George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
April 2
When the Child-Spirit Dies
Of such is the kingdom of heaven--Mat
19:14
Christlikeness Is Childlikeness
It is a beautiful thought, of such are the
kingdom of heaven. It is a beautiful conception, daring and fresh as it is
beautiful, that the one attribute of all citizens of God must be the possession
of the childlike heart. We need not be learned, though it is sweet to be
learned; we need not be gifted, though God be thanked for gifts. But we must be
childlike; that is the one necessity. Christ takes an unalterable stand on
that.
Childlikeness Is Not Childishness
Now of course to be childlike is one thing;
and it is quite another to be childish. I sometimes fear we have so confused
the two, that a certain contempt has touched the nobler of them--we use our
common words so carelessly, and treat that magnificent instrument of speech so
lightly. To be childlike is to have the spirit of the child, to have the touch
of the divine about us still. It is to live freshly in a glad, fresh world,
with a thousand avenues into the everywhere out of this dull spot that we call
now. But to be childish is to be immature; to have no grip of things, never to
face facts squarely; and he is a poor Christian who lives so. In understanding,
says the apostle, I would have you men. It is one distinguishing glory of our
Lord that He looked the worst in the face, and called it bad. But the guileless
heart, and the soul that can serve and sing, because there is love and home and
fatherland about it--all that is childlike--like the children--and of such is
the kingdom of heaven.
Childlikeness Is a Sign of Greatness
George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
April 2
When the Child-Spirit Dies
Of such is the kingdom of heaven--Mat
19:14
Christlikeness Is Childlikeness
It is a beautiful thought, of such are the
kingdom of heaven. It is a beautiful conception, daring and fresh as it is
beautiful, that the one attribute of all citizens of God must be the possession
of the childlike heart. We need not be learned, though it is sweet to be
learned; we need not be gifted, though God be thanked for gifts. But we must be
childlike; that is the one necessity. Christ takes an unalterable stand on
that.
Childlikeness Is Not Childishness
Now of course to be childlike is one thing;
and it is quite another to be childish. I sometimes fear we have so confused
the two, that a certain contempt has touched the nobler of them--we use our
common words so carelessly, and treat that magnificent instrument of speech so
lightly. To be childlike is to have the spirit of the child, to have the touch
of the divine about us still. It is to live freshly in a glad, fresh world,
with a thousand avenues into the everywhere out of this dull spot that we call
now. But to be childish is to be immature; to have no grip of things, never to
face facts squarely; and he is a poor Christian who lives so. In understanding,
says the apostle, I would have you men. It is one distinguishing glory of our
Lord that He looked the worst in the face, and called it bad. But the guileless
heart, and the soul that can serve and sing, because there is love and home and
fatherland about it--all that is childlike--like the children--and of such is
the kingdom of heaven.
Childlikeness Is a Sign of Greatness
There can be little doubt, too, that in
claiming the child-spirit Jesus was reaching up to the very highest in man. "Wisdom,"
says Wordsworth in his own quiet way--so helpful in these noisy
days--"Wisdom is ofttimes nearer when we stoop, than when we soar," and
Jesus, stooping to the little children, was really rising to the crown of life.
Show me the greatest men in human history--the men who were morally and nobly
great--and I shall show you in every one of them tokens and traces of the
childlike heart. It is the middle-men, the worldly middle-men, the men of one
talent who bury it in the napkin, it is these who are locked into their
prison-house, and have lost the happy daring of the child. Great souls, with
the ten talents flaming into genius, live in a world so full of God, that men
say they are imprudent, careless; and Jesus sees that they are little children.
Who was it that defined a genius as a man who keeps unsullied through the stern
teaching of the years the spirit of the child? I think that Christ would have
liked that definition. There is genius in childhood; there is childhood in
genius too. "He hath put down the mighty from their seats, and exalted
them of low degree."
