^ 9 *4>j. "J +*o< r ?/* V--"- , > '- <**.**&% ^-jSsk.* /.C^.^ ♦ *> fr %«** Sauk- W ,,, -5^ ^ V V'^-V V*^> «v^v V V'^> X'*^V V* w/ 4 X*^v '°.\5^y :< ' ■; ; » c -,. <^k **o« ./V«^>* *« •> ..... V o* 6 .....V 7KT, /..-. < * ►<* .'Wfe.:. V.4° ..i^fcsi*. ^-^ 4afi^:- Lib THE DIVIDE MAN FROM THE NATIVITY TO THE TEMPTATION" hy / GEORGE DANA BOARDMAN AUTHOR OP 'STUDIES IN THE CREATIVE -WEEK," "STUDIES IN THE MODEL PRAYER," "EPIPHANIES OF THE RISEN LORD," "STUDIES IN THE MOUNTAIN INSTRUCTION," ETC. Unto us a child is born, Uuto us a son is given ; And the government shall be upon his shoulder : And his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. Isaiah ix, 6. '■> 188, f\ J NEW YORK D. APPLETON AND COMPANY 1887 3&% COPYKIGHT, 1887, Bt GEOEGE DANA BOAKDMAN. TO TIIE HOUSEHOLDS OF CHRISTENDOM THESE STUDIES IN THE PREPARATORY TEARS OF THE DIVINE MAN ARE OFFERED IN PRAISE OF HIS GRACE. EXPLANATORY NOTE. The Scriptural citations in this hook ar from the Revised Version. CONTENTS I. — The Prologue to the Gospel ... 9 John i, 1-18. JL— The Preface to the Gospels ... 34 Luke i, 1-4. III. — The Annunciation to Zachaeias . . 49 Luke i, 5-25. IV. — The Annunciation to Mary . . .61 Luke i, 26-38. V. — The Visit of Mart to Elisabeth . . 73 Luke i, 39-56. VI. — The Birth and Training of John the Baptist 83 Luke i, 57-80. VII. — The Annunciation to Joseph ... 93 Matthew i, 18-25. VIII. — The Birth of Jesus Christ . . .107 Luke ii, 1-7. IX.— The Two Genealogies of Jesus Christ . 121 Matthew i, 1-17 ; Luke iii, 23-38. X. — The Annunciation to the Shepherds . 131 Luke ii, 8-20. 8 CONTENTS. PAGE XI. — The Circumcision of Jesus Christ . . . 145 Luke ii, 21. XII. — The Presentation of Jesus Christ . . 149 Luke ii, 22-24. XIII. — The Homage of Simeon and Anna . . 155 Luke ii, 25-39. XIV.— The Homage of the Wise Men . .169 Matthew ii, 1-12. XV. — The Flight into Egypt . . . .187 Matthew ii, 13-15. XVI. — The Massacre of the Innocents . . 195 Matthew ii, 16-18. XVII. — The Settlement at Nazareth . . . 211 Matthew ii, 19-23; Luke ii, 39. XVIIL— The Training of Jesus Christ . .217 Luke ii, 40-52. XIX. — The Baptist's Heraldry .... 235 Matthew iii, 1-12; Mark i, 1-8; Luke iii, 1-18. XX. — The Baptism of Jesus Christ . . . 249 Matthew iii, 13-17; Mark i, 9-11; Luke iii, 21, 22. XXL— The Temptation of Jesus Christ . . 261 Matthew iv, 1-11; Mark i, 12, 13; Luke iv, 1-13. THE PROLOGUE TO THE GOSPEL. Join* i, 1-18. Every spirit which confesseth that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is of God. 1 John iv, 2. THE PROLOGUE TO THE GOSPEL. John i, 1-18. These first eighteen verses of St. John's Gos- Majesty of the pel are in depth and majesty peerless in all the r0 ogue " world's literature, peerless even in the Book of God himself. They take us into the very holy of holies in the sanctuary of Truth, ay, into the very heights of Godhood, into the very depths of God- hood in Manhood. In this prologue profoundest philosophy and loftiest poetry are divinely wedded. No wonder the early Church loved to speak of St. John as the eagle, soaring with tranquil pinion and undimmed eye toward the very sun. Listen to a mediseval poet, who had been evidently trained in the noble school of Adam of St. Yictor : The Word of God, the Eternal Son, De S. Joanne With God, the Uncreated, One, Evangelista. Came down to earth from heaven ; Translated by To see him, handle him, and show tre. His heavenly life to men below, To holy John was given. Among those four primeval streams Whose living fount in Eden gk John's record true is known: 12 THE DIVINE MAX. To all the world he poureth forth The nectar pure of priceless worth That flows from out the throne. Beyond the heavens he soared, nor failed, With all the spirit's gaze unveiled, To see our true Sun's grace ; Not as through mists and visions dim, Beneath the wings of Seraphim He looked and saw God's face. He heard where songs and harps resound, And four and twenty elders round Sing hymns of praise and joy; The impress of the One in Three, With print so clear that all may see, He stamped on earth's alloy. As eagle winging loftiest flight Where never seer's or prophet's sight Had pierced the ethereal vast, Pure beyond human purity, He scanned, with still undazzled eye, The future and the past.* * Compare Dr. Washburn's translation of this stanza ; Bird of God with boundless flight Soaring far beyond the height Of the bard or prophet old ; Truth fulfilled, and truth to be — Never purer mystery Did a purer tongue unfold. Let me add the sonorous original : Volat avis sine meta Quo nee vates nee propheta Evolavit altius : Tarn implenda quam impleta, Nunquam vidit tot secreta Purus homo purius. THE PROLOGUE TO THE GOSPEL. 13 The Bridegroom, clad in garments red, Seen, yet with might unfathomed, Home to his palace hies; Ezekiel's eagle to his bride He sends, and will no longer hide Heaven's deepest mysteries. O loved cne, bear, if thou canst tell Of him whom thou didst love so well, Glad tidings to the Bride ; Tell of the angels' food they taste, Who with the Bridegroom's presence graced Are resting at his side. Tell of the soul's true bread unpriced, Christ's supper, on the breast of Christ In wondrous rapture ta'en ; That we may sing before the throne His praises, whom as Lord we own, The Lamb we worship slain. In studying this profound prologue, every sen- tence of which is freighted with fathomless mean- ing, we can not do better than ponder it clause by clause. "In the beginning was the Word, and the The Eternal Word was with God, and the Word was God. mv ' mit J- The same was in the beginning with God." " In the "beginning." Then Jesus Christ was eternally pre-existent. Matthew's genealogy takes us back to Abraham : " The pedigree of Jesus Matt, i, i-ie. Christ, the son of David, the son of Abraham." Luke's genealogy takes us back to Adam : " The Luke m, 23-33. son of Enos, the son of Seth, the son of Adam, the son of God." John has no genealogy, or .rather his genealogy is the genealogy of what the fathers, in lack of a better name, called an " eternal gen- 14 THE DIVINE MAN. Heb. vii, i-3. eration." Like Melchizedek, king of Salem, the Word of God is without father, without mother, without genealogy, having neither beginning of clays nor end of life. St. John's chronology ante- Genesis i, 1. dates creation itself. In the beginning God cre- ated the heaven and the earth ; in the beginning was (not became) the Word. St. John's Prologue is the real Book of Genesis. Before aught else existed, in the imbeginning solitude before crea- tion, Jesus Christ was the Word of God, the eter- nal Father's majestic soliloquy. "In the beginning was the Word." Then Jesus Christ was the Speech of God. It is most difficult, and indeed impossible, to give a complete translation of the term here rendered " Word," as the beloved disciple uses it lines of Goethe : How striking the Faust." Bay- ard Taylor's Translation. 'Tis written: "In the beginning was the Word'''' : Here am I balked : who now can help afford ? The Word? — impossible so high to rate it; And otherwise must I translate it, If by the Spirit I am truly taught. Then thus : "In the beginning was the Thought'''' . This first line let me weigh completely, Lest my impatient pen proceed too fleetly. Is it the Thought which works, creates, indeed? "In the beginning was the Power,' 1 '' I read. Yet, as I write, a warning is suggested That I the sense may not have fairly tested. The Spirit aids me ; now I see the light ! "In the beginning was the Act" I write. But why does St. John call Jesus Christ the Word ? Without loitering among the subtilties of Philo and the Alexandrian school concerning the THE PEOLOGUE TO THE GOSPEL. 15 Logos, enough that I say that John calls the Naza- rene the Word because the Nazarene is Deity in manifestation, in expression, in articulation. And for this designation of Jesus as the Word the Old Testament writers had prepared St. John. Such phrases as " God said," '" Thus saith Jehovah," " The word of Jehovah came," " The voice of Je- hovah," and the like, perpetually recur in the Old Testament. In fact, the whole revelation of God to patriarch, lawgiver, psalmist, and prophet, was recognized as God's Word. When therefore God, neb. i, t. who at sundry times and in divers manners had spoken in time past to the fathers by his prophets, now at the close of the old covenant spake to the world by his Son, it was perfectly natural that the Hebrew John, trained from his infancy in the an- cient Scriptures, should speak of that Son as being in the eminent, culminating sense of the term the Word. The God, who had been more or less clearly hinted at in the Old Testament, became distinctly articulate in Jesus the Kazarene. The Son of man is the Word of God. " And the Word 'was with GodP Then Jesus Christ was distinct from God : for whoever is with another is distinct from that other. Then again Jesus Christ was in unity with God, "throned face to face " with him. He was Deity's infinite, blessed Vis-a-vis. Existing in the form of God, pmi. ii, 6. he counted not the being on an equality with God a thing to be grasped. The Word was with God. "And the Word was God." Then Jesus Christ was absolutely Divine. Whatever doubts we may have about his Godhood, his apostle John had Agent. 16 THE DIVINE MAN. none. This in fact is the reason why the early Church gave him the title of Theologian ; they called him Theologus, because he taught that the Logos was Theos,.the Word was God. John is pre- eminently the Theologian, because John is pre- eminently the Christologian. The Word was God. " The same was in the beginning with God." Then Jesus Christ, who eternally was and was with God and was God, was also eternally distinct from God and also eternally associate with God. It is the exceeding emphasis of solemn iteration and compact summary. The Same was in the be- ginning with God. The Creative " AH things were made through him, and with- out him was not anything made that hath been made." "AM things through him were made." Then Jesus Christ was the agent and instrument of the universal creation. In him were all things created, in the heavens and upon the earth, things visible and things invisible, whether thrones or dominions or principalities or powers ; all things have been created through him, and unto him ; and he is be- fore all things, and in him all things consist, that is, hold together. Thus the "God-Said" of the first chapter of Genesis is the " God- Word " of the first chapter of John. " And without him was not anything made that hath been made." Then Jesus Christ was the sole medium of the whole creation. Again it is the solemn emphasis of minute iteration. All things came into being through him, and apart from him not even one thing came into being. lumination. Verses 4, 5. TEE PROLOGUE TO THE GOSPEL. " In him was life ; and the life was the light The Living II- of men. And the light shineth in the darkness and the darkness apprehended it not." " That which hath been made was life in him." Then Jesus Christ was not only the divine agent of the universal creation ; he was also the divine source, and basis, and means, and sphere, of all life ; life vegetable, life animal, life human, life angelic. Not only is he before all things : in him coi. \, 17. also all things consist, subsist, have their substance, hold together. That which hath come into being was life in him. 11 And the life was the light of men." Then Jesus Christ is also the divine source, and basis, and means, and sphere of moral illumination. Do you say that John's connection of life and light is abrupt ? It is abrupt only in appearance. Gifted