George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
June 9
Ashamed of Christ
For whosoever shaft be ashamed of me and
of my words, of him shall the Son of man be ashamed, when he shaft come in his
own glory, and in his Father's, and of the holy angels--Luk 9:26
Why Some Were Ashamed of Christ in His
Day...
I can understand how men were ashamed of
Christ as He moved about the villages of Galilee. He was a man of sorrows and
acquainted with grief, and men hid their faces from Him. Born in a humble and
malodorous village (can any good thing come out of Nazareth?), living in the
deepest obscurity for thirty years, then suddenly claiming to be the Messiah,
yet contradicting the warmest hopes of Israel--no wonder there was
disappointment, and that many were ashamed of Jesus and His words.
How Can Men Be Ashamed of Him Now?
But the thing that is difficult to
understand is how any man can be ashamed of Jesus now. For now He is no longer
rejected and despised: He is enthroned in heaven at the right hand of God. We
can understand a man denying that Christ rose--there are many who honestly
believe that He still sleeps; but the man who is ashamed of Christ is not an
unbeliever; you cannot be ashamed of that which has no existence. The man who
is ashamed credits the resurrection--get him alone and he will not deny it. The
man who is ashamed credits that Christ is living and is energetic in human
hearts today; and the mystery is how, crediting all that, it should be possible
to be ashamed of Christ. That it is possible everyone of us knows, and it is on
that strange possibility I wish to speak. First, I shall touch on the
revelation of this shame; next on the roots of it; and thirdly on some remedies
in our power.
Signs of Being Ashamed of Christ
1. Concealment
First, then, I wish to speak about its
revelation, about the way in which this shame of Christ betrays itself: and the
first feature that rises before me is concealment. Is there any man or woman of
whom you are ashamed? Think of them and call up their names while I am
speaking. Well, however else your shame may show itself, it will at least have
this mark--you are ashamed to be seen with them in public. In private, that is
a different matter: you have no objection to meeting them in private. In the
pressure of a great crowd, that is a different matter, for any two may be cast
together in a crowd. But when you are ashamed of a man you are ashamed of being
openly seen with him, you are ashamed of walking in broad daylight through the
streets with him; and as that is a feature of all shame between man and man, it
is a mark of the man ashamed of Christ. Remember we may be ashamed of Christ
although in the quiet hour we pray in secret. Remember we may be ashamed of Him
although at the stated times we come to church. For in the one case--in private
prayer--there is a solitude, and in other--in public worship--is a crowd; and
neither in solitude nor in the throng is the shame or glory of the heart
detected. It is as we walk through the streets of daily life; it is as we take
up our task in homely scenes; it is as we go about our work and mingle with our
friends--it is there that our heart's loyalty shall be seen. If we honor Christ
men will perceive the friendship. If we are ashamed of Him we shall conceal it.
2. Silence
The second feature of all shame is silence.
There is a close and mysterious tie between the two. The feeling of shame
whenever it is operative has a way of putting a seal upon the lips. A child
will babble and prattle all day long, and spin out a history about its small
adventures; but let it do anything of which it is ashamed, and not a word will
it speak concerning that. How many homes there are in which one son or daughter
has come to disgrace, till the parents' hearts are breaking! Does the stranger
entering that home talk of the prodigal? Is not that the one name that is never
mentioned? There are ceaseless yearnings and there are secret prayers rising to
heaven daily for the wanderer; but mingling with every thought of him is shame,
and one great witness of that shame is silence. Now far be it from me even to
suggest that all our silence about Christ is such. There is a reserve which is
dignified and right when we move among august and holy things. Still, hours
will come in every Christian life when confession is imperative and clearly
called for, and if in such hours there be not speech but silence, the silence
is the stamp and sign of shame.
3. Avoidance
The third witness of shame lies in
avoidance. We avoid instinctively what we are ashamed of. When an architect has
designed a building of which he is proud, I can imagine his delight in looking
at it. I can imagine him going out of his way by half a dozen streets just to
get one more glimpse of his conception. But let the building be a failure, and
the man ashamed of it--he is not eager to feast his eyes upon it. Now he does
all in his power to avoid it, and he avoids it because he is ashamed. I fancy
that most of us know places such as that, for we are all the architects of our
own fortunes: places that are disgraced for us by wretched memories, tarnished
and desecrated by some sin; and we too, as we journey through the years, are
glad to avoid such scenes, and we avoid them because we are ashamed. Avoidance
is one sign and seal of shame. Can it be said of you that you are avoiding
Christ? If so, however you may explain it to yourself, depend upon it you are
ashamed of Him.
The Roots of Our Being Ashamed of Christ
So far then of the revelation of this
shame: now a word or two upon the roots of it. Whence does it spring? How is it
born? What possible cause can there be for this so tragic feeling? It will be
best to keep close to Scripture in our answer.
1. Fear
Sometimes we are ashamed of Christ through
fear. We are ashamed as Nicodemus was. He came to Jesus by stealth and in the
nighttime, and he came so because he feared the Jews. In his heart of hearts he
profoundly admired the Lord--we can do that, and yet be ashamed of Him--but he
was a public man, a master in Israel, living in the fierce light that beat upon
a rabbi, and he was afraid and he crept to the Lord by night, and the root and
basis of his shame was fear. My impression is that fear is at the root of far
more things than most of us ever dream of. There are even virtues on which men
pride themselves which a little more courage would instantly destroy. The Bible
never reiterates in vain, and do you know the command that occurs most often in
Scripture? The commonest command in Scripture is Fear not. Now we are not in
bodily peril like Nicodemus; no one will slay us for being out and out. The day
of the thumbscrew and of the stake and of the Solway tide--that day, we may
thank God, is gone forever; but though that day is gone, fear has not departed.
