George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
August 12
The Number of the Hours
Are there not twelve hours in the
day?--Joh 11:9
The Disciples' Misunderstanding of
Christ
These words were spoken by Jesus at the
time when news had been brought Him that Lazarus was sick. For two days Jesus
had made no move, but had abode with His disciples where He was. The disciples
would be certain to misconstrue that inactivity--they would whisper, "Our
Master at last is growing prudent"--and therefore their amazement and
dismay when Christ announced He was going to Judea. They broke out upon Him
with expostulation--"Lord, it was but yesterday that You were stoned there.
It is as much as Your life is worth to think of going--it is the rankest folly
to run that tremendous risk." And it was then that Jesus turned upon the
twelve with a look which they never would forget and said to them, "Are
there not twelve hours in the day?" It is on these words that I wish to
dwell a little. I want to use them as a lamp to illumine some of the
characteristics of the Lord, for they seem to me to irradiate first, the
earnestness; second, the fearlessness; and third, the fretlessness of our
Savior.
The Earnestness of Christ
What first arrests us, reading the life of
Jesus, is not His strong intensity of purpose. It is only gradually, and as our
study deepens, that we feel the push of that unswerving will. If you put the
Gospel story into the hand of a pagan to whom it came with the freshness of
discovery, what would impress him would not be Christ's tenacity, but the
variety and the freedom of His life. Never was there a career that bore so
little trace of being lived in accordance with a plan. Never were deeds so
happily spontaneous; never were words so sweetly incidental. To every moment
was perfect adaptation as if that were the only moment of existence. This
hiding of intensity is mirrored in the great paintings of the face of Christ.
In the galleries of the old masters I do not know one picture where the face of
Christ is a determined face. For the artists felt with that poetic feeling
which wins nearer to the heart of things than argument, that the earnestness of
Jesus lay too deep to be portrayed by brush upon the canvas.
But when we reach the inner life of Christ,
there passes a wonderful change over our thought. We slowly awake, amid all the
spontaneity, to one tremendous and increasing purpose. As underneath the
screaming of the seabirds we hear the ceaseless breakers on the shore, as
through the rack and drift of driving clouds we catch the radiance of one
unchanging star, so gradually, back of all stir and change and the varied and
free activity of Christ, we discern the pressure of a mighty purpose moving
without a swerve towards its goal. From the hour of His boyhood when He said to
Mary, "Wist ye not that I must be about my Father's business," on to
the hour of triumph on the cross when He cried with a loud voice, "It is
finished," unhasting and unresting, without one check or falter, the face
of Jesus is set in one direction; and it is when we come to recognize that
unity hidden amid the luxuriance of freedom that we wake to the sublime
earnestness of Christ. I think that the apostles hardly recognized it till He
set His face steadfastly towards Jerusalem. Before that, they were always
offering suggestions: after that, they offered them no more. They were amazed,
we read; they were afraid. The eagerness of Jesus overwhelmed them. At last
they knew His majesty of will and were awestruck at the earnestness of Christ.
Christ's Certain Knowledge of His
Limited Time
There were many reasons for that
wholehearted zeal which it does not fall to me to touch on here. But one was
the certain knowledge of the Lord that there were only twelve hours in His day.
Before His birth, in His pre-existent life, there had been no rising or setting
of the sun. After His death, in the life beyond the grave, the day would be
endless, for "there is no night there." But here on earth with a
mighty work to do and to get finished before His side was pierced, Christ was
aroused into triumphant energy by the thought of the determined time. "I
must work the works of him that sent me, while it is day: the night cometh,
when no man can work." That must--what is it but the shadow of sunset and
the breath of the twilight that was soon to fall? A day at its longest--what a
little space! Twelve hours--they are ringing to evensong already! Under that
power the tide that seemed asleep moved on "too full for sound or
foam."
It is always very wonderful to me that
Christ thus felt the shortness of the time. This Child of Eternity heard with
quickened ear the muffled summons of the fleeting hours. It is only
occasionally that we hearken to it; far more commonly we seek to silence it. Most
men, as Professor Lecky says, are afraid to look time in the face. But Christ
was never afraid to look time in the face; steadily He eyed the sinking sands,
till moved to His depths by the urgency of days, the zeal of the house of His
Father ate Him up. Have you awakened to that compelling thought, or do you live
as if your sun would never set? There are but twelve hours in the day, and it
will be sunset before you dream of it. Get done what God has sent you here to
do. Wait not for the fool's phantom of tomorrow--Act, act today, act in the
living present!
