THE SYMPATHY OF CHRIST
by Octavius Winslow
The Disinterestedness
of Christ's Sympathy
"For even Christ did not please Himself." Romans 15:3
I. The selfishness of sinful man.
No single principle of His own religion did our Lord more perfectly embody
or more touchingly illustrate than its disinterested benevolence. The nature
which, sinless He assumed, yet whose sinfulness He came to remove, was
essentially and totally disorganized. To affirm, as the Scriptures of truth
positively do, that it is originally and totally depraved, is but to portray
it with every feature of its pristine nobleness, purity, and excellence
utterly spoiled. When, therefore, our Lord made His advent to our world, He
found man the living embodiment, the acting impersonation, the very
incarnation of fallen self-love; self-love in the form of complete
selfishness. The original Center of the soul forsaken, man had become a
center to himself. The God he worshiped, was the deification of- self. The
religion he professed, was the adoration of- self. The powers he cultivated
were consecrated to- self. His whole existence was one act of service and
devotion to- self. The Divine Center, as we have said, abandoned, he knew no
other God, acknowledged no other sufficiency, recognized no other end than-
himself. Every faculty and thought, every affection and action, was made to
contribute to the cloud of incense which rose as in one dense column before
this little idol- SELF. Himself the first- himself the last- himself all in
all! And is it not so now? Self, in some shape, is still the Deity of the
natural man. Selfishness is still the universal sin of our nature, exhibited
in one or more of its thousand modifications, its endless forms. All are in
pursuit either of wealth, or ambition, or pleasure, or honor, or
gratification- each one urging his individual suit- under the rule of this
"reigning law of the world ravaged and disorganized by sin"- the law of
selfishness. A total disregard for the interests and enjoyment of others- an
entire oblivion of what is due to another's feelings and well-being; the
possession of a certain good; the attainment of a certain end at the expense
of another's happiness and rights, is the only recognized principle and a
rule of action which regulates the conduct of the great majority of our
depraved species. The indictment is heavy, the picture is dark, the sin is
awful, we admit; but it is borne out as much by daily observation and
frequent experience, as by the faithful, unerring Word of God- "All men seek
their own." What means this self-exaltism- this egotism- this envy and
jealousy- this attempt to supplant others in esteem, influence, and power-
this prodigality and love of worldly show- this eager chase of wealth- this
covetousness and penuriousness- this niggardly dole of charity- this cruel,
heartless, grinding oppression- this growing sensuality and crime- this
haughty inflexibility of will, impatience of contradiction, and
acknowledging no superiority to its own- this love of ease and sloth- this
sectarian exclusiveness which looks with coldness, jealousy, and distrust
upon the spiritual prosperity of others? What, we ask, is all this, and a
thousand times more, but the one appalling, cancerous sin of selfishness
existing in the very heart of depravity, and sending its fatal poison along
all the fibers of human society? That there are noble modifications of this
appalling description of our nature, we readily and thankfully concede; but
they are the exceptions to the rule- the beautiful ivy entwining the decayed
and crumbling trunk of our fallen humanity, reminding us of what man was in
his first estate, and faintly foreshadowing what man in his restored state
will be, when the Lord comes to make all things new.
Nor is this selfishness of our nature entirely uprooted, though greatly
mortified, in the renewed man. The Divine precepts, admonitions, and
exhortations of God's Word all imply its existence and working in the
believer, and the need of incessant battle with the fallen principle. In
nothing, perhaps, is its existence more marked than the perpetual collision
of our will with the will of God. To please ourselves, and not God, in the
path we tread, in the service we perform, in the cross we bear, in the
suffering we endure, in the place we dwell- to gratify our inclinations, to
please our taste, to indulge our repose, to promote our self-interest, often
at the expense of others, is the baneful fruit borne by this corrupt tree.
Oh, it is a humiliating truth, that though engrafted, through sovereign
grace, as the believer is upon Christ, there should mingle with the "fruits
of righteousness, which are by Jesus Christ," fruit so bitter and noxious.
