George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
November 2
The Shield of Faith
Withal taking up the shield of
faith--Eph 6:16 (R.V.)
The Power That Protects Us
The armor of the ancients was of two
different kinds, and both kinds were absolutely necessary. It was partly armor
for attack and partly armor for protection. Now very generally, in the New
Testament, faith is one of the weapons of attack (1Jo 5:4). We see that
magnificently illustrated in the pageant of the eleventh of Hebrews. But here,
and it may be only here, Paul looks on faith in quite another light, for he
sets it among the armor of protection. Faith is not here the power that leads
to victory; it is the power that protects us in the battle. It keeps us
unembittered and serene amid the mysteries and buffetings of life. To believe
that love is on the throne and that through everything there runs a loving
purpose, is in the deepest of all senses to be shielded.
How effectual that shielding is, is shown
by the apostle's choice of words. An exquisite and unfailing niceness of
selection is the real meaning of verbal inspiration. There are two words in the
Greek tongue for shield; the one is common and the other rare. The one connotes
a little shield or target; the other a frame that covered the whole man. And it
is notable that only here--nowhere else, I mean, in the New Testament--is the
latter word employed. Faith is not a partial protection; it casts its defense
over the whole of life. It is a means of safety for the intellect, as surely as
for the passions of the heart. It guards the feet when they are prone to
wander, and the hands when they are growing weary, and the eyes when they are
drawn to what is wrong. The shield of faith is an all-embracing shelter. It is
coextensive with our being. Faith in God through our Lord Jesus Christ is
nothing less than a universal safeguard. All was choicely shown to the
Ephesians by the word which the apostle used when he bade them take up the
shield of faith.
Faith Is Given to Guard Life in
Everything; Not from Everything
But if faith be a protecting shield, what
then of the apostle's own experience? So far from being defended from life's
ills, he knew them all in an abounding measure. He was not protected from cold
or heat or hunger, nor from shipwreck, nor from the hand of robbers (2Co
11:1-33). He was not protected from bodily infirmity, for he suffered from his
lacerating thorn (2Co 12:1-21). Everything that makes life bitter was mingled
in the cup of the apostle, and yet he dares to speak of faith's protection. I
think there are many who have still to learn that faith was never intended for
exemption. Faith is not given to guard the life from anything; it is given to
guard the life in everything. It empowers one to bear, and to bear cheerfully,
what otherwise would break the heart and darken the loving ordering of God. To
pass through the very worst that life can bring, undismayed in soul, and
unembittered; to tread the darkest mile and sing in it; never to lose heart, or
hope, or love; that is what faith achieved for the apostle and can achieve for
everyone of us, and that is the shielding power of faith. So was it with our
blessed Lord. When He came here, He was offered no exemption. He was a man of
sorrows, and He suffered, and He was tempted in all points like as we are. Yet
to the end, in a faith that never faltered, He was loving, tranquil, and
forgiving and under the cross spoke about His peace.
This Protecting Faith Has to Be Taken Up
One should notice, too, that this
protecting faith is one that we require to make our own. In the apostle's
words, we have to take it up, in the same way as we take up our cross. There is
a faith that is part and parcel of our being. It is ours without any conscious
effort. We believe quite naturally when the sower sows his seed that there will
be a harvest in the autumn. But to believe, when life is stem and sorrowful,
that God is with us and loves us as a Father, that is not natural to sinful
man. We have to take it up, in the apostle's words. We have to summon up the
resources of the soul. We have to use our will in a deliberate effort, if such
a faith is to be part of life. And it is just there that the Lord Jesus makes
all the difference to us in our weakness, for God commendeth His love to us in
this, that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us.
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