George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Today's Devotional
November 11
The Perfecting Power of Love
Above all these things put on love,
which is the bond of perfectness--Col 3:14
Paul, an Apostle of Love
We are accustomed to think of Paul as a
dogmatic writer, never so happy as when immersed in argument, but we must not
forget with what affecting tenderness he has written of the grace of love. Great
intellectual strength like that of Paul is often intolerant of tender feeling.
Moving along the lines of demonstration, it disdains the heart as a true source
of knowledge; but from that temptation Paul is entirely free for while he is
the very prince of reasoners, he insists with ever increasing emphasis on the
power and the primacy of love. It is not John, it is Paul who tells us that
love is the fulfilling of the law. It is Paul who writes that wonderful hymn of
love which we find in the thirteenth chapter of Corinthians. So here it is Paul
who, after a noble passage describing our death and life in Jesus Christ, bids
us put on the bond of charity.
Love Beautifies and Perfects Every Other
Grace
Now a word or two will explain to us the
figure which the apostle uses to convey his meaning: "Above all these
things put on love, which is the bond of perfectness." The picture in the
apostle's mind is that of one who is putting on his raiment. He sees a man
throwing around his body the loose and flowing garments of antiquity. And then
it occurs to him that these loose garments, no matter how fine or beautiful
they be, can never be worn with comfort or grace unless they are clasped
together with a girdle. Without that girdle drawing all together, they hamper
and hinder a man at every turn. It is the perfect bond of robe and tunic, the
final touch that makes them serviceable. And so, says Paul, is it with love; it
is the girdle of every other grace; it is the final touch that beautifies the
whole and makes every garment of the spirit perfect. Under the figure, then,
there lies one thought--it is the thought of the perfecting of love. Love is
the girdle binding all together and giving to everything its proper beauty. On
that, then, I want to dwell a little; on love, not in its inherent qualities
but in its singular and incommunicable power of perfecting everything that
clothes our being.
Love Is Needed for the Perfecting of
Gifts
How true this is of spiritual gifts we
learn from the first epistle to the Corinthians. That church at Corinth was
very rich in gifts; so rich, that there was trouble over them. One had the gift
of prophecy and one of prayer; one had the gift of tongues and one of healing;
and every man in the ardor of the spirit was claiming for his own gift a proud
preeminence until at last the danger grew so great and the scandal of bickering
so soul-destroying that the Corinthian Christians wrote to Paul begging him for
his advice and guidance. What was the counsel which the apostle gave? First, he
said, covet earnestly the best gifts. Remember, he means, that though all gifts
are of God, yet all are not equal in spiritual value. But then immediately he
turns from that as though it were too hard for these Corinthians, and he says
"and yet I show you a more excellent way"--and that more excellent
way is love. It is thus that Paul introduces that great chapter in which he
glorifies the powers of love. There will be no more trouble about spiritual
gifts if love is the girdle which includes them all. Without love, the graces
of the spirit will irritate like flowing garments in the gale. Love is the
perfect bond which makes them serviceable, keeping each in its peculiar place.
Not only is this true of spiritual gifts;
it is true of artistic and intellectual gifts. Over them all a man must put on
love, for love is the final touch that perfects them. Take for example the
happy gift of song which God has bestowed so freely on His children. We have
all listened, I take it, to some singers who have set us wondering at their
perfect art. Artistically there was not a flaw to find; there was consummate
mastery and perfect execution, and yet the song somehow failed to move us or to
strike a responsive chord within our breast. The gift was there--that no one
would deny--and it had been trained with splendid perseverance, but there was
one thing lacking to complete it and that was the perfecting impress of the
heart. You can arrest and dazzle without love, but without love you cannot
charm or win. You cannot open these ivory and golden gates that lead to the
secret places of the soul. Hence a poor gift, if there be love behind it, will
set the eye glistening with tears while the most brilliant gift, flit be
loveless, will leave us wondering and leave us cold. I have heard preachers
whose intellectual gifts were such that any man might covet them. Yet they
never moved me to abhor the wrong or kindled me to joy in what was fair. But I
have heard others whose gifts were not remarkable but who were on fire with
love to God and man, and there was a power about their simplest word that made
a man ashamed of his poor life. My brother and sister, whatever be your gift,
over that gift put on the belt of love. Covet earnestly the best gifts, but
covet love to beautify them all. Study is noble, and discipline is good, and
perseverance is a heroic virtue; but in all the range of gifts there is not one
that does not call for love to perfect it.
Love Perfects Service
If one were asked to explain what life is,
it might be difficult to give an answer. Perhaps we get nearest to life's
deepest meaning when we interpret it in terms of service. All life is service.
We all must serve to live. Obedience is the first condition of all progress.
Hence Christ, the consummation of humanity, was among men as one who serveth.
Service of Necessity
Now I think that when we look at service,
we can distinguish three ascending stages in it. In the first place, and on the
lowest stage, we discover the service of necessity. There are many things which
we are forced to do and which we would never dream of doing were we free. They
meet us in the performance of our work perhaps, and we would gladly shirk them
if we could. But we cannot shirk them if we wish to live, they are part of the
terms on which we have our being; they are the very condition of existence and
not to render them would be suicide. Such service to which we are compelled is
the poorest and the lowest form of service. True, it is dignified when it is
bravely borne and carried through in an unmurmuring way. But the very fact that
it is forced upon us and would be at once rejected were we free, invests it
with a certain meanness and robs it of liberty and of delight.
