George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
April 22
The Cry for Companionship
What, could ye not watch with me one
hour?--Mat 26:40
The Closest Disciples Sleep Most Often
The scene was the Garden of Gethsemane, and
all three disciples were asleep. It is not the first time in the Gospel story
that we have found these three disciples sleeping. When the Lord was
transfigured on the mountain these same disciples were asleep, and neither
there nor here was it a light and evanescent drowsiness. We are told that in
the former narrative, and here, the moment Jesus ceased to speak they relapsed
into their heavy slumber. One would have thought that the word of Jesus to them
would have stabbed them wide awake. It evidently did nothing of the kind. The
last syllable was scarcely uttered, when they were sunk again in profound
sleep.
As a Man, Jesus Craved Companionship
One recognises in these words of Jesus His
passionate yearning for companionship. In His hour of travail and of agony He
craved the companionship of men. One might have conjectured that in such an
hour the Master would have longed to be alone. Had He left His disciples in
Jerusalem one could have understood that perfectly. And the very fact that He
took these three disciples, and set them where they were not far away, shows
how He craved for human sympathy and needed the companionship of men. Our
blessed Saviour was no stoic. He leaned hard on loving hearts. He yearned for the
fellowship of men as intensely as they yearned for His. And if today He is
"the very same Jesus," unchanged by death and resurrection, then He
still craves, with an unaltered longing, for loving human companionship.
He Craved for Their Companionship
although He Knew It Would Be Inadequate
It should be noted that He craved this
fellowship when it was utterly inadequate. How little could these disciples
fathom all that was transacting in the darkness! There He was bearing sin upon
His spirit, as on Calvary He bore it in His body. There He was giving Himself
utterly to God's will in the redemption of mankind. Even had the disciples been
awake, how little could they have understood--yet He craved an imperfect
sympathy like that. What an exquisitely human touch that is! An old and
faithful family retainer may know nothing of what her master has to bear. To
her his troubles may be as great a mystery as the troubles of Jesus to His
three disciples. Yet the loving sympathy of that old servant, even though she
does not understand, is strangely helpful to her master's heart. Perhaps at the
best all we can give to Christ is a sympathy like that of the old servant.
There are depths in His being, His death, His endless life, that no human heart
can ever fathom. And yet He wants our loving close companionship, just as, in
the Garden of Gethsemane, He wanted that of these three sleeping men.
He Asked Them to Watch But One Hour
Another thought that meets us is how often
it is in lesser things we fail. In order to fully appreciate that I ask you to
put the accent on one hour. Had He asked them to watch through the livelong
night with Him, that might have been a high and arduous service. But to ask
their vigilance for sixty minutes surely was a very small demand, yet it was
there that the disciples failed. In the last great service Peter did not fail
Him, for Peter was crucified for Christ. James, too, laid down his life for
Him, and John went to exile in the Isle of Patmos. Where they all failed was in
the lesser thing, in the duty that was comparatively small--what, could ye not
watch with Me one hour?
And perhaps it is there most often that we
fail in our loving companionship with Christ. Perhaps it is there that love
most often fails. In our fellowship with the Lord Jesus we may be ready and
eager for the greatest sacrifice, and yet we cannot watch with Him one hour. In
those infinitesimal self-denials which are possible with every passing day, in
patience and appreciative sympathy within the shelter and secrecy of home, in
the rendering of those little kindnesses which are more to many hearts than
gold or silver, how often we fail as those disciples did. Great services reveal
our possibilities; little services reveal our consecration. Jesus places the
emphasis of heaven on him who is faithful in the least. Had these disciples
watched for that one hour they would have rendered a service far beyond their
dreams. That is true of everyone of us.
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