George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
June 21
Interior Alms
Give for alms that which is within--Luk
11:41 (R.V.)
The importance of the Within
That the rendering of the Revised Version
is the right one is suggested by a study of the context. The whole passage is
intended to reveal to us the value which Christ attached to the within. A
Pharisee had invited Christ to sup with him, and then had marveled that He had
omitted washing. This led Jesus to speak His sharp, stern words on the
cleansing of the inside of the cup or platter. And then, recalling Pharisaic
ostentation not only in washings but in almsgiving's, He added, "Give for
alms that which is within." It is the same thought as is expressed by Paul
in the thirteenth chapter of First Corinthians, "Though I bestow all my
goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned, and have not
charity, it profiteth me nothing." It is the same thought as was expressed
by Peter when, fixing his gaze on the lame man, he said, "Silver and gold
have I none, but such as I have give I thee" (Act 3:6). For to every man
there is an outward realm of all the material things which he possesses, and to
every man there is an inward realm comprising not what he owns but what he is.
And the law which Jesus here lays down is this, that of all giving, that is the
most blessed which gives not merely of that which is without but also of that
which is within.
I need hardly say that there is no
encouragement here to anything like a cheap and spurious charity. No one could
ever associate such a thought with any word that fell from Jesus Christ. The
tender compassion of Jesus for the poor--the miracle of the loaves and
fishes--the reward that is given to all who have clothed the needy in the great
parable of the last judgment--all this would prove to us, if any proof were
needed, how Christ regarded the giving of the outward. It is not as belittling
outward giving that Jesus utters the teaching of our text. On the contrary, it
is to reinforce it from a richer and a deeper spring. For when the heart is
opened then the hand is opened, and when feelings are stirred the purse is
never closed, and when a man so lives as to bestow, the greater he is not
likely to begrudge the less. He who gives everything up to the point of money
and then refuses to give that, need never think to shelter in this text when he
remembers who it was that uttered it. And this I think it right to say in
passing, lest any one should pervert this word of Jesus, as if it put any
slight on outward charities.
Having thus safeguarded this deep word, the
question which I should like to ask is this: why does the giving of that which
is within have this primacy in the thought of Christ? There are many
considerations I could touch upon, but I shall confine my attention to three.
The Greatness of a Gift Depends on Its
Closeness to the Giver
In the first place, I would suggest to you
that the giving of that which is within is blessed, because, in a quite
peculiar sense, it is the giving of that which is our own.
You all know, friends, that the value of a
gift depends largely upon its relation to ourselves. The closer and more vital
that relationship the greater the value of the act of giving. When a king in
earlier ages gifted lands away, over which his suzerainty was of a shadowy
kind, that was not so eloquent of a generous nature as the giving of some
palace that he loved; and so always is our giving less or more, not merely
according to the greatness of the gift, but according to the place of the gift
in the giver's life. It is a glad thing that God has given us sunshine and
fruitful seasons and the rain from heaven. But gladder than all that is this,
that God hath given us His only begotten Son. And the infinite preciousness of
that great gift, viewed in relation to the Giver of it, is just that the Giver
and the gift were one.
Now when a man gives of his wealth, however
kindly and generous be the giving, it does not need any argument to prove to
you that he has not yet given of his real self. Increase a man's wealth a
thousandfold and he is not necessarily a better man. Strip him swiftly of all
his affluence and he is not necessarily a worse man. There is no vital
relationship at all between a man's belongings and himself, for a man's life
consisteth not in the abundance of the things which he possesseth. But the
moment you touch that which is within you see that the case is different at
once. You are not dealing now with what is accidental; you are dealing with
what is vital and essential. You are dealing with that which makes us what we
are, with that which, added to or taken from, might leave us richer or might
leave us poorer, but in any case must leave us different. For you may add ten
thousand pounds to a man's capital, and in the sight of God that man is still
the same. But let faith, hope and charity be added, and in the sight of God
that man is different. And so when we give of that which is within we give out
of the depths of our own being; and so are far-off followers of God who gave
for us sinners of mankind His only begotten Son.
Channels of Giving from the Heart
Once more the giving of what is within is
blessed, because it opens up such an expanse of charity.
When we confine our thought of charity to
outward things, there are two results that inevitably follow. The first is that
almost of necessity we narrow the channel in which giving flows. Now no one
knows better than I do what gladness a gift of money sometimes brings. Even a
comparatively trifling gift may make the wilderness blossom as the rose. Some
of you good people who live in comfort haven't the least conception of that
side of things. There are hundreds in Glasgow to whom a five pound note would
make all the difference in the world. Still, when that is said, and said with
most intimate knowledge out of my experience as a pastor, how much there is, my
brother, in the humblest life that all your money is powerless to reach. How
many needs that money cannot meet, how many wants that money cannot satisfy,
how many longings in the humblest heart that money is quite helpless to appease.