Service of Duty
The next stage is the service of duty--all
that we do because it is our duty. It is the service we render not because we
must. It is the service we give because we ought. It, too, may be uncongenial
service--not at all what we should have chosen for ourselves, and we may think
it hard that we should have been summoned to bear such burdens or carry through
such tasks. But conscience tells us it is the path for us, and so we pray to
God to strengthen us and then, with whatever manhood we possess, we go quietly
forward on the path of duty. There is always something noble in that service,
yet it is hardly the highest kind of service. There is a lack of joy in it--a
lack of music--there is not the gladsomeness as of a happy child. Something is
wanting to make the service perfect, to make it a thing of beauty and a joy
forever, and what it lacks to crown it with delight is the final touch of love.
It is love that makes every service perfect. It is love that turns the task
into delight. Love never asks how little can I do. Love always asks how much.
And that is why in all the range of service there is no service like that
inspired by love, whether the love of a mother for her children or that of
Jesus Christ for all mankind.
I might illustrate this ascending scale of
service by an imagined case from our old customs. Think, then, of some young
man a hundred years ago drafted into the service of the navy. Caught by the
draft and torn away from home, how intolerable that service must have seemed!
For a time, it would be the bitterest of drudgery performed with many a
muttering and curse. There was no escape--it had to be performed--the lash and
the irons followed disobedience; that, in the harshest and extremist sense, was
the service of necessity. But can we not imagine that young man rousing himself
into a worthier mood? At the call of danger he would forget his bondage and
think of the peril of his native land. And patriotic feelings would arise and
his duty to his country would awake, and now his service would be a nobler
thing because it was the service of his duty. But now suppose that a young man
like that had sailed in the same vessel with Lord Nelson and had learned to
love Nelson with that devoted love which filled the breast of every man who
sailed with him. How different would his service now become! How gladly would
he toil and fight and die! The thought of duty would be absorbed in love, and
love would make his service perfect.
Love Perfects Relationships
Once more, I want you to observe that love
is needed for the perfecting of relationships.
If you were to ask me what it is that makes
life rich, I should answer that chiefly it is life's relationships. It is in
the ties which link it to the lives of others that life enlarges to its
greatest measure. Just think how poor your life would be today if the cords
were cut which bind you to your friends. Son, father, sister, brother, friend
and comrade--what would life be without such words as these? For no man liveth
to himself--when he attempts it he is no longer living. It is in its wide and
various relationships that life is ennobled and enriched.
Now when you come to think of it, you find
there are three great enemies of a sweet relationship. The first is
selfishness, the second pride, and the third destroyer of life's ties is fear. No
man or woman who is selfish can ever know the joy of a deep relationship. If
you are selfish you cannot be a friend. If you are selfish you cannot have a
friend. For we never tell our secrets to the selfish nor open our hearts to
them in confidence nor lean upon them with that confiding hope that calls for,
and is always sure of, sympathy. Then in pride is a strange power of isolation.
We say of the man who is proud that he is cold. No one is warmed by him in this
chill world. No warmth of other lives dispels his iciness. The proud man is the
solitary man and so always is the man who is afraid, whether it be the savage
in the forest or the fearful sultan upon an Eastern throne. Where there is
selfishness, then, or pride or fear, you never can have the fullness of
relationship. Something is lacking in every human tie so long as these are
mighty in the heart. And it takes a power that can conquer these and whose
empire means the killing out of these if the relationships that make our lives
are to come slowly to a perfect growth.
The Power That Conquers
It takes a power that can conquer
these--you know as well as I do what that power is. Nothing but love,
possessing all the heart, is able to dispossess these enemies. Love is the
sworn enemy of selfishness, for it sets a crown upon the other. Love is the
sworn enemy of pride, for love is ever warm and humble. And as for fear, there
is no fear in love, but perfect love casteth out fear, for fear hath torment.
It is thus that love is imperatively needed for the perfecting of every human
tie. Like a girdle you must clasp it on, if you would wear the garment of
relationship. It and it only is the bond of perfectness between one life and
every other life. Without it we may eat and drink and sleep. But with it in our
daily life, we live.
Love Perfects Religion
So love is needed for the perfecting of
gifts, for the perfecting of service and relationship. Now in closing and in a
word or two, it is needed for the perfecting of religion.
It is a matter of infinite debate where
precisely religion begins. Is it in fear of the darkness, in dread of the
unknown; is it in some dim feeling of dependence? Brethren, we may have our own
thoughts on that matter as a fascinating question of psychology, but wherever
religion begins in the heart of man, it can never be perfect till it reaches
love. If no relationship of earth is perfect till love has entered with its
benediction, how can a man's relationship to God be perfect, if love is wanting
there? For true religion is not a thing of doctrine nor of eager and
intellectual speculation: it is the tie that binds the life on earth to the
infinite and eternal life beyond the veil. I grant you that the distance is so
vast there that you cannot gauge it by any earthly tie. I do not like that form
of pious speech that is too familiar and has no place for awe. Yet the fact
remains that every earthly tie is but a shadow of our tie with God, and if
these cannot be perfect without love, no more, you may be sure of it, can that.
Only when a man can lift his eyes and say with a cry of victory, "God
loves me"; only when he believes though all be dark that the God who
reigneth is a God of love; only then does his religion become a real, a very
present help in time of trouble, a well of water in the burning desert, a
cooling shadow in a weary land.
It is just that and nothing else which
makes ours the perfect religion. For the perfecting of religion love is needed,
and that love has been revealed in Christ. God commendeth His own love to us in
that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us. God so loved the world that
He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not
perish. When we have gazed upon the face of Christ, there are a thousand things
we still may doubt; but there is one thing we can never doubt again, and that
is the love of God. Love is the perfect bond between man and man. Love is the
perfect bond between man and God. How shall we win it where everything is dark and
a thousand divine providence's so baffling? Blessed Savior, we turn our hearts
to Thee. We gaze upon Thy pierced hands and feet. He that hath seen Thee hath
seen the Father. We rest at last upon the love of God.
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