That, with the great, the lofty, the holy principle implanted within of
living to please God, we should yet be brought into perpetual conflict with
its opposite most low and degrading principle- living to please ourselves.
And yet so it is. We marvel not, then, at the earnest and pointed
exhortation of the apostle, "We then who are strong ought to bear the
infirmities of the weak, and not to please ourselves. Let every one of us
please his neighbor, for his good to edification. For even Christ pleased
not himself." This precept is in perfect harmony with the genius of the
gospel of Jesus. The Divine religion He introduced into the world was in
direct and close antagonism to the world's selfishness. It revealed to man a
new and unearthly principle- the principle of unselfish love, disinterested
sympathy, high-minded, chivalrous benevolence and self-denial. He descended
to earth, the reflection of heaven. He appeared to man, the incarnation of
God- the embodied essence of the divinest, purest, loftiest affection in the
universe. His gospel was unselfish speaking- His life was unselfishness
acting- His sympathy was unselfishness weeping- His death was unselfishness
suffering, self-consumed amid its own sacrificial fires. "The zeal of your
house has eaten me up." And, then, when He had presented on the cross such a
spectacle of disinterested love for man as angels could not have conceived,
and such an outgush of unselfish sympathy as man had never seen- pure,
sublime, unparalleled- He rose from the grave; and, before He relinquished
the scene of His humiliation for the home of His glory, He commissioned His
apostles to traverse the world and tell its wondrous story as far as the
empire of man and misery extended, "Go into all the world and preach the
gospel to every creature." Such is the divine precept, and such its human
embodiment we are about to study. "Even Christ pleased not himself." May the
Holy Spirit of truth, while we behold as in a glass this glory of the Lord,
transform us into the same image, that henceforth we may be more like Christ
in His unselfish love and disinterested sympathy.
II. The Unselfish Love of Christ.
In what points did our Lord illustrate this Divine principle of His gospel?
Trace first its higher forms.
In Christ there was perfect submission to the supreme will of His Father.
Our Lord descended to this part of His Father's empire to erect no throne,
to assert no will in opposition to God's. His language was, "I came, not to
do my own will, but the will of Him that sent me." In this He pleased not
Himself. He would have done so had there been the slightest dissonance of
mind, or collision of will. But the union was essential- the harmony
complete- between the will of Christ on earth and the will of God in heaven.
It was the will of God that His elect should be redeemed- it was the will of
Christ to redeem them. It was the will of God that His glory should be
revealed- it was the will of Christ to reveal it. It was the will of God
that His truth should be taught- it was the will of Christ to teach it. It
was the will of God that Christ should be sacrificed- it was the will of
Christ to die. "Lo! I come to do your will, O God," were the prophetic words
which struck the first key-note to the harmony of God's will and Christ's
will. "Don't you know that I must be about my Father's business?" was a
deeper intonation of the melody."Not my will, O my Father, but Yours be
done!" has its loftiest strain on earth. To do God's will from the heart, He
was willing to forego the joys of heaven, to empty Himself of His glory, to
sink to the deepest humiliation, to die the accursed death- and in all this,
"Christ pleased not Himself." Child of God, you reach the loftiest
attainment in sanctification, you stand upon the highest round in the ascent
of holiness, when your will, like Christ's, is thus blended with your
Father's. No holier, no higher, no sublimer act of self-denial marks the
believer than this. It was in this school of subjection to the Divine will
that Christ's disinterested sympathy for us was trained. Had there been
anything of self-seeking in Him, it would have been exhibited in the
opposition of His will to the will of His Father. And the moment this
hostility commenced, all disinterested benevolence for man would have
ceased. The pure, deep spring of His self-consuming sympathy had its rise in
the perfect union of His human will with the Divine.