with profound insight, intuitively discerning the oc- cult, real connections of things, John's copulative conjunctions are more than merely connective : they are also organic. To his piercing vision, the Word in whom was life is the same as the Word in whom was light ; the God of creation the same as the God of redemption. To the disciple whom Jesus loved, the Word was the life of light and the light of life. That which hath come into being was life in him, and the life was the light of men. 11 And the light in the darkness shineth" Then there is such a thing as moral darkness. Alas ! dark, indeed, is this poor fallen world of ours ; it is the land of darkness and the shadow of death ; Job x, 21, 22. the land of thick darkness as darkness itself, with- out any order, and where the light is as darkness. ;L8 THE DIVINE MAN. But, thank God, the people that walked in dark- ness have seen a great light ; thej that dwelt in the land of the shadow of death, upon them hath the light shined. Yea, the same God, who in the beginning commanded light to shine out of dark- ness, now shineth in our hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. " And the darkness overcame it not." Then Jesus Christ will be victorious. A profound truth underlay the dualism of Zoroaster, according to which there are two deities struggling for the mastery of the universe : Ormuzd, God of Light ; and Ahriman, God of Night ; and Fate has decreed that Ormuzd shall conquer Ahriman. It was the pagan, instinctive groping after God aud his righteousness. As a matter of fact, light and darkness are inherently, constituently antagonis- tic ; but light is the stronger, and will conquer. The light in the darkness was shining ; and the darkness overcame it not. " There came a man, sent from God, whose name was John. The same came for witness, that he might hear witness of the light, that all might oelieve through him. He was not the light, out came that he might hear. witness of the light." Then John the Baptist was divinely com- missioned to be the prophetic witness of Jesus Christ. For it was not meet that the Word of God and the Light of men should come into the world unheralded. All the Old Testament, its system of oracle, ordinance, ritual, and prophecy, had foretold his coming. And the heraldic system THE PROLOGUE TO THE GOSPEL. 19 culminated in John of the Desert. This was he of whom it had been written, Matt, si, 10. Behold, I send ray messenger before thy face, Malachi iii, 1. "Who shall prepare thy way before thee. This is why among them that are born of women Matt, xi, 11. there hath not arisen a greater than John the Bap- tist, And yet he was not the Light. True, he was in his own place and measure a burning and John v, 35. shining lamp ; and men were willing to rejoice for a season in his light. But he was only a lamp ignited ; he was not the igniting light.* He was a morning star ; he was not the sun of righteous- ness. " There was the true light, even the light The Progress- which lighteth every man, coming into the nation Umi " world." Verse 9 . " There teas the true light." Then Jesus Christ was the original, archetypal light. x\ll other lights, whether of Nature or of Scripture, are only derived, reflected lights. Jesus Christ, as the Word of God, is the primal, underived, archetypal, true light. And Jesus Christ is the true light, because Jesus Christ is the Word of God. " The true light, which lighteth every man, was coming into the world." Then Jesus Christ, the true light, is evermore coming into humanity. The Word existed before the birth at Bethlehem : In the beginning was the Word. And the Word, as the true light, is ever coming into the world. * Johannes lumen illuminatum : Christies lumens illuminans.— Augustine. 20 THE DIVINE MAN. The true Tight is ever shining in Nature : The in- visible things of him since the creation of the world are clearly seen, being perceived through the things that are made, even his everlasting power and divinity; so that. even heathen are without excuse. The true light is ever shining in Conscience : When Gentiles that have not the law do by nature the things of the law, these, not having the law, are a law unto themselves ; in that they shew the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience bearing witness therewith, and their thoughts accusing or else excusing them one with another. Yes, it is sublimely true that The Tragic Re- jection. Verses 10, 11. Rom. i, 80-23. beginning was and was with God, and was God, is Deity in eternal advent. The true light, which lighteth every man, was coming into the world. " He was in the world, and the world was made through him, and the world knew him not. He came unto his own, and they that were his own received him not." " He teas in the world." Then Jesus Christ is the light of the world as well as the light of the church. The true light, as we have seen, is ever shining in nature and in conscience. " And the world was made through him." Then those who live in the world owe Jesus Christ, the eter- nal Word and the true light, grateful loyalty. " And the world knew him not." Then the world was guilty of sacrilegious ingratitude to Jesus Christ. Although his eternal power and divinity were clearly seen through his works, yet they glorified him not as God, neither gave thanks; THE PROLOGUE TO THE GOSPEL. 21 but became vain in their reasonings, and their senseless heart was darkened ; professing them- selves to be wise, they became fools, and changed the glory of the incorruptible God for the like- ness of an image of corruptible man, and of birds, and four-footed beasts, and creeping things. He was in the world, and the world was made through him, and the world knew him not. " Unto his own Tie came" Then Jesus Christ condescended to become a Jew. When the Word was made flesh, he, as had been divinely covenanted, was born of the stock of Abraham ; so that the Jewish race was in the eminent sense his own possession and inheritance : Unto his own he came. " And they that were his own received him not." Then the Jews were guilty of a special sacrilege in re- jecting their own divine Countryman. It ivas his own Nazareth who rejected him ; it was his own Jerusalem who crucified him. He came unto his own home, and his own people accepted him not. " But as many as received him, to them gave The Heavenly he the right to become children of God, even to Rlght- , a 5 Verses 13, 13. them that believe on his name : which were born, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God." '■'-But as many as received him." Then Jesus Christ found welcomers in the world that hated him, even among the Jews that spurned him. Already in our apostle's day multitudes both of Jews and Gentiles joyously accepted the Naza- rene's sovereignty. "To them gave he the right to become children of God.'" Then Jesus Christ is the medium of the divine adoption. True, man, 22 THE DIVINE MAN. Genesis i, 26. in virtue of liis very creation, as made in God's likeness, after God's image, is God's son. But lie has fallen, and lost the sense as well as the privi- leges of sonship. What he needs, then, is to have the sense and privileges of sonship restored to John iii, 3. him : .to be, as it were, born over again, born from above. And the Word of God is the secret of this regeneration : To as many as receive him he gives the right to become God's children. " Even to them that believe in his name." Then none but those who accept Jesus Christ as the Word of God will Jesus Christ, God's Word, empower to be- Acts iv, i2. come God's children. There is no other name under heaven, that is given among men, wherein we must be saved. " Who were begotten, not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God." Then this second birth, this recovery of the sense of divine sonship, is no wise possible in the plane of nature. No ances- tral piety or birth of blood, no outward rite or birth of the will of the flesh, no personal resolve or birth of the will of man, can make us children of God. None but the Word of God himself, in whom is the life and who is the true light of men, can give the power and the right to those who believe in his name to attain the divine sonship. As many as received him, to these gave he the right to be- come God's children, even to them that believe in his name ; who were born not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God. The Divine In- " And the Word became flesh, and dwelt among us (and we beheld his glory, glory as of carnation. THE PROLOGUE TO THE GOSPEL. 23 the only-begotten from the Father), full of grace Verse 14 and truth." "And the Word became flesh." Then the Divine Word became human. It is a profound statement, the corner-stone of Christianity, the turning-point in human eternity. Let us, then, ponder it most carefully. Observe, first, what it was that became flesh : it was the Word, that same Word who in the beginning was, and was with God, and was God. Observe, secondly, the verb which St. John uses. He does not say, "The Word was changed into flesh " ; he says, " The Word became flesh." When the eternal Word was born, he was not altered into flesh, and so ceased to be the Word ; he became flesh, and still continued to be the Word. Jesus Christ as the Word always was ; Jesus Christ as flesh became. In the beginning was the Word, and the Word became flesh. And in the Word become flesh 3 the Word and the flesh blended into one new per- sonality, the God-man. In him dwelleth all the coi. a, 9. fullness of the Godhead bodily, in body-fashion. Observe, thirdly, that in thus becoming flesh the Word became man under disabled conditions. For take precise note of the noun which St. John uses. He does not say, " The Word became man " ; he says, " The Word became flesh." And " flesh," according to a common scriptural usage, means man as under disabilities, human nature as frail and dependent and mortal. The Word not only became man, as Adam was before he fell: the Word became flesh, as Adam was after he fell. JSTot that the Word took into himself a sinful 24 THE DIVINE MAN. Eom. viii, 3. manhood — perish the thought ! It was only in the likeness of sinful flesh that he became. Nev- ertheless, he did become flesh, and as such did become exposed to the unfortunate conditions, to # the trials and sorrows and perils and mishaps of a nature lapsed in Adam's fall. He took into him- self weakness without sinfulness, infirmity without Heb. iv, 15. guilt, possibility of fall without fall. Yerily, we have not a high priest who can not be touched with the feeling of our infirmities, but one who hath been in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin. What unspeakable comfort in this little clause, " The Word became flesh " ! "And dwelt [pitched his tejit, tabernacled'] among us." It is a reminiscence of the old wil- derness life. What the ancient tabernacle had been to the Jew, that the enfleshment of the Word was henceforth to be to the Church. The incarnation was the entempling of Deity in hu- john ii, 19-22. manity. Jesus said unto the Jews, " Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up." The Jews answered, "Forty and six years was this temple in building, and wilt thou raise it up in three days 1 " But he spake of the temple of his body. Accordingly, when he was raised from the dead, his disciples remembered that he had spoken this, and they believed the scripture and the word which Jesus had said. "And we beheld his glory." Again it is a reminiscence of the old wilderness lif e, even of the Shechinah which was wont to marshal the hosts of Israel, and gleam between the cherubim over the mercy-seat. St. John himself had literal- THE PROLOGUE TO THE GOSPEL. 