Christ Possessed the Spirit of
Childlikeness
And you cannot read the story of Jesus
Christ without feeling that to the very close of it the child-spirit was alive
in Him. "A little child shall lead them," said the prophet; do you
think it was only a poetic fancy? The Bible is too terribly in earnest to have
any margin for poetic fancies. When I study the records of the life of Jesus,
and stumble on some unfathomable mystery, immediately I find my heart
responding, "This is the Son of God." And when I find Him healing the
Syrophoenician's daughter, raising the widow's son, or weeping in infinite pity
by the grave--"This is the Son of Man." But when I light on these
passages about the lilies; about the sparrow falling, and the raven who toiled
not; then, in a thousand touches such as these, fresh, penetrating, wonderful,
I feel that, after all, the prophet was right--a little child shall lead them. No
scoffing hardened Him. No disappointment soured Him. No pain dulled the keen
edge of His love. He still believed, in spite of Iscariot. He still had a
Father, in spite of Calvary. And that sweet spirit, as of a little child, has
been the dew of heaven to the world.
The Loss of Childlikeness May Creep on
Us Slowly
The spirit of the child, then, never died
in Jesus. I wonder if it has died in you? It dies away so slowly and so
gradually, under the pressure of a worldly city, that we hardly notice how far
we have drifted. But the greatest losses are the losses we never observe; the
crumblings in secret till this or that is ruined; the stealing away of the
dearest in the dark; and there is no loss more tragic for a soul than the loss
of that spirit of the child.
You Cease to Be Childlike...When You
Cease to Be Receptive
You ask me why? I think there are three
reasons; there are three penalties that follow when the child-spirit dies, and
the first is, that we cease to be receptive. The joy of childhood is its
receptivity. The greatest duty of it is to receive. The child knows nothing of
a haunting past yet, and it is not yet anxious about the future. Its time is
now, and now is God's time too, do not forget. But you and I have so overlaid
this present with yesterday's sin and with tomorrow's project, that we have
little heart for today's message. We are not receptive as the little child is,
we do not welcome impressions and angels now. And so we grow very commonplace
and dull; there is plenty of dust about us, and no dew. Let the dead past bury
its dead! Do not be living in a quenched yesterday. And take no anxious thought
about tomorrow. Consider the lilies; be a child again. To feel the eternal in
this passing moment, to catch the rustle of God's garment now, not to be
burdened with a vain regret, not to be peering forward through the curtain; all
that, with the open eye and feeling heart, is to be childlike. And of such is
the kingdom of heaven.
When You Cease to Live in Your Own World
No doubt it is that very receptivity that
makes the little children dwell apart. I have long thought that the aloofness
of the Christian, his isolation in the busiest life, was closely akin to the
aloofness of the child. You talk of loneliness?--I tell you there are few such
lonely creatures as little children. And they are lonely not because of sorrow;
and not, thank God, because their lives are empty. They dwell apart, because
they live in their own world, bright, wonderful, with its own visions and
voices, and you and I never touch even with our finger-tips these ivory gates
and golden. What I suggest is that the isolation of the saint is like the
isolation of the child. For the Christian also dwells apart, but not in the
solitude of emptiness. He has his world, just as the children have; old things
have passed away from him in Christ. And in that new creation where the Saviour
reigns, and which the worldly heart has never seen, there is a peopled
isolation like that of the little children, for of such is the kingdom of
heaven.
When the Simplicity of Faith Is Gone
Once more, when the child-spirit dies, then
the simplicity of faith is gone. There is an exquisite purity about the faith
of children; sometimes they make us blush--they trust us so. Intensely eager,
inquisitively curious; why? why? from sunrise, to sunset--but all the time how
they are trusting us! Ah, if we had only trusted God like that! It is something
to be trusted, if only by a helpless babe, and even God is happier when we
trust Him. But better than to be trusted, is to trust; to walk by faith and not
by sight; and when the spirit of the child dies out, it is not possible to walk
that way again. For when we cease to be childlike we grow worldly, and to be
worldly is always to be faithless; and one great danger of this commercial city
is to develop faithless, worldly men. I have no doubt you call me an idle
dreamer because I plead for the child-spirit in the city. But it is better to
be a dreamer than a coward, and woe is me if I preach not the Gospel. "Of
such is the kingdom of heaven"--minister! "Of such is the kingdom of
heaven"--merchant ! "Of such is the kingdom of
heaven"-schoolmaster, doctor, workman, servant! Are you of such? It is not
my question. I only pass it on from Jesus Christ!
