George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
August 29
The Great Comparison
As the Father hath loved me, so have I
loved you--Joh 15:9
The Love of Christ
That their blessed Master loved them was
one thing which the disciples never doubted. It was the crowning glory of their
years. There are those who always find it easy to believe that other people
love them. They accept love as the flowers accept the sunshine in an entirely
natural and happy way. But there are some who find it very hard just to be
certain that other people love them, and one or two of the disciples were like
that. Our Lord had to deal with very various temperaments in that extraordinary
little company. Some were responsive and receptive; others, like Thomas, wanted
proof of things. And yet there was one thing that they never doubted through
all the change and variableness of the years, and that was that their Master
loved them. The fact was evident to every heart, and yet behind the fact they
felt a mystery. There was something different in the love of Jesus from all the
human love that they had known. No love of wife, nor of any precious child, nor
of friend, nor of father nor of mother, fully interpreted the Master's love. It
did what these had never done. It demanded what these had never asked. It spoke
sometimes with an unearthly accent, quite alien from that of human love. They
were baffled occasionally, and perplexed, so profoundly new was the experience
that came to them in the love of the Lord Jesus. It was then that Jesus made
this great comparison that threw such a vivid light on everything. "As the
Father hath loved me, so have I loved you." And long afterwards, when
hours of darkness came and they were tempted to wonder if He loved them still,
what comfort must these words have brought them!
His Father's Love Sent Jesus to Die
They would recall, for instance, how the
Father's love for Christ inspired Him for the service of mankind. It was the
Father's love that sent Him to the world, not to be ministered unto, but to
minister. Human love is often prone to selfishness. It wants to grasp the dear
one and to keep him. It shrinks from the thought of charging the beloved with
any embassy whose end is death. Yet on such an embassy, whose issue was a
cross, God sent not an angel, but His Son--and the Son was certain that the
Father loved Him. Inspiring all His service for mankind, quickening Him for
every lowly ministry, holding Him to His appointed task, was His profound
conviction of His Father's love. And then, on that last night of earthly
fellowship, He turned to His disciples with the words, "As the Father hath
loved me, so have I loved you." How these words would come back to them
again in their evangelization of the world! It was love that had given them
their work to do, no matter how difficult or perilous. And to find in our work,
however hard it be, an argument for the love of the Lord Jesus is one of the
quiet triumphs of the spirit. His is not a love that gives us ease, any more
than the love of the Father gave Him ease. It sends us out, morning after
morning, to a service which may be only drudgery. And what illumines duty and
warms its chilly hands and brings a song into the heart of it is the certainty
of love behind it all. It made all the difference to Christ that the Father's
love had given Him the task. It made the task a love-gift and touched it as
with the joy of heaven. And then He says to all His toiling followers in every
century and country, "As the Father hath loved me, so have I loved
you."
The Father's Love Did Not Exempt Jesus
from Suffering
They would recall again how the Father's
love for Christ did not exempt Him from the sorest suffering. He was the
well-beloved Son, yet a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief. If there be
one thing we all crave to do, it is to shield our loved ones from the sting of
pain. That passion is in the heart of every mother as she clasps to her breast
her little child. Yet here was the love of the Father for the Son, that gave
the Son, and did it quite deliberately, to bitter suffering ending in a cross. Often
when our beloved suffer we are powerless. We know the agony of being helpless.
We have to witness excruciating pain, impotent to do anything that might
relieve it. But the Father, clothed in His omnipotence, with a single word
could have put an end to suffering--and yet He loved His Son and did not do it.
I wonder if the disciples thought of that when afterwards they recalled this
word of Jesus. Stoned, shipwrecked, persecuted, tortured--could it be possible
their Master loved them still? And then, clear as a silver bell, these words
would strike upon their ears again, "As the Father hath loved me, so have
I loved you." He was loved, and yet He suffered sorely. He was loved, and
yet His face was marred. He was loved with an everlasting love, and yet all the
billows of this mortal life went over Him. What an unspeakable comfort for
these gallant souls, tempted through suffering to piercing doubts, this as and
so of the Lord Jesus. All God's children must remember that when they are
tempted so to doubt the love of heaven. Have not many cried beside some bed of
agony, "How can God be love if He permits this?" In such an hour
argument is powerless, but there is one Voice that is never powerless. It is
His who suffered--and was loved.
The Father's Love Triumphed in the
Resurrection and Ascension
They would recall, too, that the Father's
love for Christ was a love that justified itself at last. There came at last
the hour of resurrection and of ascension to the right hand in heaven. Was it
love that gave Him to the earth? It was love that lifted Him above the earth.
Was it love that permitted Him to suffer? It was love that crowned His
sufferings in glory. The final issue of the Father's love was not the quietness
of a garden-grave. It was song; it was dominion; it was liberty. What a
magnificent hope for these disciples, persecuted and in prison. What a
magnificent hope for every disciple just when things are growing unendurable! A
little patience and the love that grips us is going to justify itself
magnificently. That is bound, as with hoops of steel, to the as and so of the
Lord Jesus.
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