25 Ij beheld that glory : it was when the face of the Word made flesh shone as the sim on the Mount of Transfiguration. It is also for us to behold Christ's glory ; for the character of the Divine Man, what is it but the tree and everlasting Shechinah % " Glory as of the only begotten from the Fa- ther" An infinite mystery surely ! For to be begotten implies a beginning, an origin in time. But the Word, as we have seen, had existed eter- nally : In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. How then could the unbeginning Word be said to be begotten % The problem absorbed the thought of the early church, and so they talked of " eter- nal generation," an " eternal filiation," and the like, as though the Son and only begotten of the Father were eternally generated or filiated from the Father. Their mistake was, and we ourselves often fall into a like mistake when studying Scrip- ture, they interpreted a figure of speech as though it were a creed-statement, a parable as though it were a dogma. Whereas such phrases as repre- sent Jesus Christ as being the Son of God, or the only begotten from the Father, are not creed-for- mulas, to be taken literally or word- wise ; they are figures of speech, hinting in a colossal way such ineffable relations between God and the Word be- come flesh as can be best set forth in analogies drawn from human relations. The phrase before us, " The only begotten from the Father," is an august parable, divinely meant to suggest, in way of stupendous, nebulous hint, the unutterable con- 26 THE DIVINE MAN. substantialness and fellowship) of God and Christ, the infinite intercommunion of the eternal God and the eternal Word. We beheld his glory, glory as of an only begotten from the Father, even the glory which he had with the Father be- fore the world was. Whatever glory infinite Deity had — whether as being tin create, or eternal, or omnipresent, or omniscient, or omnipotent, or in- finitely true, or infinitely righteous, or infinitely gracious, or infinitely blessed — all this infinite glory also belonged to the Word made flesh. We beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begot- ten from the Father. "Full of grace and truth.'''' Then Jesus Christ is the personal plenitude of the 'divine mercies, he is full of grace ; and also of the eternal reali- ties, he is full of truth. And this fullness of grace and truth comes to our apprehensions and to our hearts through the incarnation, or the en- fleshment of infinite Deity. In the Word made flesh dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily. Thus the weightiest of truths is expressed in the briefest of phrases, " The Word became flesh." The August " John oeareth witness of him, and crieth, saying, This was he of whom I said, He that cometh after me is oecome oefore me : for he was hefore me" Then John the apostle does not stand alone in testifying to the Word made flesh. His memory goes back many a year to the Jordan, where the man who had been sent from God to be a witness to the true Light had also borne most solemn tes- Testimony Verse 15, THE PROLOGUE TO THE GOSPEL. 27 timony to Jesus the Nazarene as the pre-existent Word. John seeth Jesus coming unto him, and joim i, so, so. saith : " Behold, the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world ! This is he of whom I said, After me cometh a man which is become before me : for he was before me." John's suc- cessor was really John's predecessor. Before John was born, the Word was. Before Abraham be- John vm, 58. came, Jesus Christ is. " For of his fullness we all received, and grace The Gracious for grace." Fullriess - ° , Verse 16. "Of his fullness." Then Jesus Christ is in- exhaustibly full. He is the plenitude of the Divine attributes, the totality of the Divine perfections. For it was the good pleasure of the Father that in coi. i, 19. him should all the fullness dwell. " Out of that fullness we all received, even grac6for grace, grace after grace, grace upon grace." The fullness of the Word made flesh is the true tree of life, ever- more fruitful, evermore yielding new kinds of fruit. " For the law was given through Hoses ; grace The Majestic and truth came through Jesus Christ." Superiority. It is a triple contrast. First, Moses, although so great, was only a servant ; but Jesus is a son : Moses, indeed, was faithful in all God's house as a Heb. hi, 1-6. servant, for a testimony of those things which were afterward to be spoken ; but Jesus was faith- ful as a son over God's house, whose house are we, if we hold fast our boldness and the glorying of our hope firm unto the end. Again, the law which came through Moses was a condemning, slaying power ; but the grace which came through 28 THE DIVINE MAN. The Compe- tent Inter- preter. Verse 18. Exc. xxxiii, 20. 1 Tim. vi, 15, 16. Jesus Christ is an acquitting, life-giving power : The law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus made me free from the law of sin and of death. Once more, the law which was given through Moses was but a shadow of the good things to come ; whereas the truth which came through Jesus Christ is the essential, abiding reality itself : Christ is the end (goal, consummation) of the law unto righteousness to every one that belie veth. The law through Moses was given ; the grace and the truth through Jesus Christ came. " ~No man hath seen God at any time ; the only begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, he hath declared him." "God no one hath ever seen" For infinite God must, it would seem, because infinite, be for ever incommunicable with finite man. Jehovah said unto Moses, " Thou canst not see my face : for man shall not see me and live." The blessed and only Potentate, the King of kings, and Lord of lords ; who only hath immortality, dwelling in light unapproachable ; whom no man hath seen, nor can see : to whom be honor and power eter- nal. Amen. "The only begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, he hath declared [inter- preted, made exegesis of~\ him" Then Jesus John xiv, 8, 9. finite as the "Word become flesh, is able to mediate, and does mediate, between the infinite and the finite. The "Word made flesh is infinite God in gracious communication with finite man. He is the loving manifestation of Deity absolute. Philip saith unto Jesus, "Lord, shew us the Father, and THE PROLOGUE TO THE GOSPEL. 29 it sufjficeth us." Jesus saitli unto Philip, " Have I been so long time with you, and dost thou not know me, Philip ? he that hath seen me hath seen the Father ; how say est thou, Shew us the Father? " Jesus Christ is the visible image of the invisible coi. i, is. God, the effulgence of his glory, the very image Heb. i, 3. of his substance. The Word made flesh is Deity in exposition. And for this service of expound- ing or revealing Deity, the Word had been per- fectly qualified. For no one can be truly inter- preted except by his intimate. And Jesus Christ was the eternal Father's bosom companion. The Word was with God, and therefore could interpret him. God no one hath ever seen ; the only be- gotten God, who is in the bosom of the Father, he hath declared him. Jesus Christ is Deity in enun- ciation. He is the Word of God. Such is the apostle John's prologue to his evan- gel of the Divine Man. Eeviewing this majestic prologue as a whole, we can not fail to be struck with certain points. First, The Word made flesh is the mystery of The Word mysteries. Listen to the great Augustine : " God ; ™q\ ^te? what more glorious? Flesh; wdiat more vile? of Myster- God in flesh ; what more wondrous ? " * This in fact is the reason why so many persons reject the story of the Miraculous Conception. But let us be fair. The Word made flesh is not the only in- comprehensible mystery. Take, for example, one at our very doors, confronting us every moment of our lives — the mystery of the union of mind and * Deus ; qv.id gloriosius ? Caro ; quid villus ? Deus in came ; quid mirabilius ? les. 30 THE DIVINE MAN. matter. Think for a moment how utterly differ- ent these two things are. The mind is spirit ; the body is matter ; between the two there is nothing in common ; spirit and matter, so far as we know, are absolute antitheses. In fact, to talk of the union of spirit and body is, as the skeptic says of the Word made flesh, " a contradiction in terms." Nevertheless the skeptic believes it, ab- surd and a priori impossible though it is. He does not deny the union of soul and body on the ground that he can not understand it. If John m, is. he can not understand earthly things and yet believes them, why then does he disbelieve heav- enly things on the ground that he can not under- stand them % The Word Secondly, The Word made flesh is in the emi- the Prophet nen * sense the Prophet of God, interpreting God of God. to man. As we have seen, he had always been in the world. Tie had spoken in creation, in provi- dence, in conscience. He had spoken especially to the Jew, uttering himself in law and prophet. But his utterances, compared with those which were to come, had been dim and vague. At length he made himself distinctly articulate in and Heb. i, i. by his own incarnation. God, having of old time spoken unto the fathers in the prophets by divers portions and in divers manners, hath at the end of these days spoken unto us in his Son. The Word, by becoming flesh, became by that very act, and in the pre-eminent sense, The Word of God, God's very Prophet, speaking to us for God, interpreting God to us. Yes, the Divine Man is God in self- disclosure. THE PROLOGUE TO THE GOSPEL. 31 Thirdly, The Word made flesh, is also the The Word Prophet of man, interpreting man to himself. the Prophet We know not what giant faculties of moral power of Man. lie within ns, what capacities of seraphic aspira- tion, nntil Jesus Christ speaks to us. We need to be touched by a God-man in order to have aroused what in us is Godlike and God ward. We need to have the Divine Word prophesy to us, to inter- pret God to us ; and we need to have the Divine Word made flesh prophesy in us, to interpret us to ourselves. And so Jehovah our God, as he prom- Dent, xviii, 15- ised Moses, has raised up unto us from among his Acts m, 22, 23. brethren a prophet like unto ourselves, born of God and born of man : unto him, then, let us all give heed in all things, lest our souls also be de- stroyed. Fourthly, The Word made flesh answers that The Word instinct of perfection of which all of us are more *? ade jl esl ] or less conscious, and which is an original, inalien- Man. able part of our nature. We instinctively con- ceive, and in our golden moments long to behold, a perfect Character, or ideal Man. Hence the tendency common to all nations to conceive either a Divine Man, or a human God ; either, with the Greek, to believe in the deification of man, as, for example, Hercules ; or, with the Hindu, in the in- carnation of God, as, for example, Vishnu. These and such as these are but attempts to realize the vague and mighty yearnings of humanity's heart for a Perfect Man. And the Word made flesh fulfills that sublime yearning. Jesus Christ, the God-man, is the perfected Character, Ehomme d venir, the ideal Man, the embodiment and sum- 32 THE DIVINE MAN. total of perfected humanity, the symbol and repre- sentative of fulfilled human nature, The Son of coi. ii, 9, 10. Man. As in him dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily, so in him dwelleth all the full- ness of an unfolded, perfected, fulfilled humanity. coi. i, 28. Perfect in Jesus Christ. The Word Fifthly, The Word made flesh is the pivotal Sfpiv^of trutn of Christianity. Everything of the Chris- Christianity, tian religion depends on the truth of the story of Bethlehem. If he who was born there was not really God, then the religion he set up is but a human religion, and our hopes of a. manhood per- fected in a Divine Man are quenched. If he who was born there was not really man, but only phan- tom flesh, then the religion he set up is a deceitful religion, leaving to us — it may be — nothing but a phantom God. Therefore, I say that Christianity from center to circumference is balanced on the pivot of the Divine Nativity. Revelation, media- tion, passion, death, resurrection, ascension, return — all revolve around Bethlehem's manger. What is the resurrection of Jesus Christ himself but the resurrection of an embodied God, the Word made flesh? The Word Lastly, Belief in the incarnation or enfleshment lhe d TeS e S of the eternal Word is the appointed test of Chris- Christianity, tianity : " Every spirit that confesseth that Jesus i John iv, s. Christ is come in the flesh is of God." That is to say : Every one who believes that the Babe of Bethlehem was really God and really man — that the Word, who in the beginning was and was with God and was God, really became flesh — every one who really believes and really acts out the belief THE PROLOGUE TO THE GOSPEL. 