In addition to the sinlessness of the human nature of our Lord, it was also
replenished with the Holy Spirit without measure, and He was the fulness of
the Godhead bodily. Our Lord Jesus was thus the embodied revelation of
infinite benevolence and love. In seeking, therefore, as man, to do the will
of God, He clasped the object of His sympathy in a love that sought not its
own but the happiness of the being it embraced. It is in this same school
we, if molded in Christ's image, are trained to love man, to sympathize with
man, to aid man with an unselfish affection. In proportion as we are found
doing the will of God, we rise superior to selfishness, and learn the
difficult, yet God-like, lesson of looking not exclusively upon our own
things, but in expansive, disinterested sympathy also upon the things of
others. As we recede from the human and approximate to the Divine, we recede
from selfishness and approximate to that disinterested love to man which
manifested itself in the bestowment and sacrifice of its unspeakable gift.
"In this was manifested the love of God toward us, that God sent His
only-begotten Son into the world that we might live through Him."
In seeking the glory of God supremely, our Lord pleased not Himself. If ever
there was the single eye, it beamed in Christ. He had no separate kingdom,
swayed no rival scepter, wore no divided crown separate from His Father. All
that He embarked in, did, and taught converged to one common center, pointed
to one single aim, terminated in one great end- the glory of God! Had there
been one thought or feeling of self-seeking in Christ, He might easily have
erected a separate throne from His Father's, at whose feet kings, and
princes, and potentates would have been proud to bring their treasures and
lay their crowns. But no! His whole soul was swallowed up in God. "I seek
not my own glory," was a declaration of unselfishness which found a living
expression in every action of His life. To win back homage to the dishonored
law of God, to vindicate the outraged glory of His Father's government, to
reveal His love, and accomplish His purpose in the salvation of His elect,
and finally to bring to heaven all whom the Father had chosen to eternal
life, to the endless honor and praise of His name, was the pole star which
guided Him, the goal for which He pressed. To vindicate and uphold His
Father's glory He was willing that His own should set in darkness, in
ignominy, and in blood. Oh that this mind that was in Christ might be in us!
What a powerful impetus, what a divine sanctity, what a lofty elevation it
would give to every purpose, and act, and sacrifice, were it done with a
more simple, pure, single aim to the glory of God! It would dignify the
lowliest, and sanctify the loftiest service for Christ. Done solely and only
for His glory, the cup of cold water which we offered to a disciple would be
sweeter than nectar to him who drank it, and to Him in whose name it was
given, precious and priceless above rubies! There is no greater, no more
humiliating or visible form of selfishness than in placing our glory above
God's. If we preach, or labor, or achieve, or suffer, or give with a view of
making the world our pedestal, self the sole figure, mankind the admiring
gazers, we are seeking but our own honor and glory, and God will consume the
idol, and will make us drink the waters which the ashes of our
self-deification and man-worship have embittered and defiled. Oh for the
mortification of this sin! Oh for the crucifixion of this self-seeking that
taints and deforms all that we do for God and for our fellows! In all this,
"even Christ pleased not himself."
Such, too, was the tenor of His whole life- it was a life of continuous and
perfect self-denial. Every step He trod was another footprint in the path of
disinterested benevolence. He went about doing good, scattering from the
horn of blessing, His favors and benedictions on friends and foes, on those
who blessed, and on those who reviled, those who loved, and those who hated
Him. Behold Him denying Himself of earth's comforts to promote the comfort
of others; hungry Himself, yet feeding the famishing; weary, yet inviting
and leading others to rest; Himself accused, yet vindicating the condemned.
Was there ever such a spectacle of self-abnegation?
Trace Christ, too, in service. There was no labor too toilsome or
self-denying from which He shrank. He would walk forty miles in one day to
take the living water to a poor sinner. He would stoop to unclasp the sandal
and wash the feet of His erring disciple. He would stand still at the word
of a blind beggar sitting by the wayside, and in response to his appeal,
pour the light of day upon the sightless eye. He would go, when asked, to
heal a sick servant. He would come, when bidden, to the house of mourning.
He had an ear for every cry of sorrow, an eye for every spectacle of woe, a
hand for every object of need, a heart for every appeal to human sympathy.
