George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Today's Devotional
November 1
The Uplift of the Body -- Part II
He is the savior of the body--Eph 5:23
Christ's Compassionate Care for the Body
The second factor in this change of view
was the compassionate care of Jesus for the body. And I sometimes think we
scarcely realize what is meant by the healing miracles of Christ. We study the
separate miracles apart till we almost forget the import of the whole. We treat
them as isolated incidents or as witnesses of Christ's divinity. But the
miracles are really more than that. They are a revelation rather than an
argument. They are not added to confirm the mission, but are themselves a vital
part of it. They teach us that this despised body is part of the manhood which
the Lord redeems. They teach us that the love of God for man is love for the
body as well as for the soul. They teach us that there is no part nor organ,
nor any faculty nor sense nor limb, but has a share in that redeeming work
which brought our Savior from the throne to Calvary. Do you remember how Christ
refused to interfere when one wanted Him to interpose about his property?
"Master, speak to my brother, that he divide the inheritance with
me"--and Jesus refused to speak a word. But tell me, did He ever refuse to
interfere when the blind eyes looked up to Him for sight?--or when the foot was
lame or when the arm was helpless or when the tongue was sealed within the
lips? Always remember that the love of Christ encompasses every organ we
possess. It is the love of God touching the human frame that it might never be
bestial any more. We have a beautiful hymn which we are fond of singing. It is
"Jesus, lover of my soul." But I want someone to write me another
hymn, beginning "Jesus, lover of the body."
I think, too, that when we remember this,
we see more clearly why miracles have ceased. I daresay to some of you it has
seemed strange sometimes that there are no such miracles today. Have you not
longed for a miracle of healing when someone whom you loved was very ill? Have
you not thought how all the world would sing if that cold face would only smile
again? And if Christ is the same today in love and power as when He moved along
the ways of Galilee, why, you wonder, should it not be so? Still in the world
are eyes that cannot see and lips that crave for utterance in vain. Still in
the world are little suffering children and loved ones whose brows are drawn in
anguish. And Christ--where is His hand of healing, and where is His touch that
brought the strength again, and where is His voice that spoke and men were
cured and the light of life came thrilling to the dead? And if that lesson has
been learned by Christendom so that Paul could say "He is the savior of
the body" (Ep5:23), Now will you just remember what was the deep purpose
of these miracles? Will you remember that they were wrought to teach us that
the body is the temple of the Holy Ghost? Ah then the work of the healing
miracles is done. Nay, I beg of you, say not it is done. Its spirit is moving
in a thousand channels. It has founded the hospital and built the infirmary,
and inspired the science and the skill of Christian medicine. It has passed
into the life of every doctor who is walking worthy of his high vocation. It
has possessed the heart of every true nurse. The lesson of the miracles was
mastered, and the great Teacher laid aside the lesson-book. But when a lesson
has been learned--what then? Does it not mean that we are fit for greater
things? So "greater works than these shall he do" (Joh 14:12) said
the Lord--greater things even than a miracle; and in the sympathy and skill and
care of Christendom that promise has been abundantly fulfilled.
The Resurrection of the Body
Then the third factor in that change of
view was the doctrine of the resurrection of the body.
One of the greatest thinkers of the ancient
world, in what is perhaps his choicest dialogue, has given us in his own
matchless way some of the reasons why men should welcome death. He felt that
the fear of death was an unworthy fear, and he tried to combat it by quiet
argument, and one of his strongest arguments is this, that at death we are done
forever with the body. We shall never more be clogged and troubled by it. It
will never hamper the bright soul again. Death is the bird escaping from its
cage. Death is the prisoner breaking from his cell. The kindliest attribute of
death, for Plato, was not just that a man would be at rest then. It was that a
man after his weary battle would be done forever with a body.
Brethren, who name the Name of Christ with
me, do you always remember that that is not our faith? We believe in the Holy
Ghost and in the Catholic church and in the resurrection of the body. That is
one thing which Jesus never doubted. That is one mystery He never questioned.
And now it has passed from the consciousness of Christ into the consciousness
of all His people. If there is any meaning in His empty grave and if our bodies
are a living sacrifice, then in the future, body, soul, and spirit, we shall be
forever with the Lord. It was that mystery, touching a thousand hearts, which
set a halo of glory on the body. It was the thrill of resurrection-doctrine,
and the open secret of the empty grave. It was the certainty that the glad day
was coming when the body of our humiliation would be changed and would be
fashioned by the power of God into the likeness of the body of Christ's glory.
Watch the Sins of the Body
And so I ask you, as I close, to think
again of sins against the body. In the light of all I have been trying to say,
I ask you to set aside these sins you know so well. No one could think that
much harm was done if the scaffolding round some temple were defaced; and when
the Roman sinned against his body, it was only the scaffolding he seemed to
touch. But the Gospel has banished forever that conception, for in the light of
Christ the temple is the body, and hence the heinousness of all such sins for
every man who calls himself a Christian. If the body after all were but a cage,
it might not be very wrong to be a sensualist. If the body after all were but a
prison, the guilt of drunkenness might not be great. But if the body was the
home of Jesus--if it is the temple of the Holy Ghost--if Christ has come to
ransom and redeem it--if it is to be raised incorruptible and glorious--then
drunkenness and uncleanness and excess, and every defiance of the laws of
health, are sins not easily to be forgiven. Young men, keep yourselves pure.
Young women, be scrupulously modest. You can train your body to be the best of
comrades. You can train it to be the deadliest of enemies. What multitudes
there are in this great Babylon who have presented their bodies to the devil! I
call you to present yours to God, a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable.
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