33 that Jesus Christ was really God-man, is born of God. Hold fast then, O friend, to the Godhood of Jesus Christ as the Word who in the beginning was : hold fast to the manhood of Jesus Christ as the Word made flesh. Adore the God in the man — the humanized God : cling to the Man in the God — the divinized Man. Almighty God, give us grace that we may cast away Collect, the works of darkness, and put upon us the armour of light, now in the time of this mortal life, in which Thy Son Jesus Christ came to visit us in great humility ; that in the last day, when he shall come again in his glorious Majesty to judge both the quick and dead, we may rise to the life immortal, through him who liveth and reigneth with theo and the Holy Ghost, now and ever. Amen. THE PREFACE TO THE GOSPELS. Luke i, 1-4. We have not followed cunningly devised fables. 2 Peter i, 16. II. THE PREFACE TO THE GOSPELS. Luke i, 1-4. " Forasmuch as many have taken in hand to Luke i, 1-4. draw up a narrative concerning those matters which have been fulfilled among us, even as they delivered them, unto us, loho from the heginning were eyewitnesses and ministers of the word, it seemed good to me also, having traced the course of all things accurately from the first, to write unto thee in order, most excellent Theophilus ; that thou ynightest know the certainty concerning the things wherein thou wast instructed '." Such are the words with which the Evangelist Luke introduces his story of the Divine Man. It reminds us of his preface to his story of the Primitive Church : " The former treatise I made, Acts i, 1, 2. O Theophilus, concerning all that Jesus "began both to do and to teach, until the day in which he was received up, after that he had given commandment through the Holy Spirit unto the apostles whom he had chosen." In fact, the story of the Apostolic Church is but a continuation of the story of Jesus Christ himself : for Jesus Christ 38 THE DIVINE MAN. and they who are his are one. Well then might the Evangelist who had written for the excellent Theophilus, Friend of God, the story of all that Jesus both did and taught from the beginning till the clay he was taken up, write for the same ex- cellent Theophilns the story of what Jesus' apos- tles did ; for the apostolic church was but the John xii, 24. unfolding of the kernel of wheat which had fallen into the ground and died. The seed of the king- dom is Jesus Christ, even the Word made flesh ; Eph. i, 23. the harvest of that seed is the church, the fullness of him who fiileth all in all. Many Primi- From this preface to St. Luke's Gospel we pels " ° S " l eani ) fi rs ^ that there were already existing in the Evangelist's day many " gospels " : " Forasmuch as. many have undertaken to draw up a consecu- tive account concerning those matters which have oeen fully established among us." Christianity has ever been the grand inspirer of Christendom's literature. Probably more has been written about Jesus Christ, his character and teaching and work, than about all other things put together. For it is not in religious books alone that we see the signs of his presence and sway. We can scarcely take up a volume on any grave subject — ethical, philosophical, historic, bio- graphic, aesthetic — without ever and anon catching at least glimpses of the passing shadow of the Son of Mary. The unconscious tributes of literature to Jesus the Nazarene are surprisingly many and Matt, xxviii, 20. emphatic. He is in very truth the perpetual Pres- Psaim xix, 3, 4. ence, his line going out through all the earth, and his words to the end of the world ; there is no THE PREFACE TO THE GOSPELS. 39 speech nor language where his voice is not heard. If, then, even amid the materialistic din of our nineteenth century, nothing so moves the hearts and pens of men as the career and character of Jesus Christ, we can easily believe that this inspi- ration must have been still more powerful in the century of Christ's contemporaries. Among the multitudes who witnessed his wondrous deeds and listened to his matchless sayings and felt the im- press of his incomparable character, there must have been not a few who would make memoranda of what they had seen and heard and felt. The impulse to do this would be all the stronger, inas- much as it was before the age of printing-press and publishing apparatus. We need not be sur- prised, then, that as time sped on and the number of Christ's contemporaries grew smaller, many of his survivors became his biographers. For so our Preface declares : " Many have taken in hand to draw up a narrative concerning those matters which have been fulfilled among us." And thus, although he who spake as never man spake does John vii, 46. not seem to have written a single word, yet many who did know him, either personally or indirectly through his apostles, committed to writing remi- niscences of his words and ways ; and so there arose in the apostolic era numerous " gospels." And, observe, our Evangelist does not censure these attempts at biography. He does not hint that these memorabilia are to be rejected. For aught we know, some of these sketches were as truly inspired as the Gospel of St. Luke himself. What though they have not come down to us % Gospels 40 THE DIVINE MAN. There is reason for believing that some scriptures, icor. v,9. for instance, a letter of St. Paul to the Corinthi- ans, have been lost. But this does not detract from the worth of those we do have. That these primitive memoirs of Jesus Christ, in addition to those by Matthew and Mark and Luke and John, have hot come down to us may be occasion for re- gret ; certainly it is not occasion for complaint. Eternity will not exhaust what Memoirs of the Divine Man we do have. Source of the From this Preface to St. Luke's Gospel, we learn, secondly, the Source of the Gospels : " Even as they delivered them, unto us, who from the he- ginning were eyewitnesses, and ministers of the word." These early memoirs or primitive Gospels to which our Evangelist alludes were evidently writ- ten by those who had not been personally ac- quainted with the Prophet of Nazareth. Never- theless, their source of information was accurate ; for it was the apostolic tradition or oral testimony of those who had been eyewitnesses, and servants of the word, all the time that the Lord Jesus had gone in and gone out. among them, from the days of John the Baptizer unto the day he was taken up from them. Two of the four Gospels which have come down to us — Matthew's and John's— were written by apostles. The two others — Mark's and Luke's— were written by evangelists, gather- ing their materials directly from apostles. Thus Luke, the writer of our Preface, like the many others who had undertaken to write a connected account of what Jesus Christ had said and done. THE PREFACE TO THE GOSPELS. 41 distinct! j bases his narrative on the apostolic testi- mony or tradition : " Even as those handed them down to us who from the beginning were eyewit- nesses and servants of the word." The source and basis, then, of these primitive Gospels was the contemporaneous oral Gospel or Tradition of the original apostles. Need I add that it is still the only kind of Tradition which the Church is at lib- erty to accept as the authorized Gospel and Doc- trine of Jesus Christ ? From this Preface to St. Luke's Gospel, we inspiration learn, thirdly, that inspiration is compatible with wi&^Free' free-will : " It seemed good to one also to write will. unto thee in order, most excellent TheojphilxisP According to the judgment of the early Church, by which judgment the Church has ever since stood, the Gospel according to St. Luke was acknowledged to be a constituent part of the in- spired canon. Yet there is no evidence to show that Luke felt laid on him a resistless necessity to write his Gospel, or that in writing it he was con- scious of any special, overmastering inspiration. Others had undertaken to arrange a narrative of the Christian Facts ; and it seemed good to Luke also to undertake the same. So far as his own consciousness was concerned, he seems to have set himself to his task spontaneously, and arranged his narrative as seemed to him best. Yet the judgment of the Christian sense from the begin- ning has been that in thus composing his recital he was Divinely inspired. These facts cast light on the doctrine of In- spiration. They show that one may be inspired, 42 THE DIVINE MAN. and yet act with entire freeness. The sacred writ- ers have often been compared to JEolian harps, played on by the Holy Spirit or divine Breath of God. The comparison is beautiful and just, so far as it goes. But it does not cover the whole truth ; it fails to recognize the human element in inspira- tion. But let the sacred writers be compared to different musical instruments, for example, a flute, a cornet, a trumpet, an organ, etc., played on, in- deed, by one and the same divine Breath, but giving forth different melodies, according to the character of each distinct instrument ; and the comparison becomes more complete and just. The source of the melody is Divine, and common to them all ; the character of the melody is human, varying ac- cording to the temperament and peculiarity of the writer. In brief, the thoughts are Divine, the words are human. And this it is which gives to each Gospel of the canon its peculiarity. Each writer wrote according to his idiosyncrasy, as seemed to him good. And this it is which gives to us one and the same Gospel — the Gospel of Jesus Christ ; and also different gospels— a gospel according to Matthew ; a gospel according to Mark ; a gospel according to Luke; a gospel according to John. Each of them doubtless said, " It seemed good to me also to write a life of Jesus Christ." But we shall recur to this point. Qualifications Erom this preface to St. Luke's Gospel we learn, fourthly, that our evangelist was qualified to write a gospel : "Having traced the course of all things accurately from the first." An educated, of Luke. THE PREFACE TO THE GOSPELS. 