Yes, there was no service so wearisome, or, so distasteful, or so difficult,
or so self-denying, in which He was not at home. The atmosphere most genial
with His nature was laden with suffering, saturated with tears, vocal with
sighs, and groans, and supplications. The homes most attractive to Him were
those where poverty, sickness, and grief had found an entrance. Such was the
pure, self-denying benevolence of Jesus! Well may it be said, "even Christ
pleased not himself."
But the crowning act of His disinterested love and
sympathy was, His suffering unto death. Marvellous and precious as were all
the other expressions of His unselfish love, they pale and vanish before
this the most marvelous, precious, and costly of all- the sacrifice of
Himself upon the cross! What more could unselfish love do? What loftier form
could it assume? What costlier sacrifice could it make? More than itself it
could not give. Listen to the inspired confirmation of this: "When we were
utterly helpless, Christ came at just the right time and died for us
sinners. Now, no one is likely to die for a good person, though someone
might be willing to die for a person who is especially good. But God showed
his great love for us by sending Christ to die for us while we were still
sinners." Romans 5:6-8. What more, we again ask, could love so unselfish, so
disinterested do? Listen yet again "Christ also has loved us, and has given
himself for us." "Who gave himself for our sins." "Christ also loved the
Church, and gave himself for it." "Who gave himself for us, that He might
deliver us from all iniquity." Oh what an infinitude of wealth and glory and
blessing is included in these words- "gave himself!" Gave His Deity- gave
His humanity- gave His obedience- gave His life- gave His heart's blood-
gave His heaven of glory- all for poor, unworthy, self-destroyed, helpless
sinners who had nothing to pay- pardoning them fully, justifying them
freely, calling them graciously- keeping and eternally glorifying them! O
Lord, my soul dissolves before this stupendous, this strange, this
unparalleled spectacle of disinterested, self-sacrificing love! I blush to
find myself so unlike it- I weep that my sins demanded it- I believe because
it was You who died- my heart is won, my affections are captivated by a love
which enchains to itself my whole being!
"Love celestial, ardent fire!
Oh extreme of sweet desire!
Spread your bright, your gentle flame,
Swift over all my mental frame.
Sweet affections flow from thence,
Sweet above the joys of sense!
Let me thus forever be
Full of gladness, full of You."
III. The Practical Lessons.
Before we speak of the consolation flowing to the saints of God from this
view of Christ's disinterested sympathy, let us glean a few of THE PRACTICAL
LESSONS IT INCULCATES.
The first holy lesson it teaches is- humility of mind. Pride forms the root
of all living to ourselves. And before our selfishness can be expelled,
replaced by a new and divine principle, the power of Christ's cross must be
brought into the soul, ruling and conquering the principle of pride.
"Though, I be nothing," will then be the echo of our hearts to the noble
declaration of Paul. The moment this inflated bubble is pierced by the cross
of Jesus, the collapse follows, and the disciplined, humbled believer is
prostrate in the dust before God, in the spirit of self-abasement and
self-surrender. Oh, let us cultivate a grace which assimilates us more than
all others to Him who, "being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to
be equal with God but made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the
form of a servant." Never are we more truly conformed to Christ than when,
emptied of self, we walk humbly with God. Oh, let us earnestly seek more
fully to possess, with all our attainments, this, the highest and holiest of
all- "the mind that was in Christ Jesus." It will brim with it a happiness
and a soothing, real and indescribable. It will preserve us from those
woundings, chafings, and self-pity to which the unslain pride of our hearts
incessantly exposes us. Why do we feel so sensitively and so keenly the
slight, the neglect, the depreciation of our fellows? Why, when thrust into
the shadow, while others are more favored and honored and admired, do we,
like Haman, "retire to our house mourning, and having our head covered?" Is
it not because of the deification and worship of self within us? Oh to be
emptied of self-complacency, self-seeking, self-exaltation! This
multi-headed monster, which can only be effectually conquered and slain by a
believing realization of the self-denying love of Christ! Study this perfect
annihilation of self in Jesus more closely, and you will imperceptibly, yet
really, transcribe the divine and beauteous lineament to your own soul. The
power of Christ will be upon you visibly, the loveliness of Jesus will array
you beauteously, you will feed in the greenest pasture, and gather the
fairest flowers, and pluck the richest fruit, and drink the purest stream of
spiritual blessing, because your daily walk will be in lowliness and love
beneath the Saviors cross- self swallowed up in Christ, and Christ all and
in all.