The poorest has a heart that longs for love, and the heart of the richest can
long for nothing more. There are chords that will vibrate to the touch of
sympathy that will never vibrate to the touch of coin. And it was just because
our Lord and Savior was so alive to the range of human need that He bade us
give of that which is within. For he who gives with the hand has but one
channel, and he who gives with the heart has fifty channels. He gives of his
sympathy and of his loving-kindness; he gives of his happiest sunshine and his
tears. He gives of his time which is the stuff of life, and of his thought
which is his noblest attribute, and of his prayers when the chamber door is
shut, and the heart is reverent, and God is near. Think not that such almsgiving
is easy. Christ does not call any man to what is easy. He calls us to what is
arduous and toilsome, and very exhausting e'er the day is done. Yet is there no
life on earth so glad as the life that is ceaseless in such interior charity, for
it is more blessed to give than to receive.
But when we limit the thought of alms to
what is outward another result inevitably follows. It follows inevitably from
that conception of it that we shut out thousands from the grace of giving. If
the only almsgiving be that of substance, if the one valid charity be money, if
no liberality deserves the name save the liberal giving of what a man
possesses, then all those thousands in our Christian lands who fight their grim
and ceaseless fight with poverty are denied the practice of the grace. It is
true that the poor are wonderfully kind. Their kindness far outstrips that of
the rich. The poor stand by each other and assist each other with a comradeship
that is often beautiful. Yet that kindness of the poor entails such sacrifice,
and makes such a drain upon the scanty means, that it can never be other than
occasional. Multitudes there are in every city who can barely win the
necessities of life. They are only too thankful if from a scanty wage they can
bring food and clothing for their children. And though these people, as I have
said, often show kindnesses that put us all to shame, such kindness from the
nature of the case must always be the exception, not the rule. If material
charity is to be the rule, then it can only be the rule of the minority. If the
giving of means be the one valid giving, then of course there always must be
means to give. And hence it follows that if the only almsgiving is the habitual
giving of the outward, there are thousands everywhere who are excluded
hopelessly from the practice of this grace.
Now, friends, if giving were a hardship we might
see in that the ordering of God. But giving, so far from being a hardship, is
one of the purest joys in human life. Look at that selfish man who in a
generous moment has given a shilling to the beggar in the street. Whether or
not it has made the beggar happy, it most undoubtedly has made the donor happy.
And if such thoughtless and impulsive giving can bring a secret glow of
satisfaction, what must the secret joy be when the giving is that of a
thoughtful and prayerful Christian man? He who has missed the joy of liberality
has missed one of the purest joys of life. There is no luxury of silk or
tapestry that can match the luxury of doing good. And it is incredible, from
all we know of God, and from all we have learned of Jesus Christ, that He
should exclude thousands from this joy simply because they happen to be poor.
But the moment you grasp our text you see that these multitudes are not
excluded. The noblest giving, in the eyes of Jesus, is the giving of that which
is within. And though a man be very poor he may have a plentiful treasure of
the heart, and be a blessing by it and help others by it, in a way that silver
and gold could never do. I suppose there is not a Christian worker here but has
had some such experience as this. You have gone with some offering of charity
to a frail or aged woman. And you have come away so helped and humbled by her
trust in God, her patience, and her gratitude that you know you have got far
more than you bestowed. You gave to her of that which was without, and for that
you shall have the blessing of the Father. For she needed it, and it will cheer
her heart, and bring her some little comfort that she lacked. But perhaps she
hath exercised the richer almsgiving according to the judgment of the Master,
for she hath given of that which is within.
The Perfect Alms Giver
I remark, lastly, that this inward giving
is blessed for a reason still more cogent. It is blessed because it brings our
lives into such harmony with that of Jesus.
If we were to reckon all that Jesus gave by
His giving of the material and outward, I need hardly tell you how sadly we should
fail to comprehend the wonder of it all. We can never forget, it is true, that
He fed the hungry, or that once He turned the water into wine. Neither can we
forget that His poor band had a bag to hold the offerings for poor. Yet if we
sought to measure all that Jesus gave by what He gave of that which was
without, how little would we understand of Him! Our blessed Lord was born in a
poor home, and lived to the end the life of a poor man. Others may leave
fortunes when they die; He left nothing but the seamless garment. Indeed it has
been questioned in these latter days, on the ground of certain well-known
Gospel incidents, whether our Savior ever handled money. Measured by the test
of things without, there are thousands who give far more than Jesus gave. There
are men and women who in a single day give more than Jesus gave in His whole
ministry. The giving of our Master is unique not in the giving of that which is
without, but in the glorious and heavenly lavishness with which He gave that
which is within. He gave of His virtue, and the sick were healed; He gave of
His sympathy, and sorrowing hearts were comforted. He gave of His joy, and men
were glad again; He gave of His peace, and restless hearts were quieted. He
gave of His prayers upon the mountain side when the shadows had fallen and His
locks were wet with dew, and faith was strengthened and courage was revived,
and Satan was baffled of his prey. He gave of His vision of a Father-God, and
men who were heavy-laden sang again. He gave of His love to the fallen and the
far, and womanhood stole back to women's hearts. He gave of His life to the
last drop of it until its very cup was dashed in fragments, and, because He
died for us, we live. That, brethren, is the spirit of Christ, and if any man
have not that Spirit he is none of His. May God grant us the joy of spending
and of being spent. Ceaselessly and happily and secretly may we give for alms
that which is within, for it is more blessed to give than to receive, and he
that loseth his life shall save it.
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