Christ All in All
Colossians 3:11 CHRIST is all in all to every one who
has truly found Him. He is our Savior, Redeemer, Deliverer, Shepherd, Teacher,
and also sustains toward us many more offices, to which I desire to call your
attention.
1. If we turn to Luke 2:10, 11, we find Christ is there announced as our
SAVIOR: "Behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all
people.
For unto you is born this day in the city of
David a Savior, which is Christ the Lord." We learn to know Christ as our
Savior, to meet Him on Mount Calvary, to look on Him as the bleeding Lamb of
God, before we know Him as our Redeemer, Deliverer, and Shepherd. Now, looking
round upon this vast assembly, I, who do not know the hearts of the people,
cannot know whether you can say that Christ is your Savior. There are many, I
trust, who can say this, and who rejoice in His salvation; while, without
being uncharitable, I am afraid there are many who know nothing personally of
Jesus as their Savior.
He is offered to every one of you today as a
Savior; "God gave Him up freely for us all," that we all through Him might be
saved. If you are belonging to this world, I can prove that you have a Savior.
If you belonged to some other planet, such as the moon or any of the stars,
then I could not say a Savior was offered to you; for it is not revealed
whether the people of these distant worlds, even if they are inhabited,
require salvation or not. But this I know, that every man on this globe has a
Savior offered him.
SALVATION FREE TO ALL.
I have no sympathy with those men who try to
limit God's salvation to a certain few. I believe that Christ died for all who
will come. I have received many letters finding fault with me, and saying I
surely don't believe the doctrine of election. I do believe in election; but I
have no business to preach that doctrine to the world at large. The world has
nothing to do with election; it has only to do with the invitation, "Whosoever
will, let him take the water of life freely." That is the message for the
sinner. I am sent to preach the gospel to all.
After you have received salvation, we can talk
about election. It's a doctrine for Christians, for the Church, not for the
unconverted world. Our message is "good tidings, which shall be to all people;
for unto you is born this day a Savior, which is Christ the Lord." All people,
this Savior is proffered to you. Accept Him, and God will accept you; reject
Him, and God will reject you. Your eternal destiny depends on your refusal or
otherwise to accept the proffered Savior. The case is simply one of giving and
taking. God gives; I receive. We must, then, first of all know Christ as our
Savior.
2. But He is still more: He is our
REDEEMER.
Supposing I saw a man tumble into a river, and
I were to jump in and rescue him, I should be a savior to him - I should have
saved him. But when I brought the man ashore, I should probably leave him, and
do nothing further.
But the Lord does more. He not only saves us,
but He redeems us - that is, buys us back. He ransoms us from the power of
sin, as if I should promise to watch over that rescued man for ever, and see
that he did not again fall into the water. The Lord not only saves us from
spiritual death, but He redeems us for ever that death can never touch
us.
LIBERTY TO THE CAPTIVES.
When I was at Richmond, U.S., the colored
people were going to have a meeting. It was the first day of their freedom. I
went to the African church, and never before or since heard such bursts of
native eloquence.
"Mother," said one, "rejoice today. Your
little child has been sold from you for the last time; your posterity are for
ever free. Glory to God in the highest! Young men, you have heard the driver's
whip for the last time; you are free today! Young maidens, you have been put
up on the auction- block for the last time!" They spoke right out, they
shouted for joy; their prayers had been answered, it was the gospel to them.
In like manner Jesus Christ proclaims liberty to the captives. Some have
accepted it; some, like the poor negroes, scarcely believe the good tidings;
but it is none the less true. Christ has come to redeem us from the slavery of
sin.
Now, who will accept of that redemption? There
was one colored woman, a servant in an inn in the Southern States, who could
not believe she was free. "Be's I free, or be I not?" she asked of a visitor.
Her master told her she was not, her colored brethren told her she was. For
two years she had been free without knowing it. She represents a great many in
the Church of God today. They can have liberty, and yet they don't know
it.
3. Again, Christ is our DELIVERER.
The children of Israel were not only saved and
redeemed from the bondage of the Egyptians, but they were also delivered, that
they should not be led back again into bondage. Many are afraid; they think
they are not able to hold on, and therefore shrink from making a profession.