43 of apostles, perhaps the brother whose praise in 2 cor. vm, is. the Gospel was spread through all the churches, St. Luke the Evangelist was in a condition to know the facts of the Christ's career. His habits of observation as a physician would naturally lead coi. iv, 14. him to scrutinize closely all alleged facts. He at least would know whether the church of his day was following cunningly devised myths. He had 2 Peter i, 16. a reputation for honesty, and he puts his own per- sonal veracity into the issue. He himself assures us that his first step fn preparing his narrative was to trace down from the beginning everything ac- curately. In short, he exercised the " critical faculty." He was a rationalist in the true sense of that noble but prostituted word, proving all 1 ^ hess - v ' 21 > things, holding fast that which is good, throwing away that which is bad. Thus was he qualified to write an intelligent, credible narrative of the great Christian facts. From this preface to St. Luke's Gospel we Luke's Pur- learn, fifthly, our evangelist's purpose in writing: posemWnt- " That thou mightest know the certainty concern- ing the things wherein thou wast instructed." Doubtless a good deal of misapprehension touching the facts of Christ's career was already prevalent. These facts were so transcendent that they might be easily misunderstood, and, in pass- ing from mouth to mouth in that age of tradition rather than of printed page, would naturally ac- cumulate unauthorized additions. These alien additions would sooner or later be seen to be dis- crepant with the apostolic statements, and so a sus- picion, especially under assaults by the enemies of inpr. 44 THE DIVINE MAN. Christianity, might spring up touching the origi- nal statements themselves. Our evangelist seems to have had this possibility in view, and therefore, having personally and minutely investigated all the facts in the case, would assure his noble friend Theophilus ' of the absolute truthfulness of the apostolic traditions : so that he might, always be ready to give answer to every man who should ask him a reason concerning the hope that was in him. For knowledge of facts rather than theories was then, as it still is, the need of the times. And St. Luke undertook to meet the need : " Foras- much as many have taken in hand to arrange a narrative of the things which are fully believed among us, even as those handed them down to us who from the beginning were eyewitnesses and ministers of the word, it seemed good to me also, having accurately traced down everything from the very first, to write to thee a connected ac- count, most noble Theophilus, in order that thou mayest thoroughly know the certainty of those statements in which thou hast been catechized." Such is the preface to the Gospel according to St. Luke. And as St. John's prologue may be taken as the prologue to the Gospel, so St. Luke's preface may be taken as the preface to the Gos- pels. And this suggests our first concluding thought : The advantage of having several Gospels. Of course, there might have been but one Gospel. But Providence has graciously preserved for us four Gospels. And herein is an immense advan- tage. First, the having several Gospels is a key TIIE PREFACE TO THE GOSPELS. 45 to the detection of imposture : where the testi- mony is false, it is perilous to multiply witnesses. Again, the having several Gospels helps us to understand better the myriad-sided Divine Man. His aspect changes with our point of vision, and the four evangelists give us four view-points. To speak in way of swift, rough characterization : Matthew's- Gospel is Hebrew, Messianic, the Gos- pel of fulfillment ; Mark's Gospel is dramatic, Petrine, the Gospel of action ; Luke's Gospel is catholic, Pauline, the Gospel of humanity ; John's Gospel is doctrinal, spiritual, the Gospel of Di- vinity. And yet the four Gospels are but one Gospel. Accordingly, the tropical fancy of the fathers took delight in comparing them to the four faces of the one cherub, to' the four sides of the one New Jerusalem, to the four rivers flowing from the one stream of Eden, etc. No- bly does Adam of St. Yictor, in the twelfth century, express the current view of the cherubic symbolism of the Gospels : See, for above the starry height, Adam of St. Beholding, with unclouded sight, Victor. The brightness of the sun, Dean E. II. Pinmptre's John doth, as eagle swift, appear, Translation. Still gazing on the vision clear Of Christ, the Eternal Son. To Mark belongs the lion's form, With voice loud-roaring as the storm, His risen Lord to own; Called by the Father from the grave, As victor crowned, and strong to save, We see him on his throne. 4G THE DIVINE MAN. The face of man is Matthew's share, Who shows the Son of man doth bear Man's form with might divine, And tracks the line of high descent Through which the Word with flesh w r as blent, In David's kingly line. To Luke the ox belongs, for he, More clearly than the rest, doth see Christ as the victim slain ; Upon the cross, as altar true, The bleeding, spotless Lamb we view, And see all else is vain. So from their source in Paradise . The four mysterious rivers rise, And life to earth is given : On these four wheels and staves, behold, God and his ark are onward rolled, High above earth in heaven. Our Debt to But while we may smile at such fancies, it is ^eHsts Eyan " n0 * fancifi,il to say that the four evangelists have given us four different portraits of one and the same Divine Man, presenting him from four points of vision, and so delineating him more viv- idly in his manifold perf ectness, making him more apprehensible to all classes, conditions, and tem- peraments of men, and to all ages of the world. This is the circumstance which makes it so profit- able for us to study the Gospels in synchronous lessons. The habit protects us from partial and unsymmetrieal views ; for the Gospels, like stones in mosaic, are mutually complemental. It is of immense benefit, therefore, to study them in light of one another ; for, like the trilingual inscription THE PREFACE TO THE GOSPELS. 47 of the Rosetta Stone, the four Gospels interpret and confirm each other. Secondly, let us thank God that he prompted his servants to note down, so early in the Christian era, statements of the apostolic testimony ; for the rich result is that, instead of uncertain and fickle tradition, we have permanent contemporary rec- ords. And so the Gospels are the foundation of all that is to be believed concerning Jesus Christ. They are the true " apostolic constitutions " for Christendom ; Built upon the foundation of the Eph. a, 20-22, apostles and prophets, Christ Jesus himself being the chief corner-stone. Lastly, be thou thyself a Theophilus, Friend Theophilus, of God ; and the Spirit will write a gospel to thee also. Almighty God, who oalledst Luke the Physician, whose Collect, praise is in the Gospel, to be an Evangelist, and Physician of the soul; May it please thee, that, by the wholesome medicines of the doctrine delivered by him, all the diseases of our souls may be healed ; through the merits of thy Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen. THE ANNUNCIATION TO ZACHARIAS. Luke i, 5-25. Whiles I was speaking in prayer, the man Gabriel, whom I had seen in the vision at the beginning, being caused to fly swiftly, touched me about the time of the evening oblation. Daniel is, 21. III. THE ANNUNCIATION TO ZACHARIAS. Luke i, 5-25. It was not meet that the Son of Clod should come into the world unheralded. Himself the Sun of Righteousness, it was fit that he should be harbingered by morning star. Let us, then, pon- der the annunciation of the coming of Immanuel's forerunner. Wretched indeed was the political plight of The Reverend the Hebrew people. Herod the Great, alien and oup e " Luke i 5-7 pagan, had usurped the throne of David, and so the scepter had departed from Judah and the Genesis xiix, 10. ruler's staff from between his feet. But, although the political independence of Israel had been crushed, one venerable institution survived : it was the priesthood which, thirteen centuries be- fore, had been inaugurated under Aaron. Among the sacred personages who still inherited the pre- rogatives of the tribe of Levi and the house of Aaron was a venerable man whose name was Zacharias. And he was doubly honored ; for Elisabeth, his wife, was also of the daughters of Aaron. A reverend couple they were, worthy of their sacred descent, righteous before God, loyal 52 THE DIVINE MAN. The Sacred Service. Luke i. 8-10. Rev. viii, 3, 4. to the institutions and ritual of Moses, walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the God of their fathers blameless. But, exemplary as they were, a cloud overshadowed their household. The honor of being the parents of the long-prom- ised Messiah was the unique, sacred honor which every devout Hebrew couple coveted. And the sorrow of the saintly Zacharias was this : they were aged, and they were childless. The priestly service, from the time of David, had been divided into twenty-four courses, each course serving a week. Zacharias belonged to the eighth course, known as Abijah's. It came to pass that, while he was serving in the order of his course, the lot fell on him to go into the temple and bum the incense. An honorable service this was, and as solemn as honorable. The offering of incense seems to have been symbolic of the offer- ing of prayer : Let my prayer be set forth as incense before thee; The lifting up of my hands as the evening sacrifice. When the Lamb had taken the scroll, the four living creatures and the twenty -four elders fell down before him, having each one a harp, and golden bowls full of incense, which are the pray- ers of the saints. Another angel came and stood over the altar, having a golden censer, and there was given unto him much incense, that he should add it unto the prayers of all the saints upon the golden altar which was before the throne : and the smoke of the incense, with the prayers of the saints, went up before God out of the angel's THE ANNUNCIATION TO ZACHARIAS. 53 hand. It was this solemn service of burning the incense which had fallen by lot to Zacharias. And, while he was discharging his holy office in the sacred precincts, the whole multitude of de- vout worshipers was praying without. For not then had the veil of the temple been rent in twain, so that all the people could enter and worship each for himself. As the aged priest was discharging his office in The Glorious the solemn seclusion, there suddenly appeared to tion. UnCia him an angel of the Lord, standing on the right L uke i, 11-17. side of the altar of incense. Although apparitions of this hind had often occurred in earlier ages, no angel, so far as we are informed, had been seen for centuries. ]STo wonder Zacharias was terror- stricken. But the angel immediately soothed him : " Fear not, Zacharias ! Thy prayer of many a year has been heard, and is now about to be an- swered. Thy wife Elisabeth will bear thee a son, and thou shalt call his name John [that is, Jeho- vah's gracious gift]. Not only in thy household will there be joy and gladness, multitudes of others will also rejoice in consequence of his birth. For he will be great in Jehovah's sight, greater than all who have gone before him. Like the an- Jer. xxxv. cient Eechabite, like the still more ancient Naza- Num. vi. rite, he will be an ascetic, drinking neither wine nor strong drink. Like the great son of Hilkiah, he will be completely a consecrate, filled with the Jer. i, 5. Holy Spirit from his very birth. Mighty will be his success as a reformer, restoring many of the sons of Israel to the Lord God of their fathers. Yea, he is to be that great forerunner promised by 54 THE DIVINE MAN. Mai. Hi, i ; iv, the last of the prophets, even the harbinger who is to go before Jehovah God in the spirit and power of Elijah, to prepare the way before the Son of the Highest, bringing back the hearts of the apostates to the religion of their forefathers, and so making ready for the Lord a prepared people." The Patri- But the angel's glorious announcement was too arch's In- mu dj f or our a g e( j priest. Pie could not forget Luke i is ^at he and his wife were far advanced in years, and, blameless Jew though he was, his faith could not soar into the supernatural. How different and nobler the faith of his ancestor Abraham Rom. iv, 18-22. under circumstances strikingly similar : "Who in hope believed against hope, to the end that he might become a father of many nations, according Gen. xv, 5. to that which had been spoken, So shall thy seed be ; and, without being weakened in faith, he con- sidered his own body now as good as dead (he being about a hundred years old), and the deadness of Sarah's womb : yea, looking unto the promise of God, he wavered not through unbelief, but waxed strong through faith, giving glory to God, and being fully assured that, what he had prom- ised, he was also able to perform ; wherefore also it was reckoned unto him for righteousness. Ah ! this is what we in these modern times very espe- cially need — a revival of the Abrahamic, simple- hearted faith in God's supernatural power. No Luke xvii, 5. prayer befits us better than this, " Lord, increase our faith ! " The Patri- And now the angel discloses himself : "I am ishment Pun " GtaMelj that stand in the presence of God ; and I Luke i, 19-23. was sent to speak unto thee, and to bring unto THE ANNUNCIATION TO ZACHARIAS. 