"Oh, hide this SELF from me, that I
No more, but Christ in me, may live;
My vile affections crucify,
Nor let one darling lust survive!
In all things nothing may I see,
Nothing desire or seek, but Thee!
"O love, your sovereign aid impart,
To save me from low-thoughted care!
Chase this self-will through all my heart,
Through all its latent mazes there
Make me your duteous child, that I,
Ceaseless, may 'Abba, Father! ' cry.
"Each moment draw from earth away
My heart, that lowly waits your call;
Speak to my inmost soul, and say,
'I am your Love, your God, your All!'
To feel Your power, to hear Your voice,
To taste Your love, be all my choice."
But the deepest renunciation of self is in the believing reception, as a
sinner, of the Lord Jesus Christ. All other acts of humiliation and self
denial apart from this are imperfect. Until the contrite and believing heart
has received Christ, until the soul has subjected itself to the power of His
gospel, until the law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus has freed the
mind from the enslaving law of 'self-justification', self may be mortified,
but not humbled; wounded, but not slain. The very reception of God's free
justification implies the surrender of that strong citadel of the soul of
man- the principle of self-righteousness. And on no other ground will God
capitulate with man in the great work of salvation. All human merit must be
disclaimed, all creature worthiness must be abjured, and the one plea with
which we may approach the Savior is that of a sinner bankrupt and beggared
of all personal righteousness, worthiness, and claim, looking only to Jesus,
and resting simply and solely in His blood and righteousness for pardon and
acceptance. Oh, what a real prostration and crucifixion of self is there in
this one believing act of receiving Christ! The great mountain has been
shaken to its center before the power of the true Zerubbabel. Jesus has
conquered. His grace has gotten the victory. His love is clothed with
triumph, and another jewel is planted in His studded diadem. My reader, has
there been such a revelation of the Lord Jesus to your soul as to stain the
pride of your own glory? Has this Dagon self fallen before the divine Ark of
your salvation?
But let me remind the child of God that the principle of self in the renewed
heart, though fatally wounded and destined eventually to die, yet retains
much of its original vitality, and will, by occasional spasmodic acts, often
seem to regain its original power and ascendancy. This must be met by a
constant and close dealing with Christ. The principle of self-pleasing can
only be kept in abeyance by strengthening its opposite principle- walking
humbly with God, under the influence of the love of Christ, constraining us
to live, not as seeking our own ease, advantage or honor, but with the
single eye to God's glory both in service and in suffering, in all we do and
endure. Oh hateful and hated act that terminates only in- self! If, to
gratify the lust for human distinction and applause, if, to please self in
any one of its many forms: self-esteem, self-complacency, self-exaltation;
this thing has been done, better, far better, that it had been left undone,
than that it should stand but as a monument to the pride and self-pleasing
of our depraved hearts! And, oh, let us lay our mouth in the dust in the
remembrance of our many failures concerning this divine and holy precept.
How much have we done for self, ostensibly done for Christ! How have we
spoken and labored and given in connection
with holy things, seeking our own glory and not the glory of God! But for
the blood of atonement, where could we look? The most righteous, most pure,
most lowly act would witness against us at the tribunal of Christ, as having
enough of the sin of self-pleasing to assign both it and us to God's eternal
displeasure! What need have we to confess the sin, and wash in atoning
blood, the moment we are conscious our self-complacency has been moved by
the flattery and applause of our sinful fellows!
O God! we blush to lift up our faces to You in the remembrance of our sin of
self-pleasing! Lamb of God! wash out the deep, dark stain, and fill our soul
with contrition, humiliation, and self-abhorrence, that we should ever have
sought to carve our vile name upon Your dear cross, while professedly
uplifting only You!