But Christ is able to keep you from falling; He is able to deliver you in the
dark hour of trial and temptation, from every evil device of Satan, and from
the snare of the fowler.
In Isaiah
49:24, we read: "Shall the prey be taken from the mighty, or the lawful
captive delivered? But thus saith the Lord, Even the captives of the mighty
shall be taken away, and the prey of the terrible shall be delivered: for I
will contend with him that contendeth with thee, and I will save thy
children." I will save him; I will deliver him. The children of Israel were
saved from the cruel bondage of Egypt, they were led out of the land of
Goshen; but still they were not fully delivered. The great host of the
Egyptians was thundering behind them. It was not till they had passed safely
through the Red Sea, which closing behind, them, swallowed up the host of the
enemy - it was not till then that they were free, that they were delivered.
And similarly in our times of danger we shall find it to be true of Christ,
"He delivered my soul"; and again in Job
33:24, "Then He is gracious unto him, and saith, Deliver him from going down
to the pit: I have found a ransom. His flesh shall be fresher than a child's:
he shall return to the days of his youth: he shall pray unto God, and He will
be favorable unto him: and he shall see His face with joy: for He will render
unto man His righteousness. He will deliver his soul from going into the pit,
and his life shall see the light." Here we have the saving, the redeeming, the
deliverance from the pit. Man is fallen into the deep pit, he is kept there a
lawful captive by one who is mighty. If he is to be brought back from the
darkness of the pit to see the light, then we must have a ransom. Here God
comes forward, and says, "I have found a ransom." Christ is the ransom, and He
will deliver us. Sound out the cry, "Christ is our deliverer." He is mighty to
save, He is able to deliver.
A LEADER.
4. But now we need something more. Look back
again to the children of Israel; when they had marched gloriously through the
Red Sea, they had been saved, redeemed, and delivered; but was that all they
required? No; they had been brought into the wilderness. What now do they
need? They must have a way to go in the pathless desert. They required a
leader. Then Christ is the way and the leader. Are we in difficulties, in
doubt, or in perplexity? Christ is our way. "I am the way, the truth, and the
life" (John 10).
I have heard some say, "Well, if I am
converted, and become religious, I don't know what church I would go to. There
are so many different churches and denominations. I really don't know which is
the right one." Hence some people are bewildered, and do not know which is the
true way. Well, I would say to such, Look only to Him who says, "I AM THE
WAY." He is the only true way, and if you want to reach the kingdom you have
only to follow Him. We may be in darkness, but He is able to lead us in the
right path. He is the Shepherd of His flock. He will go before us and lead us.
He is calling upon us to arise and follow Him, and He will lead us by a way we
know not; He will guide us to the green pastures if we only look to
Him.
THE PILLAR OF CLOUD.
All that the children of Israel had to do was
to follow the cloud. If the cloud rested, they rested; if the cloud moved
forward, then they moved. I can imagine that the first thing Moses did, when
the gray dawn of morning broke, was to look up and see if the cloud was still
over the camp. By night it was a pillar of fire, lighting up the camp, and
filling them with a sense of God's protecting care; by day it was a cloud
shielding them from the fierce heat of the sun's rays, and sheltering them
from the sight of their enemies.
Israel's Shepherd could lead them through the
pathless desert. Why? Because He made it. He knew every grain of sand in it.
They could not have a better leader through the wilderness than its
Creator.
And, sinner, can you, in all your difficulties
or doubts and fears, have a better leader than Jehovah? Oh, I do like that
good old hymn: "Guide me, O Thou great Jehovah, Pilgrim through this barren
land; I am weak, but Thou art mighty, Hold me with Thy powerful
hand.
Bread of heaven, Feed me till I want no more."
Yes, that is the true prayer of the bewildered sinner. God is able, and still
more, He is willing, to lead us, and to feed us.
"Thou gavest them bread from heaven for their
hunger, and broughtest forth water for them out of the rock for their thirst"
(Nehemiah 9:15).