55 th.ee these good tidings. And, behold, thou shalt be silent and not able to speak until the day that these things shall come to pass, because thou be- lievedst not my words, which shall be fulfilled in their season." Ah, friends, if God were as strict to punish us for our distrust of his word as he was to punish Zacharias for his, how many of us also would he strike dumb ! Who knows but that some of the calamities which befall us are really punishments for our own unbelief? Meantime the people, ignorant of what had occurred in the holy place, were wondering why the priest tarried so long in the temple. And when at length he came out of the shrine, and they saw that he was speechless, making signs unto them, they per- ceived that something supernatural had happened to him. An impressive spectacle surely it must have been : the aged priest, instead of pronounc- ing the benediction which for so many centuries had been falling from the lips of the sons of Aaron — Jehovah bless thee, and keep thee ; Num. vi, 24-26. Jehovah make his face to shine upon thee, and be gra- cious unto thee ; Jehovah lift up his countenance upon thee, and give thee peace — only motions before them in helpless silence. Whether or not Zacharias explained to the won- dering multitudes in some way the cause of his sudden calamity, we are not told. We only know that, as soon as the days of his ministration as be- longing to Abij ah's course were fulfilled, he re- turned to his own home. 56 THE DIVINE MAN. The Modest Seclusion. Luke i, 24, 25. Ministration of Angels. And as the angel's menace was fulfilled, so was the angel's promise. After these days, Elisa- beth, his wife, conceived ; and she hid herself five months, saying, " Thus hath the Lord done unto me in the days wherein he looked upon me, to take away my reproach among men." It is a beautiful instance of matronly meekness, trust, and gratitude. Such is the story of Gabriel's prophecy of Im- manuel's harbinger. This incident of the annunciation to Zacharias is rich in lessons. I will mention but two. First, The ministration of angels. Nor can we do better here than simply to cite some script- ural instances. For example, it was through the ministry of angels that Ilagar was found in the wilderness, and promised the birth of Ishmael ; that Lot was delivered from the doom of Sodom ; that Isaac was rescued from Abraham's knife ; that Jacob's name was changed into Israel ; that Moses was commissioned to deliver his people ; that Israel was guided from the land of bondage into the land of promise; that the law was or- dained on Sinai ; that Balaam was arrested in his perverse way ; that Gideon was commissioned to deliver his countrymen from the Midianites ; that the birth of Samson was foretold ; that David was bidden to rear an altar unto Jehovah in the thresh- ing-floor of Oman the Jebusite ; that Elijah was fed under the broom-shrub ; that Shadrach and Meshach and Abednego were delivered out of the fiery furnace ; that the prophecy of the seventy weeks was made to Daniel ; that the birth of THE ANNUNCIATION TO ZACHARIAS. 5f John the Baptizer was foretold to Zacharias ; that the great annunciation was made to Mary; that the name Jesus was given to the Divine Babe ; that the advent of the Saviour was announced to the shepherds ; that the wise men and Joseph were warned against Herod ; that Jesus was min- istered unto at the close of the threefold tempta- tion and in Gethsemane ; that the great stone was rolled away from the door of the sepulchre ; that the ministering women were comforted with the evangel of the resurrection ; that the prison-doors of the apostles were opened ; that Philip was bid- den to go down from Jerusalem toward Gaza ; that Cornelius was directed to send for Peter ; that Peter was delivered out of prison ; that Paul was cheered in his shipwreck ; that John was vouchsafed glimpses of New Jerusalem. In fact, the Bible from beginning to end is radiant with angels. And as it w T as in the past, so it is to-day. Angels are still ministers of God, executing his will alike in the physical and in the spiritual world. Alas ! the Church, in her just recoil from the pretensions of spiritualism, and in her just recognition of sense-tests in the domain of physics, has too often been tempted into a practical denial of spirit-pow- ers, virtually saying with the ancient Sadducee Actsxxiii, & that there is no angel. Let her also beware lest, in denying that there are angels, she also, with the ancient Sadducee, denies that there is either resur- rection or spirit. What though we do not see angels ? It does not follow that, because they are invisible, they are therefore, according to our sci- 58 THE DIVINE MAN. John i, 51. Luke xv, 10. Luke xvi, 22. Heb. i, 14. entitle tests, unreal or inoperative. In fact, it is the invisible things which are the most real. Did any human being ever see the Holy Spirit ? Yet what Christian doubts his existence ? Were our spiritual eyes open, as were the eyes of Elisha's servant at Dothan, doubtless we also would see all around us horses and chariots of fire circling to protect us. I believe that angels wait on us as truly as they ever waited on Abraham, or Jacob, or Moses, or Elijah, or Mary, or Jesus himself. The mediaeval painters were fond of filling the background of the Infancy with countless angels ; the representation, though literally false, was mor- ally true. I believe that angels are still a part of Heaven's mediatorial economy ; still encamping round about them that fear Jehovah, and delivering them ; still ascending and descending upon the Son of man ; still rejoicing over every sinner that repent- eth ; still bearing the spirits of the redeemed into Abraham's bosom ; in brief, still ministering spirits, sent forth to minister unto the heirs of salvation. The Faerie Queene," Book ii, Canto viii. And is there care in heaven ? And is there love In heavenly spirits to these creatures base, That may compassion of their evils move ? There is : — else much more wretched were the case Of men than beasts. But, oh, th' exceeding grace Of Highest God that loves his creatures so, And all his works with mercy doth embrace, That blessed angels he sends to and fro, To serve to wicked man, to serve his wicked foe. How oft do they their silver bowers leave To come to succor us that succor want ! How oft do they with golden pinions cleave The flitting skies, like flying pursuivant, THE ANNUNCIATION TO ZACHARIAS. 59 Against foul fiends to aid us militant ! They for us fight, they, watch and duly ward, And their bright squadrons round about us plant : And all for love and nothing for reward : Oh, why should Heavenly God to men have such regard! Most meet, then, it was that when the Divine Man, even he who was in the eminent sense the Angel of Jehovah, made his advent into the world, all other angels should with reverent glad- ness form his body-guard. And if angels, un- touched by sin, and therefore needing not his redemption, welcomed him to the humiliation of the manger, shall not sinful man, saved by the grace of his incarnation, join with angels in wel- coming him to the glorification of his return? For the time is coming when angels shall again serve as the visible ministers of God executing his purposes. As the first advent was ushered in by an " overture of angels," so shall be ushered in the second advent. The Son of man shall come Mark vm, 38. in his own glory, and in the glory of the Father, and in the glory of his holy angels. Then, in the harvest of the world, he will send forth his Matt, xm, 37-43. angel reapers ; and they shall sever the wicked from among the righteous, gathering out of his kingdom all them that do iniquity, and gathering together his elect from the four winds from one end of heaven to the other. Then shall be ful- filled in a sense which the Church has never yet witnessed the Divine Man's own saying at the be- ginning of his public ministry : " Verily, verily, John i, 51. I say unto you, Ye shall see the heaven opened, and the angels of God ascending and descending Matt, xsiv, 31. 60 THE DIVINE MAN. Hours of Wor- ship Hours of Annun- ciation. Collect. upon the Son of man." God grant that every one of us may confess him before men, so that in the day of his return he also shall confess us be- fore the angels of God. Lastly : Hours of worship are hours of angels' annunciation. Not that we may ever expect in this- eon of the world to behold visions of angels ; for ours it is to have something better than to have glimpses of supernatural figures; ours it is to have the presence of the Holy Spirit himself. Nevertheless, the closet-shrine is in an eminent sense the meeting - place of God and man, the trysting-place of Bridegroom and bride. It is at the time of the offering of incense, even the hour of prayer, that we are the most likely to be caught up into paradise, and hear unspeakable words. Then, if ever, we shall hear the sum- mons : " Prepare thou the way of the Lord : for thou also art one of his harbingers." And when such summons comes to thee, oh, be not disobedi- ent to the heavenly vision. O everlasting God, who hast ordained and constituted the service of Angels and men in a wonderful order; Merci- fully grant, that as thy holy Angels always do thee service in heaven, so, by thy appointment, they may succor and de- fend us on earth: through Jesus Christ onr-Lord. Amen. THE ANNUNCIATION TO MARY. Luke i, 26-38. Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immannel. Isaiah vii, 14. IY. THE ANNUNCIATION TO MARY. Luke i, 26-38. It was not the first time that Gabriel, Strength The Angelic of God, had visited earth. Five and a half centu- Visitant, ries "before, as the prophet Daniel was praying, and D a n Li'viii, 9. confessing his sins and the sins of his people Israel, and presenting his supplication before Jehovah his God for the holy mountain of his God, even while he was speaking in prayer, the angel Gabriel, having been caused to fly swiftly, touched him about the time of the evening oblation, and announced to him the glorious advent of Prince Messiah. Centuries roll on. Men are born, grow old, die. Empires rise, flourish, decay, perish. But heaven knows no decay ; only immortal growth. In heaven is ever- lasting youthhood. Half a millennium after Ga- briel, Strength of God, had visited the Hebrew exile on the banks of the Ulai, and touched him at the time of the evening oblation, he descends to earth again as vital and radiant as ever, and on the same errand of Messianic annunciation. But he comes not now, as erst he had come to stately prophet in imperial Babylonia. He comes not, as he had come live months before to anointed priest Luke i, 5-25. nunciation Luke i, 28-38. 64 THE DIVINE MAN. in holy Jerusalem. But he comes to a lowly, pure-hearted, saintly maiden, betrothed to a car- penter, in obscure Nazareth of scorned Galilee. He comes to her, it may be, as five hundred years before he had come to Daniel, at the time of the evening sacrifice. The Great An- " Hail ! " the Strength of God exclaims, "Thou that art highly favored, the Lord is with thee! " This angelic apparition, perhaps the only startling event which had ever occurred in her whole quiet life-time, the reverential greeting of a supernatural stranger to her, an obscure village maiden ; all this throws the gentle virgin into bewilderment : She is greatly troubled at the saying, and casts in her mind what manner of salutation this may be. And now the angel makes distinct annunciation : " Fear not, Mary : for thou hast found favor with God. And, behold, thou shalt conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a son, and shalt call his name Jesus. He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Most High : and the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of his father David : and he shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever ; and of his kingdom there shall be no end." Thus the glorious hope of being the mother of the Coming One, which for nearly two millenniums had been inspiring Hebrew matrons, from Princess Sarah onward, and which had been awakened in Eden itself, is at last fulfilled, and the long-prom- ised, majestic boon is conferred on the betrothed of a village artificer. And not the least wonder- ful part of this annunciation is that it is made to one who is unwedded. Mary herself feels it to be THE ANNUNCIATION TO MARY. 65 so, and in chastest surprise exclaims, "How can this be, seeing I am a virgin?" This exquisite touch of heavenly simplicity is more really a coronation of Mary than all the elaborated honors of the Komish virgin worship. And now follows a saying of divinest mystery : The angel answered and said unto her, " The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the Most High shall overshadow thee : wherefore also the holy thing which is begotten shall be called the Son of God." And now behold a picture of sublimest trustful- ness. Remembering how much this prophecy of the overshadowing Spirit involves, what tragical condition on Mary's part, what exposure to mis- understanding and dark insinuation, what loss in eyes of men of that honor dearer to woman than life itself — remembering all this, how sublimely trustful the virgin's answer : " Behold, the hand- maid of the Lord ; be it unto me according to thy w T ord ! " I do not think that there is in all history a lowliness so celestial, a trust so nearly infinite. Such is the story of the annunciation to Mary. The scene itself has been made the theme of numerous pictures, some of them among the highest triumphs of Christian art. JNTor need we wonder at it; for there is not a more exquisite scene in sacred story. And now let us seize on some of its salient features, and ponder the lessons they teach. And, first, survey the character of Mary as in- Character dicated in the story of the annunciation. " Hail, thou that art highly graced ! The Lord is with thee ! " Mary. 66 THE DIVINE MAN. It is, indeed, an Ave Ifaria, the only true Ave Maria of the church of Scripture. What a contrast to the false Ave Maria, the Ave Maria of the church of tradition : " Hail, Mary, full of grace ; the Lord is with thee ! Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus ! Holy Mary, mother of God, pray for us sinners, now, and in the hour of death. Amen." Still, more idolatrous is the blasphemous adoration of Bonaventura's Psalter : " "We praise thee, mother of God ! . . . All the earth doth worship thee, the spouse of the eternal Father! All the angels and archangels, all thrones and powers, do faithfully serve thee. To thee all an- gels cry aloud, with a never ceasing voice, Holy, Holy, Holy Mary, mother of God! . . . The whole court of heaven doth honor thee as queen. Thou sittest with thy Son on the right hand of the Father. ... In thee, sweet Mary, is our hope ; defend us evermore ! Praise becometh thee ! Empire becometh thee ! Virtue and glory be unto thee for ever and ever ! " But the nadir of blasphemy was not reached till December 8, 1854, when Pio Nono from his pontifical throne in St. Peter's announced the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, that is, the dogma that the Yirgin Mary herself was conceived and born and contin- ued through life absolutely without sin, original as well as actual. How different all this elaborate adoration of the Yirgin from the simple repre- sentation of her in the holy records! Not the favorer of men is she, but the favored of God ; not the mother of grace, but grace's daugh- THE ANNUNCIATION TO MARY. 67 ter;* not the enthroned above women, but the blessed among women ; not the queen of arch- angels, but the handmaid of the Lord ; not the sinless child of the skies, but the sinful daughter of Adam, needing and receiving her own Divine Son's redemption. Say of me as the angel said, " Thou art Mrs. Bixwn- The blessedest of women ! " — blessedest, ing- Not holiest, not noblest — no high name, Whose height, misplaced, may pierce me like a shame When I sit meek in heaven ! How prophetic a warning against Mariolatry, that Divine Son's own words : It came to pass that a Luke xi, 2?, 28. certain woman out of the multitude lifted up her voice, and said unto him, " Blessed is the womb that bare thee, and the breasts which thou didst suck ! " But he said, " Yea rather, blessed are they who hear the word of God, and keep it ! " And again : While he was speaking to the multi- Matt, xii, 46-50. tudes, behold, his mother and his brothers stood without, seeking to speak with him, but could not for the throng ; and it was told him. But he an- swered and said, " Who is my mother, and who are my brothers % " And stretching forth his hand toward his disciples, he said, " Behold my mother and my brothers ! For whosoever shall do the will of my Father who is in heaven, he is my brother, and sister, and mother." Nevertheless, a peculiar sacredness will ever- more attach to the name and character of Mary of Nazareth. And most justly. For she alone of * Non mater gratice, sedfilia graiiat. — Bengel. 68 THE DIVINE MAN. all earth's women was permitted to become the mother of the Divine Man. And her whole char- acter, as disclosed in the occasional hints of the holy memoirs, seems to have been in beautiful harmony with that august destination. Pensive, guileless, pure, gentle, meek, aifectionate, trustful, reverent — in Mary of Galilee, as the fittest of women, was fulfilled, after centuries of waiting, the glowing vision of evangelic prophecy. Isaiah vii, 14. Behold, a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, And shall call his name Immanuel [God with us]. This is Mary's unique glory — the glory of being the virgin-mother of the Word made flesh, the Divine Man. Herself the true Parthenos, our reverence for her is the true Parthenon. John Keble. Ave Maria ! blessed maid ! Lily of Eden's fragrant shade, Who can express the love That nurtured thee, so pure and sweet, Making thy heart a shelter meet For Jesus' holy dove ? Ave Maria ! mother blest, To whom, caressing and caress'd, Clings the Eternal Child ; Favor'd beyond, archangels' dream, When first on thee with tenderest gleam Thy new-born Saviour smiled. Ave Maria! thou whose name All but adoring love may claim, Yet may we reach thy shrine ; For he, thy Son and Saviour, vows To crown all lofty brows With love and joy like thine. THE ANNUNCIATION TO MARY. QQ Bless'd is the womb that bare him — bless'd The bosom where his lips were press'd, But rather bless'd are they Who hear his word and keep it well, The living homes where Christ shall dwell, And never pass away. Bat turn we now to a diviner theme. Ponder The Divine for a moment with sacred awe the ineffable mys- tery of the incarnation, the Word made flesh, di- vinity and humanity in one person, the Divine Man. Such an incarnation is a demand of human The Incarna- reason. Assuming that man is a fallen being sophicalNe- (alas ! who can deny it ?) ; assuming also that he cessity. desires salvation : — an incarnation — that is, a God- man — is a logical necessity. The argument in brief is this : Given a lost world, desiring salvation ; Given the law, Like begets like and nothing but like : And the conclusion is inevitable — he who saves a lost world must be above nature and also in nature, supernatural and natural, divine and human. Or the argument may be put in a briefer form, thus : Needed a God to touch man ; Needed a man to touch God : Needed a God-man to touch God and man. That is to say : Needed in order to man's salvation a Divine Man, such as Jesus of Nazareth claimed to be. And all this, be it ob- served, is a priori / the inevitable conclusion of human reason in advance of any divine revelation. And the story of the annunciation to Mary meets this logical, philosophical necessity. First, it gives us a God : " The Holy Spirit shall come upon thee, and the power of the Most High shall 70 THE DIVINE MAN. overshadow thee : wherefore also the holy thing which is begotten shall be called the Son of God." The divine conception gives us a God. Secondly, the annunciation gives us a man : " Thou shalt conceive, and bring forth a son, and shalt call his name Jesus." The virgin's delivery gives us a human product — that is to say, a man. Thirdly, the annunciation gives us, not a God and a man, but the God-man. The "Word became flesh. Thus Scripture answers to reason, Jesus Christ answers to human want. In the divinely conceived Son of the virgin of Nazareth we have a Saviour who is both divine and human — one who was con- ceived from the divine essence, yet bom through a human mother — a God and yet a man. Or, as phrased in the so-called Apostles' Creed : " Con- ceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Yirgin Mary " : deifically conceived, humanly born ; deifi- cally generated into humanity — in a word, The Divine Man. It is earth's most mighty yet most blessed enigma. It is a theme ineffable. All we can say is this : The Word became flesh — God became man. This, then, is the testimony of the annuncia- tion : Immanuel, God with us. Thus is the fall reversed, Eden restored, and Jehovah God walks again with man even as he Gen. in, 8. walked with our first parents in the garden in the breeze of the day. What a stupendous contrast ! Lucifer, fallen son of the morning, in Eden ; Ga- briel, unf alien strength of God, in Nazareth. And as Gabriel heralded the first advent, so it may be Gabriel will herald the second advent, when the THE ANNUNCIATION TO MARY. ^\ Lord himself, do longer a babe, but the Judge of the quick and the dead, shall descend from heaven 1 Thess. iv, 16. with a shout, with