George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
August 22
Tribulation and the Untroubled Heart
Let not your heart be troubled: ye
believe in God, believe also in me. In my Father's house are many mansions--Joh
14:1-2
He Speaks Peace in the Midst of
Tribulation
There are few more profitable studies than
that of comparing spiritual things with spiritual. In the light of this, I
should like to compare our text with that of Joh 16:33 --"In the world ye
shall have tribulation." In certain selected seasons of our life it is
easy to keep the heart untroubled. There are days in life, as in the world of
nature, when everything is radiant and serene. But when our Lord says,
"Let not your heart be troubled," He is not thinking of such days as
that, as is evident from our texts. Tribulation is a spacious word. It
comprehends a largeness of experience. It embraces everything from common worry
up to fierce and bitter persecution. And it is in lives familiar with all that,
and moving in an atmosphere like that, that our Lord looks for the untroubled
heart. He is not legislating for recluses. He is not counseling such as live in
shelter. He is speaking to men who are thoroughly familiar with the
"slings and arrows of outrageous fortune." It is to them He says, in
that quiet way of His, which in its quietness carries the ring of sovereignty,
"Let not your heart be troubled."
Jesus Promises a Peaceful Heart, Not an
Untroubled Life
From this we gather that in our Lord's
intention great emphasis is to be laid on the word heart. And when we turn to
the Greek we find that this is so, for the word heart is put in the last place.
Our Lord does not call us to an untroubled life. His own life was very far from
that. He never asks us to shirk responsibilities, nor to rid ourselves of
duties or of cares. But He wants us, as we move through life, playing our part
and shouldering our burdens, to have a kind of interior tranquillity. In the
world we may have tribulation, and the world for each of us is just our own
environment; we may have dark anxieties in business; we may have a heavy load
of care at home. But through all that, however hard and worrying, we are to
move with a quiet undisturbedness, if we are to live as He would have us do. On
the circumference may be a score of frets: these frets are never to reach into
the center. Whatever the noise of battle in the field, the soul is to be
garrisoned with peace. It is of that interior and sweet serenity that the Lord
is thinking when He says, "Let not your heart be troubled."
Three Things Necessary: A Quiet Faith in
God
For this undisturbedness, He tells us,
there are three things which are necessary. The first of them is a quiet faith
in God. If He be the God of Abraham and of Isaac, then He is the God of
individuals. He does not deal with us upon the scale of thousands; He deals
with us upon the scale of one. And our Lord means that to recognize that
dealing, and to trust Him, often in extreme opposition to the senses, is one
great secret of interior peace. If trials be only the bludgeoning of fate, if
things that meet us be only chance occurrences, it is incredibly hard for
common men and women to be victoriously serene within. But the moment we say,
"This thing is of God," however dark and inscrutable it be, then the
birds start singing in the trees. If underneath are the everlasting arms, if not
a sparrow can fall without our Father, if He who sees the end from the
beginning is ordering everything in perfect wisdom, however hard life be, or
unintelligible, there comes a radiant quietness at the center, and in that
quietness we overcome the world. We are not here to be beaten. We are here, the
weakest of us, to be more than conquerors. A deep faith in the sovereignty of
God overthrows the tyranny of things. All of which our blessed Savior knew so
well, from His immediate communion with the Father, that He could say,
"Let not your heart be troubled."
Faith in Jesus Christ
The next secret of the untroubled heart is
a strong faith in the Lord Jesus. To trust Him fully is to be at rest. One is
ready to think that when we follow Christ there is going to be exemption from
life's hardships. But discipleship gives no exemptions--in the world ye shall
have tribulation. Discipleship may not remove the trouble, but it gives such a
new setting to it all, that the interior disquiet departs, and there comes the
peace that passes understanding. Through Him we get a grip of God that was
simply impossible before. Walking with Him, we learn the love of God with a
fullness hitherto unknown. Looking to Him, so radiant and restful, under the very
shadow of the cross, we find His spirit entering into us. When we do that, life
may not grow easier. The thorn in the flesh may not be taken away. Burdens may
weigh heavy on us still, and uncongenial tasks be very irksome. What is given
is not a tranquil world, nor is there any promise of a tranquil life--what is
given is the tranquil heart. We lose the fearfulness of manhood and reach the
happy confidence of childhood. We have a Friend beside us in the darkest mile.
We have a Savior who can save unto the uttermost. All of which, in the deep
places of our being, unseen by any human eye, ushers in a certain shining
peacefulness which the world can never take away.
A Living Faith in the Beyond
The last secret of the untroubled heart is
a living faith in the beyond. "In my Father's house are many mansions ...
I go to prepare a place for you." There every question will be answered,
and every chastisement reveal its loving-kindness. There we shall reach the
crowning and completion of all we have tried to do and failed to do. There
these partings, which were so very bitter that for a time they almost wrecked
our faith in God, will be justified in the gladness of reunion. Our light
afflictions, which are but for a moment, will work for us an exceeding weight
of glory. We shall arrive, and arriving understand. Heaven will make perfect
our imperfect life. It was because our blessed Savior lived and died in this
divine assurance that He said to His disciples, and says still, "Let not
your heart be troubled."
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