nChrist
|
 |
« Reply #1 on: December 08, 2012, 03:27:03 PM » |
|
Then the stranger said to them, "'How foolish you are, and how slow of heart to believe all that the prophets have spoken! Did not the Christ have to suffer these things and then enter his glory?' And beginning with Moses and all the Prophets, he explained to them what was said in all the Scriptures concerning himself. As they approached the village to which they were going, Jesus acted as if he were going farther. But they urged him strongly: 'Stay with us, for it is nearly evening; the day is almost over.' So he went in to stay with them."
Here was an instance of a ready seizing hold of an unexpected opportunity of grace; of an earnest constraining appeal to one for further instruction and blessing; of an unwillingness to lose so precious a season of deepening their knowledge of the truth thus marvelously given to them. And yet they did not know then, that the stranger was Jesus. He had not then made Himself known to them. He was to them only a spiritually-minded, and scripture-filled stranger, whose conversation . . . riveted their attention, engrossed their minds, fired their imaginations, cleared away their doubts, and made their souls to glow and burn with especial fervor — as they took in His words, and as He opened to them the Scriptures.
And oh! were they not repaid? Were they not well rewarded for their devout attention, their readiness to hear, their willingness to be taught, their earnestness to secure still further His presence and instruction?
Yet, beloved, would I speak extravagantly, if I said that Jesus often reveals Himself to His disciples now, with as much preciousness as He did to the two at Emmaus? I think not. They, indeed, had His personal presence; but yet they did not know until just as He vanished out of their sight, that He was Jesus. They listened to Him, not as their Lord and Master — but as to a wise and well-instructed stranger; they heard Him speak only two or three hours at the most, and only about the Messianic aspect of the Old Testament. Their eyes were blinded that they would not know Him until He made Himself known in the breaking of bread; and before they had time to recover from the surprise of the revelation, "He vanished out of their sight!"
But what, brethren, do we have? We have not the unknown Jesus — but the known Jesus to be our companion. We have Him to walk with us, not in one afternoon's walk of seven or eight miles — but each day of our life, and all the way of our pilgrimage. We hear Him speak to us, not in the tones and accent of a stranger — but as our own dear Lord and Savior. To us, by His Spirit — He reveals, not only the prophets of the Old Testament, and the things there written concerning Himself — but in the full canon of the completed Scriptures; in the prophecies of Revelation, as well as those thousands of years before.
We hear Him in His exquisite picture-parables, those painted windows of the Gospel cathedral, bedecked with the tracery of the divine artist! We see Him as the wondrous miracle-worker in the realms of sea and sky, mind and matter, life and death. To us, He speaks in the words of His Sermon on the Mount, and in the discourse in the upper room of Jerusalem. We listen to His prayer, on the mountain top, in the garden, and in the words of His own matchless form! We witness His daily life, through the three years of His holy ministry! We go with Him to Calvary, see Him wrapped in linen and spices, laid in Joseph's grave! We hear Him, after His resurrection, tell doubting Thomas, "Reach here your hand and thrust it into my side; and be not faithless — but believing." We hear Him ask Peter, "Simon, son of Jonah, love you me?" We accompany Him to the Mount of Olives, catch the words of His last and great commission, and watch His receding form as He is taken up and "a cloud receives Him out of sight."
Is not this, then, better than that which the two disciples had? His word to each of us is, "Lo, I am with you always!" "If any man loves me — my Father will love him, and we will come and make our abode with him." Yes, He dwells in us, as an abiding guest.
But all depends on our doing as these disciples did — constraining Jesus to "abide with us."
He will be with us, if we seek Him, not only in His Word — but in the assemblies of His people; for He has said, "Where two or three are gathered together in my name — there am I in the midst of them." He will be with us in the celebration of the Holy Communion — for there He is specially set forth crucified before us. He will be with us in the worship of the great congregation — for He ever inhabits the praises of Israel. Nor in these public places only.
He will abide with us in our hearts — if we are meek and lowly in heart, for such hearts are His temples. He will abide with us in our homes — if, like Mary and Martha of Bethany, we ever keep a guest-chamber for Him. He will be with us in our business — if, like Matthew at the tax collector's booth, our ear is ever open to hear, and our hearts ever ready to obey, His call, "Follow me!" He will ever be with us in our studies, if, like the doctors of old in the Temple, we seat Jesus in the midst, and ask Him the questions which make for our eternal peace.
There is no unwillingness on the part of Jesus to abide with us. It is that our hearts are not prepared to receive and welcome such a visitant! Is not this a grievous wrong which we are doing to our souls? Shall we allow them to continue in such a condition, that we cannot, by reason of our cherished lusts, or sins, or covetousness, or worldly-mindedness — constrain Him to come in and abide with us?
Finally, there is one point which some of you have reached, to which all are hastening, when it will be settled whether we shall exclaim with the deluded and unprepared Jews in Jeremiah's day, "Woe unto us! For the daylight is fading, and the shadows of evening grow long!" Or whether, in response to our constraining importunity — Jesus will go in and abide with us. The day of life is fast fading away to all of us; the shadows of life's evening are, to many of us, lengthening and deepening. Sunset is near — the night of death is at hand.
If your manifold and most graciously bestowed opportunities of securing salvation, and conquering your spiritual enemies, are allowed to slip away unused; if the convenient season passes without your making it convenient to accept the offered grace — then must you very soon — how soon we know not, for God has said, "My Spirit shall not always strive with man" — then, I say, shall you soon take up the doleful cry, "Woe unto us! For the daylight is fading, and the shadows of evening grow long!"
If, on the other hand, favored as you are with such manifestations of Jesus' love and grace, you say to Him, "Abide with us," and by your faith and love "constrain" Him to tarry with you — then how exquisitely sweet and precious will His presence be to your soul! How His life will flow into your life . .. opening your mind to understand the Scriptures; opening your heart to His indwelling grace; filling you with a joy and peace which passes understanding; and enriching you with all needed strength and moral loveliness, so that you will be made "fit for the inheritance of the saints in light."
Let not Christ now present with you — pass away from you and leave you to die Christless, and to go Christless to the judgment and to eternity! Constrain Him to abide with you. He will readily assent. He is more willing to be your guest — than you are to be His host.
But delay not, for it is toward evening, and the day is far spent; and when the day of grace once sets behind the horizon, it is followed by no tomorrow. For the uniform declaration of God's word and God's ministers, and God's Church, and God's providences is, "Behold now is the accepted time; behold now is the day of salvation!" And "For in the grave, where you are going, there is neither working nor planning nor knowledge nor wisdom!" And "As the tree falls — so it lies!"
PUBLIC DOMAIN - Permission is not required to reproduce this material.
|