The practical embodiment by us of this holy principle, thus so beautifully
exhibited in our Lord, will regulate our conduct towards others. A
disinterested sympathy, like His, will prompt us to seek the advancement of
another's interest and well-being as well as our own. It is one of the
characteristics of true love, that she "seeks not her own." Like the Being
from where it flows, true love is disinterested and self-sacrificing. It
looks with an eye of interest upon the condition of others. It will, so far
as it righteously can, descend to their circumstances and infirmities, if it
might but promote their well-being. A striking example of this is presented
in the conduct of Paul. The quotation is long, but one passage supplies a
clue to the whole. "Though I am free and belong to no man, I make myself a
slave to everyone, to win as many as possible. 1 Cor. 9:19-23. Magnanimous
man! your love was like your Master's, high-minded, chivalrous, and
self-sacrificing. What abnegation of self in your ministry! what a
forgetfulness of self in your labors! what a sacrifice of self in your
suffering! Lord, may I follow Your apostle as he followed You!
This Divine precept, so touchingly illustrated by Christ, also includes
bearing the burdens, tenderness toward the infirmities, and sympathy with
the sorrows and necessities of our brethren. In all this Christ has set us
an example that we should follow His steps. To be Christ-like, in this
particular, is to aspire to one of the loftiest and loveliest features of
our religion. To supply, as far as in our power, the needs of Christ's poor-
our brethren by a fraternal tie, closer and holier than nature's; to visit
the sick and afflicted, the widow and the fatherless; to bear with the
infirmities of those who, in religious things, are weak in judgment, in
faith, and in practice; to identify ourselves with those who are suffering
calumny, persecution, and loss for Jesus' sake- oh, this it is to be like
Him who went about doing good in the spirit of His own unworldly, unselfish
religion! How touching is the apostle's exhortation- "you then who are
strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak, and not to please
ourselves. Let every one of us please his neighbor for his good to
edification. For even Christ pleased not himself; but, as it is written, The
reproaches of those who reproached you fell on me." May the Lord the Spirit
write this holy, unearthly precept upon our heart! May we more deeply feel,
more constantly realize, that, ransomed with so great a price as Christ's
blood, we are not our own; and that, in the self-denying spirit of the
gospel, living for the good of others, especially for the household of
faith, we are, in reality, living for the Lord himself. The lowliest labor
of love, the feeblest work of faith, the obscurest act of self-denying
service, done in the Lord's name, is registered in His remembrancer, to be
reproduced, acknowledged, and rewarded in the great day of account. Treading
thus in the footsteps of Jesus, we shall experience a happiness and a
blessing found only in a life of unselfish benevolence, of disinterested,
expansive sympathy. And while others are living in the frigid region of
self-pleasing, your spirit will rise to an atmosphere of the purest
happiness and joy, unchilled and undimmed by the iciness and fogs of this
sinful, heartless, selfish world. Assimilating with the spirit, you will
also participate in the joy of Him who pleased not Himself, but lived and
labored, suffered and died for others. Oh, evidence and illustrate your
union with the Lord by the studious and daily cultivation of this
disinterested, self-denying sympathy! And, in addition to the evidence thus
appended to your discipleship with Christ, it will return into your own soul
with a sweet recompense of reward. Disinterested charity is sweetly and
richly remunerative- blessing him who receives, and with a powerful reflex
influence, it blesses him who bestows. Would you experience the purest, the
most exquisite and refined bliss the human heart is capable? Then, imitate
Christ, and be merciful, sympathizing, and kind; loving others as you love
yourself, seeking and promoting their well-being and happiness, even though
it curtail or sacrifice your own. "This is how we know what love is: Jesus
Christ laid down his life for us. And we ought to lay down our lives for our
brothers. If anyone has material possessions and sees his brother in need
but has no pity on him, how can the love of God be in him? Dear children,
let us not love with words or tongue but with actions and in truth." 1 John
3:16-18. Do this, and your own need will be met, your own sorrow soothed,
your own wound healed, by the love and sympathy you have dispersed abroad,
returning back in confluent streams upon yourself.
"Are you dejected? Is your mind overcast?
