nChrist
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« on: March 03, 2012, 07:49:54 PM » |
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"Be dressed ready for service and keep your lamps burning, like men waiting for their master to return from a wedding banquet, so that when he comes and knocks--they can immediately open the door for him." Luke 12:35-36
"What good is it, my brothers, if a man claims to have faith but has no deeds? Can such faith save him?" James 2:14. The religion of Jesus Christ is made up of two parts--faith and works.
Faith is the root of works. Works are the fruit of faith.
A belief, however true and pure, if it is accepted only by the intellect, and is not carried out into practice--translating the faith held by the mind, into active duties--is a barren faith, which will not be accepted by God, and which will not secure salvation.
On the other hand, works, however good, which do not spring out of faith in the Lord Jesus, but which are done merely from human and worldly motives--are of no avail before God, because "whatever is not of faith, is sin."
Thrice has James told us, "Faith without works is dead!"
And just as distinctly has Paul declared, "By the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified in His sight."
Both apostles are right!
Works without faith--have no living root. Faith without works--has no authenticating fruit.
They are the two parts of the one tree, namely, the root and the fruit. They are the two halves of the one whole--together they make up the true Christian. "In the same way, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by works, is dead!" James 2:17.
In the text, this completeness is brought out and illustrated in a forcible manner, in the three aspects in which our Lord presents the Christian, namely: a servant, a light-bearer, and a watchman.
In the first direction which our Lord gives, "Be dressed ready for service," we have before us the picture of a SERVANT dressed for duty.
The flowing robes of the Orientals required that in all active exercises, they should be gathered up and girt about by a belt around the waist; thus their limbs would be free and unfettered by their full and cumbrous robes. I need not tell you what the position and duties of a servant are--how it is expected of him that he should know his place, and humbly and faithfully discharge the duties of his station. He should, if possible, identify himself with his master's interest, and conduct himself in a manner which will sustain his master's honor.
The servant of Christ has . . . the noblest of all masters; the holiest of all services; the most honorable of all positions.
The servant of a king ever bears about him the reflected honor of the king, and the amount of this honor is in proportion to his nearness or remoteness to the throne.
Just so, the servant of the King of kings borrows dignity from the Being whom he serves. He wears no outward insignia of that dignity, as earthly courtiers do in uniforms and ornaments; but it is a glory which reflects itself in his daily life, and evidences his relation to Jesus by the fidelity and zeal which he shows in His service.
Basking thus in the glow of his divine Master, the servant of Christ finds . . . no work too menial, no toil too hard, no sacrifice too great for such a Lord.
As he studies the life of His Lord, he notes how on one occasion He said to His disciples, "I am among you as he who serves"; and he marks, also, that in very truth He did on one occasion lay aside His garments, gird Himself with a towel, pour water into a basin, and wash His disciples' feet--the Lord and Master, doing the menial work of a servant. So when the Christian marks his Master's condescension to servile acts and servile men--he will not deem anything he can do for Jesus either too low or too vile. The fact that what he does, he does for Christ, lifts it out of the plane of menial duty--and places it in the higher region of holy privilege.
He learns through Christ's words and acts, that . . . nothing is too low for love; nothing is too vile for grace; and nothing is too sinful for atoning blood.
He learns that Jesus, by going down to the lowest stratum of human society, has sanctified each and every class, and ennobled each and every duty.
So long, then, as we have His Spirit and labor for His glory, we are not merely plodding, drudging, ignorant servants--the hirelings of a day; but we become co-workers with God, fellow-laborers with the Lord Jesus--doing in His name, by His strength, for His sake--the grandest of all works--lifting up the fallen, bringing back the lost, and in every way within our means and opportunities, winning souls for Christ!
Such a service ought to call out . . . prompt obedience, loving devotion, unwearied effort, and thorough sympathy with the aim and purpose of God in the work of man's salvation.
And then, again, mark how even our humblest acts of service . . . our giving bread to the hungry, our giving water to the thirsty, our giving clothes to the naked; our visiting a person sick in bed, or shut up in prison --are recognized by Christ, and owned by Him as acts of service rendered personally to Him, when He says, "Inasmuch as you have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren--you have done it unto me!"
So that in serving the poor, the sick, the imprisoned--we are serving Christ in disguise! And by and by, those who serve Him thus secretly--shall have their reward openly, before the assembled universe! "Then the King will say to those on his right: Come, you who are blessed by My Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world!" Matthew 25:34
But, secondly, the text tells us that the Christian is to be a LIGHT-BEARER as well as a servant. Not only must he be dressed ready for service--but he must also keep his lamps burning. The Christian lives in the midst of moral darkness. Sin is darkness, and he lives in a world of sin--a world in which men love darkness rather than light, because their deeds are evil. Error also is darkness. It is the result of a darkened understanding alienated from the life of God, and hence the Christian is surrounded by the darkness of error, as well as by the darkness of sin--and together they form a gross darkness which can only be dissipated by "the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ."
As disciples of Him who is "the Light of the world," "the Sun of righteousness," "the brightness of the Father's glory"--Christians are termed "children of light and of the day." They are so, because the light of Christ is in them. The light of His life, the light of His love, the light of His joy, the light of His hope--are to be found in the heart in which Christ Himself is formed the hope of glory.
Where there is this light in the heart--there must of necessity be a raying forth of this light in the thoughts, the words, the daily life, of the believer in Jesus. If Christ is in you--then His light will shine out through you. And if no light shines out through you--it is because there is none in you. Where the light is--there will be the shining. The absence of light--proves the absence of Christ; for you cannot cover up His light or smother His beams. But this light of faith and love and hope and joy--is not given to us for our mere personal satisfaction and delight; we are made light-bearers--that we may be light-dispensers. The light is put within us, not to be hidden away--but that through us, as through a reflecting lantern, it may shine out and give light to all around; so that men may see our good works, and glorify our Father who is in Heaven.
As the light in the Holy Temple was "ever to be kept burning"--it was never to go out; so in Christians, who are living temples--the lights are ever to be burning. The supply of the oil of grace to keep them burning is ever at hand, always ready, and is exhaustless. It is given more freely to those who ask for it, than parents give good things to their children; so that any lack of supply, arises not from deficiency of material--but lack of earnest supplication.
The necessity for these lights being ever burning, arises from the personal need of the believer himself; and from the necessity of showing forth to others the light and truth which he has found in Jesus.
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