George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
June 4
Somewhat to Say
Simon, I have somewhat to say unto
thee--Luk 7:40
Jesus Christ Has Somewhat to Say
It is one of the notable things about our
Lord that always He has somewhat to say. No hour of need ever finds Him silent.
The intrusion of the woman into Simon's dining room was an entirely unexpected
incident. It was a painful and perplexing moment when she made her way into the
feast. But our Lord had somewhat to say then, and one of the wonderful things
about Him is that, always, He has somewhat to say still. Listen to the speaker
at the street corner discussing Socialism or industrial unrest. Join an eager
company of young fellows gathered to reconstitute the universe. Socrates and
Shakespeare are not mentioned, but almost always Christ is summoned in; they
all feel He has somewhat to say still. Heaven and earth have passed away, but
His words have not passed away. We live under a different heaven now, and the
earth has been displaced from her centrality. Yet still, on every problem which
emerges, Jesus Christ has somewhat to say. It is a fact which is well worth
considering.
Jesus Has Somewhat to Say When Everybody
Else Is Silent
He has somewhat to say, it should be noted,
just when everybody else is silent. My impression is that when that woman
entered, you might have heard a pin drop in the dining room. Some of the guests
would hang their heads, and some would look at each other "with a wild
surmise." A sudden quiet would fall upon the table; conversation would
instantly be hushed. And just then, when there was silence, when nobody else
had a syllable to utter, our Lord had somewhat to say. So was it in the house
of Jairus, when the father and mother could do naught but weep. So was it
outside the gates of Nain, when the widow was stricken dumb in her great
sorrow--and the wonderful thing is that so is it still. When all the
philosophers are dumb, and cannot give one word of help or comfort; when
learning has no message to inspire or to console the heart; when sympathy
hesitates to break the silence, lest it give "vacant chaff well-meant for
grain," the Lord has something to say. Nothing can rob Him of His message,
not even the bitterest experience of life. He never grows silent when the way
is dark, nor when the feet go down into the valley. There are many voices, and
none without significance; but the hour comes when they all fail us, and then
we find how in such hours as that. Jesus has somewhat to say.
He Has Somewhat to Say to Those
Separated from Him by Great Distances
One notes, too, that He has somewhat to say
to those separated from Him by great distances. What a gulf there was between
our Lord and Simon! It is true that Jesus was sitting next to Simon, for that
was the place of the chief guest. But sometimes one may sit beside another, and
all the while be thousands of miles away. Just as two may live in the same
dwelling, and sleep under the same roof at night, and yet seas between them
"broad may roar." Many a young fellow is nearer Keats or Shelley than
he is to the fellow-clerk on the next stool. Real nearness differs from
proximity. And that night, though seated next to Simon, our Lord was really
separate from Simon by a gulf it is impossible to measure. The One a provincial
from Galilee; the other trained in the learning of the schools. The One with
love filling His great heart; the other discourteous and cold and legal. And
yet across that gulf the Savior reaches, with His searching and revealing
word--"Simon, I have somewhat to say unto thee." That is the wonder
of the word of Christ. it is universal. It bridges every gulf. Men hear that
word in their own tongue, as they did at the miracle of Pentecost. He has
somewhat to say to the millions of India. He has somewhat to say to the myriads
of China. He has somewhat to say to the New Guinea cannibals. When one thinks
of our industrial civilization and compares it with the environment of Jesus,
it might seem incredible that that lone Man of Galilee should have anything to
say to us. yet there come times when we most profoundly feel that there is no
one who understands us and our problems like the Guest who was in Simon's house
that night.
The Lord Has Somewhat Personal to Say
Then, too, we must not forget that our Lord
has somewhat personal to say. To his intense surprise Simon discovered that. I
imagine that when he invited Christ to dinner, he was counting on some splendid
talk. Had he not heard from the assembly officers that never man spake like
this man? Simon was a man who loved good talk, and had an abhorrence of gossip
at the dinner table, as every decent person ought to have. He would get this
prophet to talk of the Old Testament--He was said to have strange views of the
Old Testament. He would get Him to speak about the Coming One. He would urge
Him to tell one of His beautiful stories. And then, suddenly, and in the
deathlike silence, came what he was never looking for: "Simon, I have
somewhat to say unto thee." It was a word for him and him alone. It was
intensely personal and individual. It reached his solitary, selfish heart. It
probed his conscience and convicted him. And that is the abiding wonder of the
Lord, that He speaks to each of us in such a way that there might be no one
else in the wide world at all. He holds the answer to the vastest problems. He
has a message for international relationships. But when we listen to Him He
never leaves us brooding on international relationships. As He speaks to me, I
come to realize that the problem of all problems is myself. "Simon, I have
somewhat to say unto thee."
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