine down like stars on the world's darkness--speak
of Jesus as the great peace bringer. "Peace I leave with you, my peace I give
unto you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you." Yet here, "I
came not to send peace, but a sword." The point I wish you to observe in
passing is Christ's disregard for superficial consistency. Life proves many a
proposition to be true that logic would readily demonstrate as false. And the
strange thing about the words of Christ is, that while they seem to contradict
each other at the bar of reason, they link themselves together into perfect
harmony when we go forward in the strength of them. Are you fond of arguing
about Christ's teachings? You may argue till doomsday and never find their
power. They are words of life meant to be lived out; there is no argument in
all the armory like action. And it is only as we set our faces heavenward,
making these statutes our song in the house of our pilgrimage: only as we view
every new morning as a new opportunity of putting Christ to proof; it is only
thus, through the gathering experience of days, that we awaken to their power
and truth. I notice in the engines of our river steamers that there are rods
that move backward as well as rods that move forward. A child would say they
were fighting with each other, and that half of the engines were going the
wrong way. But though half the engines seem to go the wrong way, there is no
question that the ship is going the right way: out of the smoke and stir of the
great city into the bays where the peace of God is resting. So with the words
of Christ that seem to oppose each other. Make them the driving power of the
soul: and the oppositions will not hinder progress, and the contradictions will
reveal their unity, and you shall be brought to your desired heaven.
So to our text; and there are two lights in
which I wish to set it. (1) The coming of Christ sends a sword into the heart.
(2) The coming of Christ sends a sword into the home.
He Calls Us to a Lifelong Warfare
First, then: The coming of Christ sends a
sword into the heart. Now this is exactly what I should have expected when I
remembered the penalties of gain. For everything a man achieves there is a
price to pay. There comes a wound with everything we win. Think of the
knowledge of nature that we now possess. All knowledge, whatever joy it brings
with it, brings with it in the other hand a sword. All love, though it kindles
the world into undreamed-of brightness, has a note in its music of unrest and
agony. Every advance mankind has ever made holds in its grasp new possibilities
of pain.
It is through thoughts like these that I
come to understand how the coming of Christ into the heart must send a sword
there. To receive Christ is to receive the Truth; it is to have the Spirit of
Love breathing within us: and if truth and love always bring sorrow with them,
I shall expect the coming of Christ to be with pain. I have no doubt there are
some to whom Christ came, and made them very happy. You will never forget the
hour of your conversion, when, as by the rending of a veil, the night was gone,
and the trees in the forest clapped their hands before you, and every star in
the heavens shone more brightly. A true experience, a very real experience:
there are those here who look back on such an hour. But Jesus does not always
come that way. He comes with the sword as well as with the song. He comes to
banish the old shallow happiness, to break the ice that was over the deep
waters, to touch the chords that had never given their music, to open the eyes
to the hills above the cloud. And if He has come to you thus, so that you are
not happier but consumed with a passion of divine discontent, I bid you in
God's name go forward--it is Christ with the sword, but it is still the Christ.
It is a great thing to feel like singing. Perhaps it is greater still to feel
like struggling. This one thing I do, forgetting the things that are behind I
press towards the mark.
Three Ways Christ's Coming into the
Heart Brings a Sword: He Opens Up the Depths of Sin within Us
There are three ways in which the coming of
Christ into the heart sends a sword there. I can only briefly touch on these
three ways. Christ opens up the depths of sin within us; that is one. We see
what we are in the light of His perfection. We were tolerably contented with
our character once, but when Christ comes we are never that again. Like the
sheep that look clean enough among the summer grass, but against the background
of the virgin snow look foul; so you and I never know how vile we are until the
background of our life is Christ. You would have thought that when Christ
filled Peter's net, Peter would have been ecstatically happy; but instead of
that you have Simon Peter crying, "Depart from me for I am a sinful man, O
Lord." Christ came to Simon Peter with the sword; showed him himself;
taught him how dark he was. And whenever the sword-stroke of an indwelling
Savior cuts into the deeps of a man's heart the wound is very likely to be
sore.
He Calls Us to a Lifelong Warfare
And then Christ calls us to a lifelong
warfare. The note of warfare rings through the whole New Testament. The spirit
is quickened now to crave for spiritual things, and the flesh and the spirit
must battle till the grave. I knew a student who had been to Keswick and had
drunk deep of the teaching of that school. And very noble teaching it is when
nobly grasped. And he came back to Scotland in a kind of rapture; everything
was to be easy evermore. And he went to one of our most saintly and notable
ministers to tell him about this newfound way to holiness, and the minister
(with his beautiful smile) looked at him and said, "Ah, sir, it will be a
sore wrestle till the end." For we wrestle not against flesh and blood,
but against principalities and powers and spiritual darkness. And the evil that
I would not that I do, and the good I would that do I not. Paul knew the peace
of God that passed all understanding, yet to Paul the Savior came bearing the
sword.
