George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
August 2
The Drawing of the Father
No man can come to me, except the Father
which hath sent me draw him--Joh 6:44
These Words Spoken in Pity
We get some light on these deep words by
remembering the occasion of their utterance. They were spoken rather in pity
than in sternness. Our Lord had just been speaking of Himself as the bread
which cometh down from heaven. It would have been a bold word to say in any
company, but to that company, it seemed like madness. They had never dreamed
that One could come from heaven by the ordinary way of human birth. They
thought Messiah would descend in glory. Do we not know His father and His
mother? Do we not remember Him when He was just a child? It was that which
irritated them and made them grumble as these stupendous claims fell on their
ears. And it was then that Christ, as if pitying their deadness and
half-excusing their disbelief in Him, said, "No man can come to me, except
the Father which hath sent me draw him." Now in Joh 6:37 of this chapter,
there is a statement which appears very like to this one: "All that the
Father giveth me shall come to me." The two are always associated in our
thoughts. The one inevitably suggests the other. Yet there is a world of
difference in their tone which is well that we should bear in mind. In the one
case Christ is gladly confident. He is not disheartened although He is
deserted. Let men forsake Him and turn away in anger, all that the Father
giveth Him shall come to Him. But the other is not the utterance of assurance.
It is a cry of pity for hearts that were like stone: "No man can come to
me except the Father which hath sent me draw him."
You Come to Christ When You Believe on
Him
In passing, let me express the earnest hope
that we all know what Christ meant by coming to Him. It is one of those vivid
and pictorial words that were so congenial to the Master's lips: "Come
unto me, all ye that labor"; "Ye will not come unto me that ye might
have life"; "No man can come unto me except the Father draw
him." Now, had our Lord never looked beyond His earthly ministry, we might
have been tempted to take coming literally. We might have thought that Christ,
when He said, "Come," spoke of a literal coming to His side. But if
there be one thing certain, it is that Christ took a longer view than that. He
thought of a coming that would still be possible when He was no longer on the
streets of Galilee. Can we now come to Him as Mary came when He was dining in
the house of Simon? Can we now come to Him as Jairus came when the keel of His
boat was grating on the beach? With His faith in a Gospel that should still be
preached when He had gone home to share His Father's glory, Christ thought of
something different from that. What then did He actually mean? He has told us
that Himself. "I am the bread of life," He said, "he that cometh
to me shall never hunger, and he that believeth on me shall never thirst."
Clearly, then, in the mind of Jesus, coming and believing were identical; the
one was the vivid image of the other. You come to Christ, not by any pilgrimage.
You come to Christ when you believe in Him. You come when, both for time and
for eternity, all your trust is centered in Him. It is in that sense, and only
in that sense, that the words of our text have any meaning--"No man can
come to me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him."
This Drawing Does Not Involve Fatalism
It is then of very great importance that we
should understand what this drawing is, and my object in choosing this great
text is just to try to make it plain to you. Is it something mysterious and
dark, or is it something that falls within our understanding? Is it a special
work of the Almighty, or does it blend into our common discipline? Is it
something that we may recognize, something which inevitably betrays itself, or
may we be subjects of the Father's drawing and all the time be unconscious of it?
There are many who have taken this text and made it the excuse for an unworthy
and unchristian fatalism. They have made no effort to believe and said they
waited the drawing of the Father. I want you to learn how sinful that is, and
how opposed to the spirit of the Lord, and how dishonoring to the great thought
of Fatherhood which is the thought on which the text is based.
It Involves Man's Will; The Father
Draws, Not Drags
The first ray of light upon the text is
found in the word which Christ employs. He does not talk of the dragging of the
Father. He talks deliberately of the Father's drawing. No man is hurried to the
feet of Christ as the heifer was hurried to the Jewish altar. No man is pushed
there by an almighty arm and in defiance of a protesting will. The Father does
not drag. The Father draws. He bids the soul to come in gentle ways. He will
have a man come willingly to Christ, or else He will not have him come at all.
We may illustrate this meaning of the word from the only other occasion when
Christ uses it: "I, if I be lifted up," He said, "will draw all
men unto me." And, tell me, what is the drawing of the cross? Is it
anything which tramples on our freedom? It is just the appeal to all that is within
us of that spectacle of redeeming love. We are not forced to Christ by what we
see. We are only appealed to by that wondrous spectacle. It puts to shame all
that is bad in us. It woos and wins all that is best in us. And as it is with
the drawing of the cross, so is it with the drawing of the Father. It is but
the action of appealing love. I do not say it is not irresistible; but I do say
it does not seem so. It is as sweet, as natural, as gentle, as the drawing of
the sunshine on the earth. There is no pressure of an arresting hand; no force
exerted to overpower the will; a man is not conscious that he is being dragged
by a power that is mightier than his own. It is that thought which makes it
such a peril for a man to await the drawing of the Father. It is not something
that will flash in splendor and overpower a man into belief. It is something
blended with the daily providence, and wrought into the fabric of the life, and
intermingled with the lights and shadows that make the variables of our common
day. Just as the sunshine falling on earth draws it into the pageant of the
summer, just as the moon falling on the ocean draws it into the fullness of its
tides, so not less silently, not less insensibly, does the grace of the Father
fall upon the heart and draw it, when it thinks not of it, into readiness for
Jesus Christ. That this is the right tone to give the word we may confirm in an
interesting way. Christ found this word He used in the Old Testament, and it is
illuminative to notice where He found it. There are three books in the Old
Testament which are peculiarly the books of tenderness, three books above all
others which contain what I might call the wooing note. The one is that
mystical book we call The Song; the second is the Book of Jeremiah; the third
is Hosea, who in his ruined home had learned the power and the pain of love. It
is in these three books, and these alone, that the thought of drawing is found
in the Old Testament. "I have loved thee with an everlasting love,
therefore with lovingkindness have I drawn thee." That is the accent of
the Song of Solomon; that of Jeremiah and Hosea; and it is that accent you must
still preserve when the prophet's word is used by Jesus Christ. He is not
thinking, anymore than they, of a power that should be mighty to compel. He is
not thinking of any sudden energy that should surprise a man into belief. He is
thinking, with His prophetic forerunners, of all that wooing ministry of love
which none can recognize except the loved one, and to which even he is often
blind.