When the Feeling of Wonder Disappears
Lastly, when the child-spirit dies, then
the feeling of wonder disappears. For the child is above all else a wonderer,
and is set in the center of a wonderful world. There is nothing common or
unclean for children; all things are big with wonder for him. The rolling of
the wagon in the street, and the gathering banks of cloud down by the sunset;
and the opening flower, and the father's morning kindness, and the mother's
stories, and the birthday joy--the little magicians so trick them out with
glory, that they make the pomp of emperors ridiculous. Childhood, as one of our
poets sang, is "The hour of glory in the grass, of splendour in the
flower."
What a poor thing is life when the wonder
of it all passes away! I remember a magnificent sermon by John Ker, that master
in the great art of spiritual preaching, and this is the title of it,
"God's Word suited to man's sense of wonder." And Ruskin said,
"I had rather live in a cottage and wonder at everything, than live in
Warwick Castle and wonder at nothing." You have all felt the trials of
existence, I want you to feel the wonder of it now; and the great wonder that
the Lord should be your Shepherd, and should have died upon Calvary for you.
His name shall be called Wonderful--become a child again, and feel it so. For
except ye be born again, ye cannot see the kingdom; and of such is the kingdom
of heaven.
There can be little doubt, too, that in
claiming the child-spirit Jesus was reaching up to the very highest in man. "Wisdom," says Wordsworth in his own
quiet way--so helpful in these noisy days--"Wisdom is ofttimes nearer when
we stoop, than when we soar," and Jesus, stooping to the little children, was really rising to
the crown of life. Show me the greatest men in human history--the men who were
morally and nobly great--and I shall show you in every one of them tokens and
traces of the childlike heart. It is the middle-men, the worldly middle-men,
the men of one talent who bury it in the napkin, it is these who are locked
into their prison-house, and have lost the happy daring of the child. Great
souls, with the ten talents flaming into genius, live in a world so full of
God, that men say they are imprudent, careless; and Jesus sees that they are
little children. Who was it that defined a genius as a man who keeps unsullied
through the stern teaching of the years the spirit of the child? I think that
Christ would have liked that definition. There is genius in childhood; there is
childhood in genius too. "He hath put down the mighty from their seats,
and exalted them of low degree."
Christ Possessed the Spirit of
Childlikeness
And you cannot read the story of Jesus
Christ without feeling that to the very close of it the child-spirit was alive
in Him. "A little child shall
lead them," said the prophet; do you think it was only a poetic fancy? The Bible is too terribly in earnest to have
any margin for poetic fancies. When I study the records of the life of Jesus,
and stumble on some unfathomable mystery, immediately I find my heart
responding, "This is the Son of God." And when I find Him healing the
Syrophoenician's daughter, raising the widow's son, or weeping in infinite pity
by the grave--"This is the Son of Man." But when I light on these
passages about the lilies; about the sparrow falling, and the raven who toiled
not; then, in a thousand touches such as these, fresh, penetrating, wonderful,
I feel that, after all, the prophet was right--a little child shall lead them. No
scoffing hardened Him. No disappointment soured Him. No pain dulled the keen
edge of His love. He still believed, in spite of Iscariot. He still had a
Father, in spite of Calvary. And that sweet spirit, as of a little child, has
been the dew of heaven to the world.
The Loss of Childlikeness May Creep on
Us Slowly
The spirit of the child, then, never died
in Jesus. I wonder if it has died in you? It dies away so slowly and so
gradually, under the pressure of a worldly city, that we hardly notice how far
we have drifted. But the greatest losses are the losses we never observe; the
crumblings in secret till this or that is ruined; the stealing away of the
dearest in the dark; and there is no loss more tragic for a soul than the loss
of that spirit of the child.
