George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
May 25
The Problem of Pain
Neither shall there be any more
pain--Rev 21:4
The problem of pain, I think, is in its
full intensity a modern problem. There is today a sensitiveness to pain which
in past ages was unknown. When you go back three or four centuries, you read of
the most excruciating tortures. And you say how cruel must men have been in
those days when they would actually use those frightful instruments. Well, of
course there was much cruelty about it, but remember there was also a certain
callousness--an absence of that quivering sensibility which makes us shrink
from suffering today. Still more conspicuously was this the case in the ancient
world of Greece and Rome. It was a cruel and a callous world. It was not alive
to the mystery of pain. Even the Book of Job, which deals with suffering, is
not perplexed about the fact of suffering. It is the question why the righteous
suffer that forms the burden of the Book of Job. The problem, then, has become
insistent in these latter days. Is it possible, do you think, to find the
reasons that may have led to this emergence? Why, in other words, are we today
more sensitive to pain than men were once? Why do we dwell on it more and feel
its pressure more than men seem to have done in the old world? Let me suggest
to you three reasons that may help to account for that new sensibility.
Our Power to Escape It
In the first place, the keener sensitiveness
to pain springs partly from our new power of escaping it. The fact that we can
so often cheat it now has had the effect of calling attention to it. So long as
anything is quite inevitable, we grimly and silently accept it. Death is
inevitable --no man can escape it--and you and I seldom dwell on death. But
just suppose that some man were to come and tell us a secret for escaping
death--and wouldn't the fact of death leap into prominence? So is it with the
fact of pain. Men thought that pain was inevitable once. There it was, and one
had just to bear it, and that was the end of the whole matter. But now, thanks
to the discoveries of science and to the wonderful appliances of Christian
medicine, we look on pain in quite a different light. A doctor will actually
come to you and say, "It is your duty not to suffer." I had a
first-rate doctor who once said to me, "You have no right to suffer pain
like that." And it is just this sense that pain is not inevitable, but may
be escaped from and avoided somehow, that has helped to call attention to its
problem.
The Kinship of Creation in Suffering
A second reason for the pressure of the
problem is to be found in the new sense of the solidarity of life. We feel our
common suffering now with all creation in a way that was undreamed of once.
Men, of course, have always recognized that there was a common suffering
between them and the dumb animals. But in bygone times it was not of that they
thought; it was rather of the chasm between man and beast. Now, however, it is
not on the chasm that thought is centered, it is on the wonderful closeness of
the ties that link all living things into a unity. Now the moment you have
built that bridge, there comes galloping over it the form of pain. For pain is
universal in the world; wherever there is life, there is suffering. And it is
the new sense which we have gained of the suffering throughout the animate
creation that has given the matter a new prominence. You know how John Stuart
Mill has dwelt on that. You know how Huxley has dwelt on that. They have taken
the pain of bird and beast and fish and flung it in the very face of God. And
what I say is that that new concept of the groaning and travailing of all
creation helps to explain the pressure of the problem.
Our Love of Christ Makes Us Conscious of
Suffering
But there is another reason, it seems to
me. It is not scientific; it is theological. It is the discovery we have made
in these last days of the full humanity of Jesus. Can you detect the bearings
of that upon the question? Let me try in a sentence to explain it to you. Well,
so long as the faith was viewed as a body of doctrine, so long there was little
room in it for pain. It was with sin it dealt. It was on sin it centered. It
was through sin it reached the love of God. But the moment that out of the mist
of ages there stepped the figure of the man Christ Jesus, in that moment there
flashed upon the world the recognition of the fact of pain. Here was the
Christ, the very Son of God, and He was infinitely sensitive to pain. It was
His passion to cure it when He met with it. For Him it was a terrible reality.
And I suggest that it is the human Christ who has become so real to us today
who has made real to a thousand hearts the problem of our human suffering. Men
are not deeply interested perhaps in dogma now, but they are deeply interested
in Christ Jesus. They want to look at the world through Jesus' eyes in a way
that was never thought of in past ages. And I think that when you get that
standpoint, immediately, as in the days of Galilee, you are confronted not
alone with sin, but also with the terrible spectacle of pain.
The Place of Pain in Our Lives
Now to show you the place that pain has in
our being, there are one or two facts I want to bring before you. And the first
is that our capacity for pain is greater than our capacity for joy. You
experience, for instance, a great joy. Does that prolong its sway through the
long months? Do you not know how it exhausts itself and dies, as Shakespeare
says, in its own too much? But now you experience great pain, and I never heard
that that must necessarily exhaust itself--it may continue with a man for
years. That means that our capacity for pain is deeper than our capacity for
joy. And I mention that to show you how our nature, when you come to understand
it in the depths, is in unison with the message of the cross.
Another fact which we shall pick up as we
pass is that pain is at the root of life and growth. It is not through its
pleasures but through its pains that the world is carried to the higher levels.
You remember how Bums wrote about our pleasures?
But pleasures are like poppies spread,
You seize the flow'r, its bloom is shed
and that is not only true of men; it is
true also of the progress of the world. It is through suffering that we are
born, and it is through suffering that we are fed. It is through agony that we
have won our poetry; it is through blood that we have reached our freedom. It
is through pain--pain infinite, unutterable, the pain which was endured by
Christ on Calvary--that you and I are ransomed and redeemed. Now that is a
fact, explain it how you will, and we are here to deal with facts. I do not
deny that pain may be a curse--remember that it also is a power. We owe our
laws to it, and all our institutions of health and welfare. We owe to it our
salvation. We owe to it the fact that we are here and able to look the problem
in the face.