He is still as able to lead any of us as He
was four thousand years ago to lead the children of Israel, "For I am the
Lord; I change not." To every one of us He says, "Fear not, I will lead thee;
I will help thee." Wonderful thing, is it not, to have God to help us on our
way? In our Western countries, when men go out hunting into the dense
backwoods, where there are no roads or paths of any kind, they take their
hatchet and cut a little chip out of the bark of the trees as they go along,
and then they easily find their way by these "blazes." They call it "blazing
the way." And so, if you will allow me the expression, Christ has "blazed the
way." He has traveled the road Himself, and knowing the way, He tells us to
follow Him, and He will lead us safe on high.
5. Now we have seen Christ is our Savior,
Redeemer, Deliverer, Leader, or Way. But He is more than all that; HE IS OUR
LIGHT.
"I am the light of the world: he that
followeth me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life." He
shall have the very "light of life." Yes, it is the privilege of every
Christian to walk in an unclouded sky.
But do we walk thus in an unclouded sky? No,
most Christians are often in darkness. If I were to ask this congregation if
they were all walking in the light, I believe there is scarcely one, if he
spoke the true feeling of his heart, but would reply, "No, I am often in
darkness." Why is that? It is because we are not following Christ, and keeping
close to Him. We are much in darkness when we might be in the
light.
Suppose the windows of this building were all
closed, and we were complaining of the darkness, what would any one say to us?
Why, they would say, "Admit the light; open the windows all round, and you'll
soon have plenty of light." Similarly we must let in Christ, who is the light,
and open our minds to receive Him, and we shall soon walk in light. There is a
great deal of darkness at the present time, even in the hearts of God's own
people. But follow Him, and then you will have plenty of light. Then Christ
will show to each of us that He is "The Light"; and He will do more, He will
set us on fire with His light, that we also may shine as lights in this dark
world.
May God help His own people to SHINE BRIGHTLY,
to flash out of darkness, that men may take knowledge of us that we have been
with Jesus. But remember, the world hates the light. Christ was the light of
the world, and the world sought to extinguish it at Calvary. Now He has left
His people to shine. "Ye are the light of the world." He has left us here to
shine. He means us to be "living epistles, known and read of all men." The
world is certain to watch, and to read you and me. If we are inconsistent,
then you may be sure the world will take occasion to stumble at us.
The world finds plenty of difficulties on the
way; let us see that we Christians do not add more stumbling-blocks by our
un-Christlike walk.
God help us to keep our lights burning clear
and brilliant! Out West a friend of mine was walking along one of the streets
one dark night, and saw approaching him a man with a lantern. As he came up
close to him he noticed by the bright light that the man had got no eyes. He
went past, but the thought struck him, "Surely that man is blind." He turned
round, and said, "My friend, are you not blind?" "Yes." "Then what have you
got the lantern for?" "I carry the lantern that people may not stumble over
me, of course," said the blind man. Let us take a lesson from that blind man,
and hold up our light, burning with the clear radiance of heaven, that men may
not stumble over us.
6. Objectors have said that it's all moonshine
about Christ's people being lights on the way. Well, that's just what we
believe; we reflect the light of Christ.
REFLECTED LIGHT.
Just like the moonshine, our light is borrowed
light. When we are living in the light of our Savior we shine with His light:
somewhat like the face of Moses, which shone after he had been in the mount
with God. Let us live in an atmosphere of heaven, and we cannot help shining.
But whenever we get downcast and weak in faith, then we are sure to lose our
light.
I remember during the American war I was in a
prayer meeting. We were all very dark and gloomy. Things had been going
against us for some time.
At last an old man got up, and said, "What is
the matter with us, that we are downhearted and sad? It is simply our lack of
faith. Moses, Joshua, and David were men strong in faith. They believed, and
therefore God honored them. Whence comes our want of faith? God is not dead.
He is as powerful, as willing, to help today as ever He was. Why, then, are we
not full of faith in Him? It is God-dishonoring to forget that He still has
power, although our armies are defeated, and all seems dark and gloomy." GET
ABOVE THE CLOUDS.