For in the intricate mechanism of modern society there is ample room for
subtler and finer fear--fear lest one's business suffer, fear for one's
prospects, fear for the welfare of one's wife and children; and who does not
know how often tongues are tied and lips are silenced and confession stifled,
through the haunting of a vague fear like that? I do not wish to speak harshly
of that temper: I know how hard it is sometimes to be true. There are
inevitable and unavoidable accommodations which the wheels-within-wheels of
modern life demand. Still, there is such a thing as being ashamed of Christ--if
there were not, the words would not be written--and at the root of it today as
in Jerusalem, may be the promptings of unmanly fear.
2. Social Pressure
Again the cause of this shame may be social
pressure. We may be ashamed of Christ as Simon Peter was. And the amazing thing
is that in such a zealous and loving heart there should have been any room for
shame at all. But Peter sat by the fire in the courtyard, and they taunted him
with his discipleship; and then the girl who kept the wicket recognized him,
and everyone present was antagonistic; and Peter denied his Lord--Peter was
ashamed of Him--and the shame had its source in his society. Had it not been
for Peter's company that night, we should never have had the tale of Peter's
fall. Alone, in the dark streets, with what a burning loyalty he would have
lifted up his heart to his great leader! But Peter was impressionable, easily
influenced, quick to receive the impact of environment, and his society made
him ashamed of Christ. Are there none today who are like Simon Peter? Are there
none who deny Christ because of social pressure? Are there none who are silent
and afraid to speak because of the men and women who surround them? In careless
homes, in crowded shops or offices, in football clubs, in social gatherings, is
not the old tragedy re-enacted sometimes, and does not their company make men ashamed
of Christ?
3. Intellectual Pride
One other reason only would I mention, and
that is intellectual pride. There are not a few instances in the book of Acts
of shame which sprang from a certain pride of intellect. When a minister whom I
know well was on the point of entering the ministry, the late Dr. Moody Stuart,
a saint and a scholar, happened to walk up and down his garden with him. And
the talk fell on the ministry, and on its joys and sorrows, on the love that
inspires it and on the hopes that cheer it; when the Doctor turned sharply on
his young friend and said, "Mr. C., are you willing to be a fool for
Christ's sake?" It was an apposite and pertinent question. There must be
something of that willingness in every Christian--the Gospel is so simple, so
free from subtle intricacy, so entirely, in the heart of it, a gift. And men
are ashamed of Christ because His message is so plain that the illiterate
peasant can live by it and die by it. There is nothing so alien in the world to
pride of intellect as the life and the words and the sacrifice of Jesus. Here
is the great offence of Calvary in intellectual and cultured ages--it is that
in Calvary there is a fact which the mind alone is powerless to explain. I
bring my learning of a thousand books there, and I cannot fathom its mystery
and meaning. It only speaks home to my dark and baffled heart when
"Nothing in my hand I bring."
The Remedies for Being Ashamed of Christ
In closing, what are the remedies for this
besetting shame? I shall just mention two.
1. Endeavor to Realize Who
Jesus Is
The first is, endeavor to realize who Jesus
is. If you had lived in London in the times of Queen Elizabeth you might have
met two men walking together; and the one by his rich dress and his attendants
you would recognize as the Earl of Southampton. But who is the other so plainly
and carelessly dressed; and is not my lord ashamed to be seen with him? The
other is the profoundest intellect God ever fashioned--the other is William
Shakespeare. I do not think we should care much about dress, if we had the
chance of a walk and a talk with Shakespeare. He would be a strange creature
who would be ashamed to be seen anywhere in such company. And did we but
realize who He is, whom we name and whom we seek to follow, the very thought of
shame would grow ridiculous. Who are you, tell me that--a merchant or a
minister? a teacher or a doctor or a clerk? And who is Christ?-the King
immortal and eternal, the Wonderful, the mighty God, the Counselor! When I put
it that way does it not seem absurd even to dream of being ashamed of Christ?
And no one really likes to be absurd.
2. Endeavor to Realize What
Christ Has Done for You
And then endeavor to realize what Christ
has done for you. That after all is the great cure of shame. When we once feel
deeply all that we owe to Him, the black bat, shame, has flown. I could
understand a young fellow about town being ashamed to walk through the streets
with an old-fashioned and lame countrywoman. But if the old-fashioned and lame
country-woman is his mother--God have mercy on him if he feels shame then! For
she cradled him and she watched him night and day, and she nursed him in fever
and she prayed for him; and never a day has passed since he left home but her
thought has gone out in a great longing to him; and who with a spark of manhood
in his heart could ever dare to be ashamed of one who had rendered service so
great and rich as that? Yet all the service of the dearest mother is not one
tithe of what we owe to Christ. He loved us and He gave Himself for us. He
saved us and called us, and has made us heirs of heaven. Just think of it. Try
to realize it. Call it up as you walk home from church tonight. Then from the
heart you will be able to sing.
I'm not ashamed to own my Lord,
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