Pain in Relationship to God
And then the third fact I note is this, and
to me it is of the deepest significance. It is the tendency which men have
always had to think of pain as acceptable to God. We talk today of the duty of
happiness till people are almost tired of hearing of it. Now not for a single
moment would I question that it is our duty to be happy. But how significant
and singular it is that in every country and in every age men should have
looked on suffering and pain as something that was acceptable to God. You have
it in the Roman knight who, to appease the gods, leaped into the chasm. You
have it in the Indian fakir who sits for years in an attitude of misery. You
have it in the pilgrim to the shrine; in the hermit and in the lonely
anchorite; in every saint who ever scourged himself; in every savage who has
made his offering. Whatever else that means (and it means much else), it hints
at something mysterious in pain. Men feel instinctively that in the bearing of
it there is some hope of fellowship with heaven. You may despise the hermit,
and you may flout the saint when the weals are red upon his back, but an
instinct which is universal is something you do well not to despise.
That leads me to touch just for a moment
upon the purifying power of pain, for that is more closely akin than we might
think to the feeling that it pleases God. Now I am far from saying that pain
always purifies. We have all known cases where it has not done so. We have
known men who were hardened and embittered by the cup of suffering they had to
drink. But on the other hand, who is there who has not known some life that was
transfigured, not by the glad radiance of its joy, but by its bearing of the
cross of pain? How many shallow people has pain deepened! How many hardening
hearts has it made tender! How many has it checked, and checked effectively,
when they were running headlong to their ruin! How many has it weaned from
showy things, giving a vision of true riches, and steadying them into a sweet
sobriety as if something of the unseen were in their sight! Pain may warn us of
the approach of evil. It is the alarm bell which nature rings. Pain may be used
in the strong hand of God as a punishment of the sin we have committed. But
never forget that far above such ministries, pain, when it is willingly
accepted, is one of the choicest instruments of purifying that is wielded by
the love of heaven. Fight against it and it shatters you. All the tools of God
have double edges. Rebel against it as a thing of cruelty, and all the light of
life may be destroyed. But take it up, absorb it in the life, weave it into the
fabric of the being, and God shall bring the blossom from the thorn.
The Sufferings of the Innocent
And that thought, as it seems to me, may
throw some light on the sufferings of the innocent. One of the hardest
questions in the world is why the innocent should have to suffer so. There is
no perfect answer to that question, nor ever shall be on this side the grave.
But is there not at least a partial answer in what I have been trying to say? If
pain were a curse and nothing but a curse, well might we doubt the justice on
the throne; but if pain is a ladder to a better life, then light falls on the
sufferings of the innocent. It is not the anger of heaven that is smiting them;
it may be the love of heaven that is blessing them. There are always tears and
blood upon the steps that lead men heavenward to where the angels are. Mark
you, not by the fraction of an ounce does that lighten the guilt of him who
causes suffering. It only shows us how the love of God can take the curse and
turn it to a blessing.
The Place of the Gospel in Bearing Pain
So I am led lastly to consider this, What
has the Gospel done to help us to bear pain? I shall touch on two things which
it has done.
In the first place it has quieted those
questionings which are often sorer than the pain itself. It has helped us to
believe that God is love, in the teeth of all the suffering in the world. Have
you ever noticed about Jesus Christ that He was never perplexed by the great
fact of pain? Death troubled Him, for He groaned in spirit and was troubled
when He stood before the grave of Lazarus. But though the fact of death
troubled His soul, there is no trace that the dark fact of pain did so--and yet
was there ever one on earth so sensitive to pain as Jesus Christ? Here was a
man who saw pain at its bitterest, yet not for an instant did He doubt His
Father. Here was a man who had to suffer terribly, and yet through all His
sufferings God loved Him--it is these facts which, for the believing soul,
silence the obstinate questionings forever. We may not see why we should have
to suffer. We may not see why our loved ones have to suffer. Now we know in
part and see in part; we are but children crying in the night. But we see
Jesus, and that sufficeth us. We see how He trusted. We know how He was loved.
And knowing that, we may doubt many things, but we never can doubt the love of
God again.
And in the second place, it has helped us
here by giving us the hope of immortality. It has set our pain in quite a new
environment--the environment of an eternal hope. I wonder if you have ever
thought of the place and power of hope in human suffering? Hope is mighty in
all we have to do; but it is mighty also in all we have to bear. When once you
get the glow of a great hope right in the heart of what you have to suffer, I
tell you that that suffering is transfigured. Two people may have to endure an
equal agony--taken abstractly, the pains are much alike,--but the one sufferer
may be a hopeless man, and the other a woman with the hope of imminent
motherhood: and who shall tell the difference there is in the bearing of
everything that must be borne through the presence or the absence of such hope?
It is just there that Jesus Christ steps in. He has brought immortality to
light. Our light affliction which is but for a moment worketh for us an
exceeding weight of glory. Out of Christ we thought it was unending. We thought
we never should have strength to bear it. But now, against the background of
the glory, our light affliction is but for a moment.
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