I will tell you what happened to me some time
ago when I was out West. I wanted to reach the summit of one of the Western
mountains. I had been told that sunrise was very beautiful when seen from the
summit. We got up to the half-way house one afternoon, where we were to rest
till midnight, and then set out for the top. Soon a little party of us started
with a good guide. Before a great while it began to rain, and then it became a
regular storm of thunder and lightning. I thought there was little use in
going on, and said to the guide, "Guess we'd better turn back; we won't see
anything this morning, with all these clouds." "Oh," said the guide, "I expect
we'll soon get through these clouds, and get above them, and then we'll have a
glorious view." So we went on, whilst the thunders were rumbling right about
our ears. But soon we began to get above the thunder-cloud; the air was quite
clear, and when the sun rose we had a splendid view of his rays as they tinged
the hilltops; and then, as the glorious sunshine began to break on where we
stood, we could see the dark cloud far beneath our mountain height. That's
what God's people want - to get into the clear air above the stormy clouds,
and to CLIMB HIGHER away up to the mountain peak. There you'll catch the first
rays from the Sun of Righteousness far above the clouds and mists. Some of you
may be in great darkness and gloom; but fear not, climb higher, get nearer to
the Master, and soon you'll catch His bright rays on your own soul, and they
will sprinkle back upon others.
KEEP THE LOWER LIGHTS BURNING.
We must live as children of the light, not as
children of the darkness. If we are dark and sorrowful, how is the world to
know that we are children of peace, and joy, and gladness? Our determination
must be to keep our lights burning. A few years ago, at the mouth of Cleveland
harbor there were two lights, one at each side of the bay, called the upper
and lower lights; and, to enter the harbor safely by night, vessels must sight
both of these lights.
These Western lakes are more dangerous
sometimes than the great ocean.
One wild, stormy night a steamer was trying to
make her way into the harbor. The captain and the pilot were anxiously
watching for the lights.
By and by the pilot was heard to say, "Do you
see the lower lights?" "No," was the reply; "but I fear we have passed them."
"Ah, there are the lights," said the pilot; "and they must be, from the bluff
on which they stand, the upper lights. We have passed the lower lights, and
have lost our chance of getting into the harbor." What was to be done? They
looked back, and saw the dim outline of the lower lighthouse against the sky.
The lights had gone out. "Can't you turn her head round?" "No; the night is
too wild for that. She won't answer her helm." The storm was so fearful that
they could do nothing. They tried again to make for the harbor, but they went
crash against the rocks, and sank to the bottom. Very few escaped; the great
majority found a watery grave. Why? Simply because the lower lights had gone
out.
And with us the upper lights are all right.
Christ Himself is the upper light, and we are the lower lights, and the cry to
us is, keep the lower lights burning, that is what we have to do. In the place
God has put us He expects us to shine, to be living witnesses, to be a bright
and shining light.
While we are here our work is to shine for
Him, and He will lead us safe to the sunlit shore of Canaan, where there is no
more night.
7. But Christ is more than our Light on the
way; for He is OUR TEACHER.
What a wonderful thing to have a teacher sent
from heaven. "If any man lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all
men liberally, and upbraideth not; and it shall be given him" (James
1:5).
"If any lack wisdom": I am afraid there are a
great many of us who lack wisdom, and even the best of us at times will be in
perplexity. There are moments in the life of us all when we seem in a fix; we
just stand still, and say, "What shall I do? I don't know what is the best
way." Oh, leave it with God, He will Himself be our teacher! "Come unto me,
all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke
upon you, and learn of me." Here is a wonderful teacher. He has had a school
for many thousand years; He has had the best men in His school; but still
there's room for another scholar there. His college is not too full yet, and
the teacher is the One sent from heaven.
Any one, every one in this assembly may join
this school. Jesus will welcome you there. Are you in doubt about anything?
ask Jesus; He will tell you.
Anxious sinner, seek the good teacher, as
Nicodemus did: "Master, we know thou art a teacher sent from God." If you seek
Him thus He will direct you. He will keep you, and lead you into green
pastures and by the still waters. I met a woman the other day who was full of
infidel doubts and fancies. She could not believe. Reading for some time
infidel works had thrown a dark and gloomy pall over her mind. It made me sad
to see her in such a case. Some of you may be like her. I wish you would take
Christ as your teacher, and then all darkness would flee away.