The Father Draws and Man Comes
But now we can go a little farther, for we
have the commentary here of Christ Himself. In the verses which succeed out
text, He throws His thought into another form. "No man can come unto
me," He says, "except the Father which hath sent me draw him."
And then immediately He adds, "Every man therefore that hath heard, and
learned of the Father, cometh unto me." And so He tells us that the
Father's drawing is just an expression for the Father's teaching, "for,"
says the prophet, "they shall all be taught of God." Now mark you,
there are two kinds of teaching: there is an outward and an inward teaching.
And it cannot be of the first that Jesus thinks or else these Jews would have
believed in Him. If ever anybody had been taught of God, was it not just these
men to whom He spoke? And yet they hated Him and crucified Him. A man may have
the Scriptures in his hand; he may enjoy the truest spiritual teaching; he may
read the name of God across the stars, and yet never may be drawn to Jesus
Christ. It is only when that teaching becomes inward and moves the will and
kindles the affections that it becomes the drawing of the Father. Christ does
not think of a teaching of the head. He rather thinks of a teaching of the
heart. He thinks of every providence that chastens us; of every providence that
breaks and humbles us. It is by that teaching that a man is drawn and comes to
feel his need of a Redeemer and realizes that his only hope is in the
fellowship of Jesus Christ. We are not only taught by every craving. Christ
means that by every craving we are drawn, by every sorrow and by every joy, by
every touch of pain and hour of sadness, by all the love that meets us when we
journey, by all the tears when hours of parting come; by all that, we are not
only taught; by all that, we are drawn to Him. Clearly, then, our Savior did
not mean that we were to sit inactive and just wait. He meant us to find, even
this very hour, that the Father is drawing us to Him. He meant that if we only
looked within and read our story in the light of God, we should find there
today such elements as would prepare us for the feet of Christ. There was that
in these Jews that, had they heeded it, would have proved to them the drawing
of the Father. There is that in you today, which is undoubtedly the Father's
drawing. Only let God interpret it to you and show you what it implies and what
it needs, and it will draw you to the feet of Christ.
Drawing and Responding in Marriage
We may further illustrate what Jesus meant
by thinking of our earthly friendships. There is a deep sense in which all
human love would be impossible without the Father's drawing. Among all the
mysteries with which we are engirded, there is none deeper than the mystery of
love. It is the heart reaching to its own, and finding in its own its resting
place. Viewed on its earthly side it is the drawing of sympathies that answer
one another. Viewed on its heavenly side it is far more than that; it is just
the drawing of the Father. Does not one of our oldest proverbs tell us that
true marriages are made in heaven? It is not often that our proverbial wisdom lights
upon a truth so deep as that. For it just means that when two hearts are knit
into a union that only death can sever, it is the drawing of the Father that
hath done it. The heart of the mother is drawn towards her child. The heart of
the friend is drawn towards his friend. God is busy within us in a thousand
ways when He is leading us to recognize our own. And so, when He is leading us
to Christ, God is busy with us in a thousand ways, and it is in that
preparatory ministry that there lies the drawing of the Father. Our
loneliness--that is the Father's drawing; it is His whisper to us that we need
a friend. Our weakness--that is the Father's drawing; it is His guidance to
sufficient strength. And all our haunting sense of inability and our shame when
we have sinned again, all that is but the drawing of the Father to the loving
mercy of the Lord Jesus Christ. I believe as stoutly as the sternest Calvinist,
that no man can come to Christ except the Father draw him. But I also believe
with all my heart that He is drawing every man this very moment. It is not new
drawing that men want. It is new vision to behold its meaning. Lord, open men's
eyes, that they may see.
In Retrospect, Friendships, Especially
with Christ, Were Not the Result of Drifting But of Being Drawn
In closing, I desire to say that this is a
truth which is abundantly verified in our experience. As life goes on and its
meanings become plainer, our vision also clarifies a little. We stand, as it
were, upon a little eminence and see more clearly our path across the heather. And
it is then that often looking backwards we can set to our seal that this is
true, we were drawn of the Father when we never knew it. Just as our human
friendships, when we make them, seem to be often but the child of accident, yet
afterwards as we survey it all we recognize that there was more than chance
there. So the friendship of the Lord Jesus Christ may also appear to us a
casual thing, yet every year that passes makes us surer that our steps were
ordered when we knew it not. One of the insights of passing years is to
eliminate the thought of accident. They touch as with the light of a great plan
what in its hour seemed a happy chance. We come to see in sunshine and in
shadow, in sicknesses, in shiftings of our home, the movement of a will that
was not ours and that had seen the end from the beginning. So is it, brethren,
with that great transaction which seals the covenant between the soul and
Christ. It may come suddenly and unexpectedly, and we feel no will in it except
our own. Yet as the years go by we trace a change. We waken to a wise and loving
leadership. We thought in the passing hour that we were drifting. We now
discover that we were being drawn. That strong impression deepens with the
years. We become less; the Father becomes more. We realize that we are Christ's
today simply and solely because the Father drew us. And so we take this as a
word of hope based on the changeless love of Fatherhood, and we believe that
now and always, the Father is drawing every human soul.
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