Go, fix some weighty truth;
Chain down some passion;
do some generous good;
Teach ignorance to see, or grief to smile."
Then shall the benedictions of the widow, the fatherless, and the poor light
upon you in gentle breathings; above all, and sweeter than all the hand of
Him who submitted to a life of poverty and humiliation to enrich you with
grace and glory, will pour the oil of gladness on your head.
"Blest is the man whose softening heart
Feels all another's pain,
To whom the supplicating eye
Is never raised in vain.
"Whose breast expands with generous warmth
A brother's woes to feel;
And bleeds in pity over the wounds
It lacks the power to heal.
"He spreads his kind supporting arms
To every child of grief;
His secret bounty largely flows,
And brings unasked relief.
"To gentle offices of love
His feet are never slow;
He views, through mercy's melting eye,
A brother in a foe.
"Peace from the bosom of his God,
My peace to him I give;
And when He kneels before the throne,
His trembling soul shall live."
"To him protection shall be shown,
And mercy from above
Descend on those who thus fulfil
The perfect law of love."
We have equal reason to guard against "religious selfishness". This is but
another form of the fallen principle we have been endeavoring to combat- it
is selfishness in a Christian disguise. A child of God may be so exclusively
enfolded within his own religious privileges and enjoyments as to overlook
his obligation and pledge to promote the spiritual well-being of others.
Satisfied of his own conversion- nourished in rich pastures- and
experiencing high spiritual enjoyment, He may become selfishly and
criminally indifferent to the multitudes within his reach living in sin and
ignorance, destitution and neglect; hearing of no Savior, possessing no
Bible, attending no sanctuary; and each day passing into a hopeless
eternity, uttering the fearful wail and the bitter reproof- "no man cared
for my soul!" But this must not be. The religion and the love of Him who
sacrificed Himself for us, forbids it! What an example of self-denying,
self-sacrificing, self-consuming, disinterested benevolence, sympathy, and
labor was Christ's- He had griefs that needed assuaging, loneliness that
needed cheering, depressions that needed soothing, wounds that needed
healing, needs that needed supplying, weakness that needed strengthening,
and yet, He buried all within the deep, silent cloisters of His own bosom,
and went about doing good! Let us imitate Hin! God converted us, that we
might be instrumental in converting others! Through grace we have found
Jesus, that we may bring our fellow-sinners to Jesus. The light of life has
been enkindled within our soul, that its bright shining might guide the
steps of those who are stumbling on the dark mountains of death, to the
Savior. The Lord, therefore, deposited this rich grace in our heart, that it
might be dispersed abroad in self-denying efforts to win souls to Christ.
Arise, then, and let us labor. This is a day of glad tidings, and we dare
not hold our peace. We must not be satisfied with our own salvation, but
seek also the salvation of others. We must love our neighbor as ourselves.
And what is the nature of the love we are to cherish for him? A self-denying
sympathy for his soul's eternal happiness! And who is our neighbor? Not
simply him who dwells beneath the shadow of our own abode- but the sinner,
the wanderer, the sufferer, the child of sorrow and of need, be he who and
where he may. He is your neighbor! Be willing for a while to forego your own
religious advantage, to relinquish some personal spiritual enjoyment, to
find him out and tell him of Christ. How can you go to and fro to the rich
banquet of the gospel, week after week, and feel no concern for, and make no
effort in behalf of, those within your reach who are dying of spiritual
starvation amid the plenty of which you have enough and to spare? This is
religious selfishness of a fearfully responsible kind! The Lord deliver us
from blood-guiltiness! You must deny yourself of some spiritual privileges
for the spiritual benefit of others, if you are a true disciple and imitator
of the Savior. Restrict not your evangelical sympathy and labor within the
limits of your own vicinity. At home or abroad, in your native or in a
foreign land, be a herald of salvation, a missionary of the gospel; a
witness for Christ, recognizing him as your neighbor and your brother who
needs a word of instruction, a look of kindness, an uplifting hand- the oil
and the wine of Christian sympathy and love poured into a wounded and
bleeding heart- in a word, someone to speak to of- Jesus!