Christ is able to teach us. See how He taught
the disciples. He never wearied of their learning from Him. So He will teach
us if we will only listen to Him.
THE OLD JUDGE CONVERTED.
I remember, as I was coming out of the daily
prayer meeting in one of our American cities a few years ago, a lady said she
wished to speak to me; her voice trembled with emotion, and I saw at once that
she was heavily burdened by something or other. She said she had long been
praying for her husband, and she wanted to know if I would go to see him; she
thought it might do him some good. What is his name? "Judge - ," and she
mentioned one of the most eminent politicians in the State. "I have heard of
him," I said; "I am afraid I need not go, he is a booked infidel; I cannot
argue with him." "That is not what he wants," said the lady. "He has had too
much argument already. Go and speak to him about his soul." I said I would,
although I was not very hopeful. I went to his house, was admitted to his
room, and introduced myself as having come to speak to him about salvation.
"Then you have come on a very foolish errand," said he; "there's no use in
attacking me, I tell you that. I am proof against all these things, I don't
believe in them." Well, I saw it was no use arguing with him; so I said, "I'll
pray for you, and I want you to promise me that when you are converted you'll
let me know." "Oh, yes, I'll let you know," he said in a tone of sarcasm. "Oh,
yes, I'll let you know when I'm converted!" I left him, but I continued to
pray for him. Some time subsequently I heard that the old judge was converted.
I was again preaching in that city a while after that, and when I had done
talking the judge himself came to me, and said: "I promised I'd let you know
when I was converted; I have come to tell you of it. Have you not heard of
it?" "Yes; but I would like to hear from you how it happened." "Well," said
the judge, "one night, some time after you called on me, my wife had gone to
the meeting; there was no one in the house but the servants. I sat by the
drawing-room fire, and I began to think: Suppose my wife is right, that there
is a heaven and a hell; and suppose she is on the right way to heaven, where
am I going? I just dismissed the thought. But a second thought came: Surely He
who created me is able to teach me. Yes, I thought, that is so. Then why not
ask Him? I struggled against it, but at last, though I was too proud to get
down on my knees, I just said, 'Father, all is dark; Thou who created me canst
teach me.' "Somehow, the more I prayed the worse I felt. I was very sad. I did
not wish my wife to come home and find me thus, so I slipped away to bed, and
when she came into the room I pretended to be asleep. She got down on her
knees and prayed. I knew she was praying for me, and that for many long years
she had been doing so. I felt as if I could have jumped up and knelt beside
her; but no, my proud heart would not let me, so I lay still, pretending to be
asleep. But I didn't sleep that night. I soon changed my prayer; it was now,
'O God, save me; take away this terrible burden.' "I didn't believe in Christ
even yet. I thought I'd go right straight to the Father Himself. But the more
I prayed I only became the more miserable; my burden grew heavier. The next
morning I did not wish to see my wife, so I said 'I was not well, and wouldn't
wait for breakfast.' I went to the office, and when the boy came I sent him
home for a holiday. When the clerks came I told them they might go for the
day. I closed the office doors: I wanted to be alone with God. I was almost
frantic in my agony of heart. I cried to God to take away this load of sin. At
last I fell on my knees, and cried, 'For Jesus Christ's sake take away this
load of sin.' At length I went to my wife's pastor, who had been praying with
her for my conversion for years, and the same minister who had prayed with my
mother before she died. As I walked down the street the verse that my mother
had taught me came into my mind, 'Whatsoever things ye desire, when ye pray,
believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them.' Well, I thought, I have
asked God, and here I am going to ask a man. I won't go.
I believe I am a Christian. I turned and went
home. I met my wife in the hall as I entered. I caught her hand, and said, 'I
am a Christian now.' She turned quite pale; she had been praying for
twenty-one years for me, and yet she could not believe the answer had come. We
went into our room, and knelt down by the very bedside where she had so often
knelt to pray for her husband. There we erected our family altar; and for the
first time our voices mingled in prayer. And I can only say that the last
three months have been the happiest months ever I spent in my life." Since
then that judge has lived a consistent Christian life; and all because he came
to God, asking for guidance.
