MASTERING OUR MIDNIGHTS
For our beautiful theme today, I am indebted to my friend,
Dr. Roy S. Nicholson, president of the Wesleyan Methodist church. We were
preaching colleagues at the great Lakeland, Florida,
camp meeting. One day he said, "I've been thinking of a theme that maybe
you could use on 'Showers of Blessing.'" Always eager to receive helpful
suggestions, I pressed him for it. He answered, "Mastering Our
Midnights."
Midnight in the
natural realm is normally the darkest, blackest hour in the twenty-four. It is
farthest from sunset and longest from sunrise. It signifies the period most
removed from light in either direction.
In the moral and spiritual realms also midnight symbolizes all that is dark, black, distressing,
painful, disappointing, and discouraging. It is the period of trial when the
lights are all out.
Our midnights can
have a very definite effect on us. It all depends on our attitude toward
them and our use of them. They can
make us stronger or weaker, better or bitter, victims or victors. We must
master them or they will master us. So the question -- Are you mastering your midnights or are your midnights mastering you?
Midnight is
referred to often in the Bible. It was midnight
when the destroying angel went throughout Egypt
killing the first-born in every home not having the blood on
the lintel of the door. The blood changed midnight
into morning; death was avoided and life preserved (Exodus 11:4).
Samson destroyed the city gate at midnight (Judges 16:3). It was midnight when the cry was made, "Behold, the
bridegroom cometh." For five wise virgins it became everlasting day, but
for the five foolish virgins it became night -- "outer darkness"
forever. It was at midnight that Paul
and Silas sang praises to God, although they were suffering from scourged backs
and their hands and feet were in stocks. For them morning came with an angel to
bring deliverance and usher in the sunrise.
Night is the antithesis of day. In the beginning God created
all things, "and the darkness he called Night" (Gen. 1: 5). Night has
come to mean despair, time of evil, blackness, and terror. The Psalmist spoke
of "the terror by night" (Ps. 91:5) and "the pestilence that
walketh in darkness" (Ps. 91:6). In the books of Proverbs and
Ecclesiastics we find these references: "The way of the wicked is as
darkness" (Proverbs 4: 19),
and, "The fool walketh in darkness" (Eccles. 2:14). Isaiah also referred to "the people" as
walking "in darkness."
Jesus is called "The Light of the World." He
himself said, "I am the light." John said, "God is light, and in
him is no darkness" (I John 1: 5). Paul declared, "We are not of the
night" (I Thess. 5:5).
In this present world it seems conclusive that there is a
mixture of light and darkness, good and evil, blessing and cursing, sunshine
and rain, roses and thorns. A battle rages between the forces of darkness and
the armies of light.
In the future life a separation will be made. In heaven all
is light and "there is no night
there." (Rev. 21:25; 22:5.) God is the Light and in Him
is no darkness at all. Hell is described by Jesus as a place of "outer
darkness" (Matt. 8:12). Jude
speaks of the abode of sinners as "the blackness of darkness for
ever" (Jude 13).
In this life we shall have tribulation and sorrow and pain.
But we can have for our spirits
and minds the Light. Jesus can
dispel the darkness of sin from our hearts and the blackness of despair from
our souls. We can have light within, even though it may be dark without.
In heaven all midnights
will be past forever. But here on earth we still have them. The
midnight of sin can
be dispelled by the light of Christ in the soul, but the midnights of trouble and sorrow and pain remain.
There are three attitudes we can take toward our midnights. We can oppose them bitterly,
accept them stoically, or welcome them happily. The last is
the Christian's answer to personal midnights.
We master them. They become stepping-stones to higher levels instead of
stumbling blocks to lower living. Someone has said, "Difficulties pull the
trigger; what explodes depends on what you are loaded with." If you are
filled with light there is an explosion of love. If you are loaded with
darkness there is a blast of hatred. Your midnights
make or break you.
What enables one to "master his midnights" instead of having his midnights master him?
First, Christ, the Light, within.
Second, Faith in the goodness and power of
God.
Third, The inner knowledge that light always follows
darkness and morning always
follows the evening in God's plan.
Read in Genesis -- it is always "the evening and the morning," never
the reverse. God always leaves us in the light.
An unknown author has penned these beautiful lines.
I have found a joy in sorrow,
A secret balm for pain,
A beautiful tomorrow
Of sunshine after rain.
I have found a branch of healing
Near every bitter spring,
And a whispered promise stealing
Over every broken string.
Man's last midnight
is death. This too can be mastered through Christ, the mighty
Conqueror. For without the Saviour
death means perpetual and eternal midnight
-- "outer
darkness." But for those who
already possess Him, the Light, and He possesses them, death means no more
midnights, no more darkness -- only light -- eternal light in God's eternal day
and His perpetual sunrise.
Virgil Brock has written:
Beyond the sunset, oh, blissful morning,
When with our Saviour heav'n is begun!
Earth's toiling ended, oh, glorious dawning,
Beyond the sunset, when day is done!
Beyond the sunset, no clouds will gather,
No storms will threaten, no fears annoy.
Oh, day of gladness, oh, day unending,
Beyond the sunset, eternal joy! [1]
What an inspiring, glorious hope! Midnights mastered and past forever!
W. C. Poole in a similar vein wrote:
When I shall come to the end of my way,
When I shall rest at the close of life's day,
When, "Welcome home," I shall hear Jesus say,
Oh, that will be sunrise for me!
Sunrise
tomorrow, sunrise tomorrow,
Sunrise
in glory is waiting for me;
Sunrise
tomorrow, sunrise tomorrow,
Sunrise with Jesus for eternity. [2]
Midnights mastered
here means no midnights over there.
We shall exchange earthly darkness for eternal light,
temporal sorrow for everlasting joy,
temporary pain here for perpetual health hereafter, midnights now for middays
then, sunsets for continuous sunrises.