He Heightens Our Ideals
But above all, it is by heightening our
ideal that the old peace goes and the pain begins. It is in the new conception
of what life may be that the sword-stroke cuts into the heart. We are no more
the children of time and space. We are the children of glorious immortality. We
are launching out onto a career that will advance and deepen forever and
forever. And do you think that the birth of a mighty thought like that can be
accomplished without wound or pain? Whenever the horizon widens there is
sorrow. The sword of Christ smites through the thongs that bind us. The sword
of Christ cuts down the veil that shadows us. The sword of Christ makes free
play for our manhood; we step into our liberty through Him. And if, with all
that, there comes a haunting pain and an unrest that may become an agony,
remember that Christ came to send the sword.
Christ Sends a Sword into the Home
But I pass on now: so, secondly and lastly,
Christ comes to send a sword into the home.
Did you ever think how true that was of
Nazareth? Did you ever reflect on our text in the light of that home? There was
not a cottager in all the village but would think of one home they knew when
they heard this. Joseph and Mary--was there any home in Nazareth on which the
sunshine of heaven seemed to rest so sweetly? The peace of mutual love and
trust lay on it, like a benediction from the green hills that sheltered it.
Then into that quiet home came Jesus Christ, and the point of the sword has
touched the heart of Joseph. And he was minded to put Mary away quietly, for
the great love he had to her. Then came the flight to Egypt; then Jesus in the
Temple--ah, yes! the sword is going deeper now. And when the public ministry
began, and He was put to scorn, rejected, crucified, I think the sword had
smitten that quiet home. It might have been so peaceful and so happy, with the
laughter of children and the joy of motherhood. It might have been so peaceful
and so happy if God had never honored it like this. But Jesus was born there,
and that made all the difference. It could never be the quiet home again.
Gethsemane was coming, Calvary was coming; a sword was going to pierce through
Mary's heart. He came not to send peace, but a sword.
Now I think that still in many and many a
home the coming of Jesus spells out unrest like that. When a young man or woman
in a worldly home takes a definite stand, comes out and out for Christ, then
the father and mother and every brother and sister will understand the meaning
of this text. There is no outward quarrelling--how could there be when all the
family are members of the Church? But the new enthusiasm and the new
consecration and the new wholeheartedness for Jesus Christ--all well enough at
the distance of the pulpit, but now brought into the bosom of the family--cause
unrest, uneasiness, and irritation there, and that is Christ coming with the
sword. I quite admit the sword is needlessly sharpened sometimes by the pride
and arrogance of the young convert. I have had cases in my ministry where all
my sympathy went out to the unconverted brothers. But this I want to say, Is
there any young man or woman whose difficulty in deciding for Christ is the
life at home? Well, then, be very humble; do not obtrude yourself; remember
your ignorance, remember your youth; but as you have a life to live, and as you
have a death to die, and as you have a God to meet before the Throne, do not
let father or mother or the happiest home that ever cradled man keep you from
closing with the call of God. If there must be trouble, then trouble there must
be. To thine own self be true. As man to man Christ says to you, "I came
not to send peace, but a sword."
The Sword in the Hearts of Parents over
Their Children
A word to the children of sorrow as I
close. A word to the fathers and to the mothers. I want you to remember there
is another way in which Christ has brought the sword into the home. For home
itself has a wealth of meaning in it that it never would have had save for the
Gospel. And the natural love of the mother for her child has been deepened and
glorified since Jesus came. Brotherhood, sisterhood, fatherhood, motherhood,
childhood, you do not know how little these words meant once. And if now they
speak to us of what is truest and tenderest, of ties unsurpassably delicate and
strong, it is the love of Christ, it is the revelation of the Father, it is the
touch of our Brother that has achieved the change. And what is the other side
of that rich heritage? Ask any Christian mother for the answer. Find out if her
heart never bleeds over her child; if she has not hours of haunting and
torturing fears. Develop love, and you develop sorrow. Deepen the heart-life,
and you deepen suffering. It is by doing that, through all the centuries, that
Christ has brought the sword into our homes. The Stoic said, "Dry up these
fountains of feeling"; so he made a solitude and called it peace. But
Christ deepened and cleansed life's wellsprings here, and that very deepening
has brought the sword. I think it is worth it. I would not be a Stoic. It is better
to live vividly, spite of the pain, than to have the fingertips of all the
angels grope at a heart of steel. After all, if He smiteth, He will bind up
again. If He woundeth, yet He will make us whole. The sword, like Excalibur
swung by the arm of Bedivere, shall flash and sink into the deeps forever, when
we wake in the eternal morning of the Lord.
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