If there is one here today whose mind is
filled with such infidel thoughts, go honestly to God, and He will teach you
the right way through the dark wilderness of infidelity. He won't leave you in
darkness or doubt. It is the devil's own work to lead men into such doubts;
well he knows if he once gets them there he has them pretty safe.
It is Satan's work to keep you in ignorance or
doubt. It is God's work to teach you. The teacher is Christ; He is appointed
by God for this work.
God help us all to accept Him as our teacher.
8. Now we have seen Christ as our Savior, Redeemer, Deliverer, Leader, Light,
and Teacher. But He is still more; He is also OUR SHEPHERD.
A very sweet thought it is to me, "The Lord is
my Shepherd; I shall not want." There is not one here, except the very babes,
who does not understand the work of a shepherd. He watches over his flock,
protects them from danger, feeds them, leads them into the best pastures. In
fact, the 23rd Psalm is just a statement of the duties of a good shepherd:
"The Lord is my Shepherd; I shall not want," etc.
You want to be fed; are you going to wander
about seeking something to satisfy the cravings of your soul? Then, I tell
you, you never will find anything to satisfy the longings of your heart. The
world cannot, and never could, satisfy a hungry soul. The Lord Jesus can - He
is the true Shepherd. He is seeking to restore your soul, to lead you back to
the paths of righteousness. Even to death will He lead you, and safely through
its shadow guide you to a better land. Mother, father, will you claim Him as
your Shepherd? Young man, young woman, will you have Him as your Shepherd? My
little child, will you have Jesus as your Shepherd? He will lead safely and
softly.
You can, all of you, if you will. For "God
gave Him up freely for us all," that He might have us for His flock. He will
lead us through life, down to the banks of the Jordan; He will lead us across
the dark river into His kingdom. He is a tender, loving Shepherd.
I sometimes meet people in the anxious
inquiry-room who are nourishing hard, bitter feelings against God, generally
because they have been afflicted. A mother said to me the other day, "Ah, Mr.
Moody, God has been unjust to me; He has come and taken away my child." Dear
afflicted mothers, has God not removed your children to a pure and happy life?
You may not understand it now, but you will by and by. He wants to lead you up
there. THE EASTERN SHEPHERD.
A friend of mine, who had been in eastern
lands, told me he saw a shepherd who wanted his flock to cross a river. He
went into the water himself and called them; but no, they would not follow him
into the water.
What did he do? Why, he girded up his loins
and lifted a little lamb under each arm, and plunged right into the stream,
and crossed it without even looking back. Whenever he lifted the lambs, the
old sheep looked up into his face and began to bleat for them; but when he
plunged into the water the dams plunged after him, and then the whole flock
followed. When they got to the other side he put down the lambs, and they were
quickly joined by their mothers, and there was a happy meeting.
My friend says he noticed the pastures on the
other side were much better and the fields greener; and on this account the
shepherd was leading them across. Our great Palestine Shepherd does that. That
child which He has taken from the earth is but removed to green pastures of
Canaan, and the Shepherd means to draw your hearts after it, to teach you to
"set your affections on things above." When He has taken your little Mary,
Edith, or Julia, accept it as a call to look upward and beyond. You, mother,
are you weeping bitter tears for your little one? Do not weep! Your child has
gone to the place where there is neither weeping nor sorrow. Would you have it
return? Surely never.
Christ is our Shepherd - faithful and loving.
Though sickness, or trouble, or even death itself, should come to our house,
and claim our dearest ones, still they are not lost, but only gone before. God
help each one of us to have Him as our Shepherd.
If time permitted, I should like to take up
the subject of Christ as our Justification, our Wisdom, our Righteousness, the
Friend that sticketh closer than a brother; but it would take a whole eternity
to tell what Christ is to His people, and what He does for them.
