George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
May 1
Where They Found Him
And when they had found him--Mar 1:37
Lost and Found--Sinner and Savior!
Meditating on the Gospel story, one of the
most enriching of all studies, one notes the great variety of places in which
men and women found the Savior. There are people of whom we say admiringly,
that you always know where you will find them. At any hour of any given day,
you know where they are to be met with. But I venture to say, with the most
perfect reverence, no one ever could say that of Christ--that was one of the
wonders of His life. Appointments may be precious, but what a charm there is in
unexpected meetings, when suddenly in the crowd we see a face, and then the sun
shines out even in December. People were always finding Christ like that,
suddenly, in very diverse places, and it is of one or two of these I wish to
write.
In the Special or Striking Place
First, let us take the wise men from the
East. They found Him in a manger. It was the unlikeliest place in all the world
for One who had been heralded by stars. I remember, many years ago, going down
a coal mine with a friend. We stumbled along a mile of tunnel, and there came
on a man working in a hollow. And my guide, who was the local minister,
pointing to the stooping figure, said, "That is the brightest Christian in
my parish." Then I thought of the wise men from the East finding Christ in
that unlikely manger. I thought of the rowers upon the Lake of Galilee finding
Him upon the stormy sea. I thought of the penitent thief upon the cross,
finding the desire of all the nations amid the shames and agonies of Calvary. That
is one of the wonders of the Lord. He is found in the unlikeliest places, in
lives where one would never think to light on Him, and in the most unpromising
of circumstances. He is found in India and in Manchuria, and among the hills
and glens in Livingstonia, and in the savage islands of the Pacific Ocean. How
often, studying the Old Testament, is the Lord found in the unlikeliest
places--not in the royal splendors of Isaiah, but in seemingly desolate and
barren tracts. So the magi, dreaming of kingly furnishings, and of cradles
wrought with curious art, found Him a little babe among the beasts.
In the Sacred Place
Then, passing on a little, one remembers
how His parents found Him in the Temple. It is a story familiar to us all. The
wisest sages of the land were there, but Mary and Joseph never heeded them. The
courts were echoing with music, but I question if Mary ever heard it. Like a
morning of sunshine after a night of weeping was the sight of Jesus to His
mother's eyes, and she and Joseph found Him in the church. Not in the streets
where rolled the tide of traffic; not amid the chaffering of bazaars; but in
the beautiful place where God was worshipped, with its altar and its mercy
seat. And to this hour, wherever folk are gathered to worship God in singleness
of heart, the Lord still reveals Himself as present. Through song and prayer,
or when the word is preached, or in mystical ways the mind can never fathom,
how many become conscious of that presence which makes all the difference in
the world? What new meaning does it give to churchgoing if we practice it in
quiet assurance that we shall meet the chiefest among ten thousand there?
In the Solitary Place
Then, again, one recalls how His disciples
found Him in the solitary place. To me that is of infinite suggestiveness. All
the evening before He had been busy, healing sicknesses and working miracles.
Virtue had been passing out of Him, for when He gave a cure He gave Himself.
Then in the morning, long before the sunrise, He had risen and stolen quietly
away--and they found Him in the solitary place. All alone, nobody beside Him,
round Him the infinite solitude of nature--and to me there is a parable in that.
To many a young man there comes the day when his spirit is thrilled by Emerson
or Shakespeare. But Shakespeare and Emerson do not stand alone; there are other
essayists and other poets. You find them moving in a glorious company, and you
look at them, and call them men of genius; but you find Christ in the solitary
place. Genius is a thing of less or more. It has its chosen child in every
century. Genius may be an all-subduing flame, or it may only be a tiny spark.
But the one thing you can never do with Christ is to regard Him as belonging to
a class; you find Him in the solitary place. In the unconditional obedience He
calls for, in His unparalleled and stupendous claims, in His immediate
knowledge of the Father, in His total sinlessness, Christ stands alone, confronting
every one of us. We find Him in the solitary place.
The Standard Places - Along the
"Highway of Life"
Lastly, one recalls that there were those
who found Him on the common highway. Who does not know the matchless story of
the two who found Him on the Emmaus road. There rolled the wagon. There the
chariot dashed. There marched the legions of the empire. There was the merchant
travelling on business; there the prodigal returning home. It was the common
highway, free to everybody, open to the beggar and to the emperor, and there
the two disciples found the Lord. Sometimes that common road is very dusty. The
heart faints and the feet grow weary on it. We wonder if we shall have strength
to travel it, till in the hour of evening we win home. But what a difference it
makes, what a blessed and amazing difference, when like the two going to
Emmaus, we find Him on the common road! He makes so much of our worrying
ridiculous. We forget it all in company with Him. He is so radiant, so full of
loving hopefulness, so absolutely sure of God. In that companionship life
blossoms. We have courage for the darkest mile. We recapture, even when the
shadows fall, the burning of the heart.
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