"Your neighbor? It is he whom you
have power to aid and bless;
Whose aching heart or burning brow,
Your soothing hand may press.
"Your neighbor? It is the fainting poor
whose eye with need is dim,
Whom hunger sends from door to door-
Go and succour him.
"Your neighbor? It is that weary man
Whose years are at their brim,
Bent low with sickness, cares, and pain-
Go and comfort him.
"Your neighbor? It is the heart bereft
Of every earthy gem;
Widow and orphan helpless left-
Go and shelter them.
"Your neighbor? Do you meet a human form
Less favored than your own?
Remember, it is your neighbor worm,
Your brother, or your son.
''Oh, pass not, pass not heedless by;
Perhaps you can redeem
The breaking heart from misery,
Go, share your lot with him.
Let us, also, be watchful against "denominational selfishness". Other
branches of the Christian church than our own should share our sympathy,
good-will, and prayers. We add nothing really to the ranks of Christ by
proselyting from one denomination to another. Alas! there are those who deem
it of much more importance to compass sea and land to draw over a convert to
their own religious sect from another, than to make a single effort to win a
convert to Christ from the world! What has Christ, or what has the gospel
really gained by this? Nothing! To labor only to advance our own
denomination, to seek exclusively the increase, the wealth, the prosperity
of the body to which we belong, indifferent to the depression, or jealous of
the increase and prosperity of other communions, is not the spirit of the
gospel, is not the spirit of Christ. Oh for more largeness of heart! Oh for
more of our Lord's disinterested sympathy! Let our love and intercessions
embrace all Christian sections and congregations of the one Church of
Christ, praying, "Peace be within your walls, and prosperity within your
palaces! For my brethren and companions' sake I will now say, Peace be
within you. Because of the house of the Lord our God I will seek your good."
Nor would we fail to remind you that in proportion as self-pleasing in us
decreases, pleasing God increases. In the same degree that the one is
crucified, the other lives. "I live, yet not I, but Christ lives in me." And
what is Christ living in the believer, but the believer living so as to
please God? And, oh, to live as pleasing God is the holiest principle, the
purest joy, the most sublime life. An angel, with soaring wing, could not
ascend higher!
But for one moment let us refer to the CONSOLATIONS
flowing from this subject. If such is the disinterested sympathy of Christ,
then, believe that you have not a need, nor a grief, nor a burden that He is
not prepared to make all His own. Oh, how much have we yet to learn of the
unselfishness of Christ's compassion- its self-denying, yearning, weeping
tenderness! He would have you learn something of it in your present
circumstances. For this end He has permitted them. Oblivious of all your
past waywardness, ingratitude, and sins, forgetting your countless
backslidings and base requitals of His love; and remembering only the
kindness of your youth, the love of your espousals, how you once went after
Him in the wilderness, and entered into a covenant to be His, which covenant
you have broken times without number- in the exercise of a love forgetful of
Himself, and thinking only of you, He will cast around you the robe of a
sympathy which soothes your sorrow, while it veils your sin, and which
absorbs your infirmity, while it makes you lovely through His loveliness put
upon you. Let no sad memories, then, intercept your approach to the Savior.
So unselfish is His love, so disinterested His sympathy, not one look, or
word, or motion of the hand will upbraid you for the past, or reprove you
for the present. He will forget how you have wounded, grieved, and
dishonored Him; how your heart has again and again proved treacherous and
inconstant as a broken bow; how, forsaking your first love, you have gone
after other lovers and other confidences; and now retrace your steps and
return to Him again, because the hand of affliction, of sorrow, and of
chastisement is upon you- forgetting all this, He will receive you
graciously, love you freely, and turn His anger away from you, clasping you
to the bosom of a disinterested sympathy that writes your countless failures
upon the sand, while it engraves your lowliest deeds of love eternal upon
the rock.
"But my life is worth nothing unless I use it for doing
the work assigned me by the Lord Jesus—the work of telling others the Good
News about God's wonderful kindness and love." Acts 20:24