I remember when I was preaching on this
subject in Scotland, after I had done, I said to a man that "I was sorry I
could not finish the subject for want of time." "Finish the subject," said the
Scotchman, "why, that would require all eternity, and even then it would not
be complete; it will be the occupation of heaven." 9. Once more, let us look
at Christ as OUR BURDEN-BEARER.
Oh, I love to think of Him as the bearer of
our burdens as well as our sin-bearer.
He carries our sins, although they are more
numerous than the hairs of our heads. Great and terrible as these burdens are,
God has laid them all on Jesus.
"O Christ, what burdens bowed Thy head! Our
load was laid on Thee." That aspect of His burden-bearing we have already
looked at in His work as Savior and Redeemer. I wish now to take up the sweet
thought, which has been a great comfort to me.
"Surely He hath borne our griefs, and carried
our sorrows." Glorious, is it not, to know we have such a Savior? Can you feel
that He has lifted your burden off your shoulders on to His own shoulder? Then
you will feel light in heart.
A LIGHT HEART.
On one occasion, after I had been talking this
way, a woman came forward, and said, "Oh, Mr. Moody, it's all very well for
you to talk like that, about a light heart. But you are a young man, and if
you had a heavy burden like me you would talk differently. I could not talk in
that way, my burden is too great." I replied, "But it's not too great for
Jesus." "Oh," she said, "I cannot cast it on Him." "Why not? surely it is not
too great for Him. It is not that He is feeble. But it is because you will not
leave it to Him. You're like many others. They will not leave it with Him.
They go about hugging their burden, and yet crying out against it. What the
Lord wants is, you to leave it with Him, to let Him carry it for you. Then you
will have a light heart, sorrow will flee away, and there will be no more
sighing. What is your burden, my friend, that you cannot leave with Christ?"
She replied, "I have a son who is a wanderer on the face of the earth. None
but God knows where he is." "Cannot Christ find him, and bring him back?" "I
suppose He can." "Then go and tell Jesus, and ask Him to forgive you for
doubting His power and willingness; you have no right to mistrust Him." She
went away much comforted, and I believe she ultimately had her wandering boy
restored to her!
A MOTHER'S PRAYER ANSWERED.
This circumstance reminds me of a faithful
father and mother in our country, whose eldest son had gone to Chicago to a
situation. A neighbor of theirs was in the city on some business, and he met
the young man reeling along the streets drunk. He thought, "How am I to tell
his parents?" When he returned to his village, he went and called out the
father, and told him. It was a terrible blow to that father, but he said
nothing to the mother till the little ones had all gone to rest; the servants
had retired, and all was quiet in that little farm on the Western prairies.
They drew up their chairs to the little drawing-room table, and then he told
her the sad news. "Our boy has been seen drunk on the streets of Chicago -
drunk." Ah, that mother was sorely hurt; they did not sleep much that night,
but spent the hours in fervent prayers for their boy. About daybreak the
mother felt an inward conviction that all would be well. She told the father
"she had cast it on the Lord, had left her son with Jesus, and she felt He
would save him."
One week from that time the young man left
Chicago, took a journey of three hundred miles into the country; and when he
reached his home, he walked in, and said, "Mother, I've come home to ask you
to pray for me." Ah, her prayer had reached heaven; she had cast her burden on
Jesus, and He had borne it for her. He took the burden, presented her prayer
sprinkled with the atoning blood, and got it answered. In two days that young
man returned to Chicago rejoicing in the Savior. What a wonderful thing it is
to have Christ as our burden-bearer! How easy, how light do our cares become
when cast upon Him!
Do you say Christ is nothing to you? If so, it
is only because you won't have Him. He is to all who will accept Him a Savior
from death, a Redeemer from the power of sin, a Deliverer from our enemies, a
Leader through the wilderness; He is the way Himself, He is Light in the
darkness, He is a Teacher to His people, He is the Shepherd of His flock, our
Justification, Wisdom, Righteousness, Elder Brother, Burden-bearer.
He is in fact "Our all in all." Then come to
Christ; oh, come today, The Father, Son, and Spirit say, The Bride repeats the
call, For He will cleanse your guilty stains, His love will soothe your weary
pains, For Christ is All in All.