You Cease to Be Childlike...When You
Cease to Be Receptive
You ask me why? I think there are three
reasons; there are three penalties that follow when the child-spirit dies, and
the first is, that we cease to be receptive. The joy of childhood is its
receptivity. The greatest duty of it is to receive. The child knows nothing of
a haunting past yet, and it is not yet anxious about the future. Its time is
now, and now is God's time too, do not forget. But you and I have so overlaid
this present with yesterday's sin and with tomorrow's project, that we have
little heart for today's message. We are not receptive as the little child is,
we do not welcome impressions and angels now. And so we grow very commonplace
and dull; there is plenty of dust
about us, and no dew. Let the dead past bury
its dead! Do not be living in a quenched yesterday. And take no anxious thought
about tomorrow. Consider the lilies; be a child again. To feel the eternal in
this passing moment, to catch the rustle of God's garment now, not to be
burdened with a vain regret, not to be peering forward through the curtain; all
that, with the open eye and feeling heart, is to be childlike. And of such is
the kingdom of heaven.
When You Cease to Live in Your Own World
No doubt it is that very receptivity that
makes the little children dwell apart. I have long thought that the aloofness
of the Christian, his isolation in the busiest life, was closely akin to the
aloofness of the child. You talk of loneliness?--I tell you there are few such
lonely creatures as little children. And they are lonely not because of sorrow;
and not, thank God, because their lives are empty. They dwell apart, because
they live in their own world, bright, wonderful, with its own visions and
voices, and you and I never touch even with our finger-tips these ivory gates
and golden. What I suggest is that the isolation of the saint is like the
isolation of the child. For the Christian also
dwells apart, but not in the solitude of emptiness. He has his world, just as the children have;
old things have passed away from him in Christ. And in that new creation where
the Saviour reigns, and which the worldly heart has never seen, there is a
peopled isolation like that of the little children, for of such is the kingdom
of heaven.
When the Simplicity of Faith Is Gone
Once more, when the child-spirit dies, then
the simplicity of faith is gone. There is an exquisite purity about the faith
of children; sometimes they make us blush--they trust us so. Intensely eager,
inquisitively curious; why? why? from sunrise, to sunset--but all the time how
they are trusting us! Ah, if we had only trusted God like that! It is something
to be trusted, if only by a helpless babe, and even God is happier when we
trust Him. But better than to be trusted, is to trust; to walk by faith and not
by sight; and when the spirit of the child dies out, it is not possible to walk
that way again. For when we cease to be childlike we grow worldly, and to be
worldly is always to be faithless; and one great danger of this commercial city
is to develop faithless, worldly men. I have no doubt you call me an idle dreamer because I plead for the
child-spirit in the city. But it is better to be a dreamer than a coward, and
woe is me if I preach not the Gospel. "Of such is the kingdom of heaven"--minister! "Of
such is the kingdom of heaven"--merchant ! "Of such is the kingdom of
heaven"-schoolmaster, doctor, workman, servant! Are you of such? It is not
my question. I only pass it on from Jesus Christ!
When the Feeling of Wonder Disappears
Lastly, when the child-spirit dies, then
the feeling of wonder disappears. For the child is above all else a wonderer,
and is set in the center of a wonderful world. There is nothing common or
unclean for children; all things are big with wonder for him. The rolling of
the wagon in the street, and the gathering banks of cloud down by the sunset;
and the opening flower, and the father's morning kindness, and the mother's
stories, and the birthday joy--the little magicians so trick them out with
glory, that they make the pomp of emperors ridiculous. Childhood, as one of our
poets sang, is "The hour of glory in the grass, of splendour in the
flower."
What a poor thing is life when the wonder
of it all passes away! I remember a magnificent sermon by John Ker, that master
in the great art of spiritual preaching, and this is the title of it,
"God's Word suited to man's sense of wonder." And Ruskin said,
"I had rather live in a cottage and wonder at everything, than live in
Warwick Castle and wonder at nothing." You have all felt the trials of
existence, I want you to feel the wonder of it now; and the great wonder that
the Lord should be your Shepherd, and should have died upon Calvary for you.
His name shall be called Wonderful--become a child again, and feel it so. For
except ye be born again, ye cannot see the kingdom; and of such is the kingdom
of heaven.
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