Christ's Fearlessness
In the next place, our text illuminates
Christ's fearlessness, and that indeed is the textual meaning of it, for it was
when the disciples were trying to alarm Him that Jesus silenced their
suggestions so. "Master," they said, "It is a dangerous thing to
show Yourself at Bethany. Remember how You were stoned on Your last visit; it
will be almost certain death to go thither again." And it was then, to
silence all their terror and with a courage as sublime as it was simple that
Jesus asked, "Are there not twelve hours in the day ?" What did He
mean? He meant, "I have my day. Its dawn and its sunset have been fixed by
God. Nothing can shorten it and nothing can prolong it. Till the curfew of God
rings out, I cannot die." It was that steadying sense of the divine disposal
which made the Christ so absolutely fearless and braced Him for every
"clenched antagonism" that rose with menace upon the path of duty.
When Dr. Livingstone was in the heart of Africa, he wrote a memorable sentence
in his diary. He was ill and far away from any friend, and he was deserted by
his medicine-carrier. But he was willing to go anywhere provided it was
forward, and what he wrote with a trembling hand was this: "I am immortal
till my work is done." That was the faith of Paul and of Martin Luther,
the faith of Oliver Cromwell and of Livingstone. They had caught the fearless
spirit of the Master who knew there were twelve hours in the day.
The Strength in Knowing That God
Appoints Our Times
Now it is always a source of buoyant
strength when a man comes to see that his way is ordered. There is a quiet
courage that is unmistakable in one who is certain he is led by God. But
remember, according to the Master's doctrine, our times are fixed as surely as
our ways; and if we are here with a certain work to do which in the purposes of
God must be fulfilled, no harm can touch us nor is there power in death till it
draws to sunset and to evening star. What is it that makes the Turk such a
brave soldier that with all his vices we cannot but admire him? It is his
conviction of a relentless fate which he cannot hasten yet cannot hope to shun.
In the name of freedom, Christ rejects that fatalism; but on the ruins of it He
erects another. It is the fatalism of a love that is divine, for it includes
the end in the beginning. Never shirk dangers on the path of duty. On the path
of duty one is always safest. Let a man be careful that he does his task, and
God will take care of the task-doing man. For always there are twelve hours in
the day, and though the clouds should darken into storm, they cannot hasten the
appointed time when it is night.
And just here we ought to bear in mind that
the true measurement of life is not duration. We live in deeds, not breaths--it
is not time; it is intensity that is life's measurement. Twelve hours of joy,
what a brief space they are! Twelve hours of pain, what an eternity! We take
the equal hours which the clock gives, and we mould them in the matrix of our
hearts. Was it the dawn that crimsoned in the east as Romeo stood with Juliet
at the window? It seemed but a moment since the casement opened, and--"It
is my lady, O it is my love." But to the sufferer tossing on her sickbed
and hearing every hour the chiming in the dark, that night went wearily with
feet of lead, and it seemed as if the dawn would never break. "Are there
not twelve hours in the day?" said Jesus--yet Jesus died when He was
thirty-three. The dial of God has got no minute hands; its hours are measured
by service and by sacrifice. Call no life fragmentary. Call it not incomplete.
Think thee how love abbreviates the hours. If God be love, time may be
fiery-footed, and the goal be won far earlier than we ever dreamed.
Christ's Fretlessness
Then lastly, and in a word or two, our text
illuminates Christ's fretlessness. For never was there a life of such untiring
labor that breathed such a spirit of unruffled calm. We talk about our busy
modern city, and many of us are busy in the city, but for a life of
interruption and distraction, give me the life of Jesus Christ of Nazareth.
Some of us could hardly live without the hills--a day in their solitude is
benediction; but when Jesus retired to that fellowship of lonely places, even
there He was pressed and harassed by the crowd. Every day was thronged with
incident or danger. There was no leisure so much as to eat. Now He was
teaching--now He was healing--now He was parrying some cruel attack. Yet
through it all, with all its stir and movement, there is a brooding calm upon
the heart of Christ that is only comparable to a waveless sea asleep in the
stillness of a summer evening. Some men are calm because they do not feel. We
call it quiet, and it is callousness. But Christ being sinless was infinitely sensitive--quick
to respond to every touch and token. Yet He talked without contradiction of His
peace--"My peace that the world cannot give or take away"--and down
in the depths of that unfathomed peace was the thought of the twelve hours in
the day. Christ knew that if God had given Him a twelve hours' work, God would
give Him the twelve hours to do it in. To every task its time, and to every
time its task, that was one great method of the Master. And no man will ever be
calm as Christ was calm who cannot halt in the midst of the stir and say,
"My peace"; who cannot stop for a moment in the busiest whirl and say
to himself, "My times are in Thy hand." God never blesses unnecessary
labor. That is the labor of the thirteenth hour. All that God calls us to and all
that love demands is fitted with perfect wisdom to the twelve. Therefore be
restful; do not be nervous and fussy; leave a little leisure for smiling and
for sleep. There is no time to squander, but there is time enough--are there
not twelve hours in the day?
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