the voice of the archangel, and with the trump of God. Oh, let us hasten, then, with shepherd and with Magian to the cradle of the new-born King, bringing our gifts of gold and frankincense and myrrh. Recognizing that holy thing cradled in the manger as Mary's son and Mary's Lord, and bowing down before him as God manifest in the flesh, Deity incarnate, God-man, we shall be his, and so saved, world without end. O Holy and ever-blessed Spirit, who didst overshadow Prayerof Jere- the holy Virgin of our Lord, and cause her to conceive by m J Taylor, a miraculous and mysterious manner; Be pleased to over- shadow my soul and enlighten my spirit, that I may con- ceive the holy Jesus in my heart, and may bear him in my mind, and may grow up to the fullness of the stature of Christ, to be a perfect man in Christ Jesus. Amen. THE VISIT OF MARY TO ELISABETH. Luke Speaking one to another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody with your heart to the Lord. Ephesians v, 19. V. THE VISIT OF MAKY TO ELISABETH. Luke i, 39-56. Gabriel's annunciation to the virgin of Naza- The Sacred reth — an annunciation so majestic and yet so mys- ourne y- , . ,. j . ■ £ • Luke i, 39,40. terious, so glorious and yet so ominous 01 misun- derstanding and ignominy — is too much for the lowly maiden to bear alone. She yearns to con- fide the wondrous secret to some pure-hearted, trusty friend. Who shall that confidant he ? Some female friend at Nazareth ? No ; the secret is too sacred. He to whom she has plighted her troth ? No ; the secret is too feminine — too di- vinely peculiar. To whom, then, shall she turn % Far to the south dwells an aged and saintly, kins- woman, concerning whom this same Gabriel has Luke i, 5-25. also made a glorious annunciation. To her she now feels drawn by the sense of a double kinship — a kinship in spirit as well as in nature. To Elisabeth, therefore, Mary now betakes herself with sacred haste. Considering those days of slow locomotion, it was a long and formidable journey for a solitary maiden to take. Yet how her steps must have been beguiled as she passed such mem- orable spots as Jezreel, and Samaria, and Jacob's 76 THE DIVINE MAN. The Homage- ful Saluta- tion. Luke i, 41^5. Matt, iii, 13-15 "Well, and. Raman, and Bethel, and. Jerusalem, and Rachel's Tomb, and Hebron ! What thoughts, too, must have absorbed her in her strange jour- ney — thoughts of the angel's promise ; her glori- ous future; her relation to her betrothed; the effect the disclosure of her secret would have on Elisabeth ! Did ever mortal perform a journey so wondrously unique ? And now she has arrived at the priestly city. Entering the house of Zacharias, she salutes her aged kinswoman. Unexpectedly reverential and joyous is the answer to her greeting : It came to pass, when Elisabeth heard the salutation of Mary, the babe leaped in her womb. It was the recog- nition and adoration by the yet unborn son of the desert. It was also a prophecy of the homage by the Jordan : Then cometh Jesus from Galilee to the Jordan unto John, to be baptized by him. But John would have hindered him, saying, " I have need to be baptized by thee, and comest thou to me % " And not only does the unborn babe salute, the reverend mother joins in the salutation : Elisabeth, filled with the Holy Spirit, lifts up her voice, and exclaims, " Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb ! And whence is this to me, that the moth- er of my Lord should come unto me ? For, be- hold, when the voice of thy salutation came into mine ears, the babe leaped in my womb for joy. And blessed is she that believed ; for there shall be a fulfillment of the things which have been spoken to her from the Lord." It is a beautiful instance of humility. For Mary was Elisabeth's cat. Luke i, 46-55. THE VISIT OF MARY TO ELISABETH. 77 inferior in age and in station. Yet Elisabeth bowed before Mary, as the aged and anointed Eli 1 Sam. m, i-is. had bowed before the youthful and unmitered Samuel. Freedom from jealousy is ever a mark of greatness. Then burst forth from the lips of the JSaza- The Magnifi- rene virgin that glorious psean known as the Mag- nificat, and which to this day is still chanted in many of our temples. And Mary said : My soul doth magnify the Lord, And my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour. For he hath looked upon the low estate of his hand- maiden : For, hehold, from henceforth all generations shall call me blessed. For he that is mighty hath done to me great things ; And holy is his name. And his mercy is unto generations and generations On them that fear him. He hath showed strength with his arm ; He hath scattered the proud in the imagination of their heart. He hath put down princes from their thrones, And hath exalted them of low degree. The hungry he hath filled with good things ; And the rich he hath sent empty away. He hath holpen Israel his servant, That he might remember mercy (As he spake unto our fathers) Toward Abraham and his seed for ever. In glancing at the Magnificat, observe, first, Peculiarities that it is marked by that peculiar characteristic of ^ ao . n ifo a e t Hebrew poetry known as parallelism. Our rhythm is the rhythm of meter, our rhyme is the rhyme of sound. The Hebrew rhythm was the rhythm 78 THE DIVINE MAN. of clause or statement, the Hebrew rhyme was the rhyme of thought and sentiment ; or, as Ewald beautifully expresses it, "The rapid stroke as of alternate wings," " The heaving and sinking as of the troubled heart." Yiewed in this light, the Hebrew poetry is as much nobler than the classic as rhyme of thought is nobler than rhyme of sound. When will our colleges teach Job, and David, and Isaiah, and Habbakuk, as well as Ho- mer, and Yirgil, and Dante, and Shakespeare ? Again, observe the intensely Jewish character of the Magnificat, alike in its phraseology and in its reminiscences. Especially is it imbued with the l Sam. ii, 1-10. spirit of Hannah's thanksgiving song, improvised a thousand years before under circumstances some- what similar. But intensely Jewish as both these songs are, they are at the same time intensely ma- ternal, and so as true for mothers to-day as in the days of Mary or Hannah. Motherhood deepens into richer glory in the luster of these sacred lyrics. Once more, observe how in the holy strains of the Magnificat the Old Testament glides into the !Ne\v. Mary's cadences are the interlude between law and gospel — at once the finale to the old covenant and the overture to the new — and so linking Sinai and Calvary, temple and church, Moses and Jesus. Yery beautiful is the picture, this mutual greeting of aged Elisabeth and youth- ful Mary ; it is the emblem of the mutual greeting of type and antitype, of law and grace. Such is the story of the visitation. Devotion and In dismissing the story, it will not be amiss to oetry " say a few words on the matter of devotion and THE VISIT OF MARY TO ELISABETH. 79 poetry. All deep feeling is essentially poetical. It is so in all lands, and has been so in all ages. All deep emotion, whether of joy or of grief, in- stinctively yearns for the accompaniment of sound and measure. Hence the pseans of Miriam, and Deborah, and Hannah, and Mary ; the laments of Job, and David, and Jeremiah, and captives of Babylon. Even the Delphian pythoness was wont to breathe forth the oracle in hexameter. All this is pre-eminently true of religious feeling. The truest devotion is the highest poetry. Ac- cordingly, the Bible is in way of eminence a book of poems. And the Psalter of the Bible has ever been the favorite praise-book of the Church. What does not the Church owe in way of devo- tion to the ancient doxologies and hymns, such as Gloria Patri, Gloria in Excelsis, Te Deum, Trisagion, Veni Creator Spiritus! What does she not owe in way of worship to Anatolius, and Ambrose, and Bernard of Clairveau, and Bernard of Cluny, and Thomas Aquinas; to Tauler, and Luther, and Eber, and Weiss, and Gerhard ; to Quarles, and Herbert, and Yaughan, and Addi- son, and Watts, and Doddridge, and Wesley, and Toplady, and Olivers, and Cennick, and Beddome, and Newton, and Cowper, and Montgomery, and Lyte, and Bowring, and Heber, and Faber, and Newman, and Bonar, and Palmer, and Smith ; to Anne Steele, and Letitia Barbauld, and Elisabeth Browning, and Sarah Adams, and Charlotte El- liott, and Alice and Phoebe Carey ! Ah ! here is the real concord of the ages — here is the true ecu- menical. 80 THE DIVINE MAN. Devotion and And as there is a profound relation between devotion and poetry, so there is a profound rela- tion between devotion and music. Devotion borrows music's tone, And music takes devotion's wing ; And, like the bird that bails tbe sun, Tbey soar to beaven, and soaring sing. Accordingly, music is an essential, vital part of public worship. It was so in the ancient temple service. In fact, many of the psalms were com- posed for a distinctively liturgical purpose; for example, Psalms xx, xxix, xlvii, xlviii, lxvi-lxviii, xcii, xcv, c, etc. It was so in the apostolic church : Eph. v, 19. Be filled with the Spirit, speaking one to another in psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs, singing and making melody with your heart to the Lord. coi. m, 16. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly : in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another with psalms, and hymns, and spiritual songs, sing- ing with grace in your hearts unto God. It was so in the Church just succeeding the apostolic. The heathen Pliny, writing to his imperial master Trajan, about the close of the first century, de- scribes the early Church as wont to assemble be- fore light, and sing responsively a song to Christ as to God.* It has been so evermore and every- where since. Even the Quakers, although they allow not music, yet preach intoningly, in a sing- song way. Music is the natural outlet of de- votion. * Ante lucem eonvenire, carmenque Christo quasi Deo dicere invicem. — Epist. x, 97. THE VISIT OF MARY TO ELISABETH. 81 But the music, not less than the feeling and Superiority of the words, must be religious ; singing with grace chantin S- in our hearts unto God, making melody in our hearts unto the Lord. And herein lies the supe- riority of chanting. It is in certain respects the simplest form of music, and therefore offers the least temptation to pride of artistic execution. Moreover, chanting is intelligible. Even things 1 cor. xiv, 7-9. without life, giving a voice, whether pipe or harp, if they give not a distinction in the sounds, how shall it be known what is piped or harped ? For if the trumpet give an uncertain voice, who shall pre- pare himself for war ? So also ye, unless ye utter by the tongue speech easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken ? for ye will be speak- ing into the air. Once more, chanting is the most natural as well as ancient form of temple music. Instruments may be improved, but not the sponta- neous expression of feeling. To the reflective wor- shiper, few things are more inspiring and sublime than the sense of joining in strains centuries old. But devotion is even more than a song, it is a Worship, life. And here even the deaf and dumb may sing, singing and making melody in their hearts to the Lord. Oh, how many spiritual Beethovens there Life. are There are in this loud, stunning tide Of human care and crime, "With whom the melodies abide Of th' everlasting chime ; Who carry music in their heart Through dusky lane and wrangling mart, Plying their daily task with busier feet, Because their secret souls a holy strain repeat. 82 THE DIVINE MAN. What God is like our God, who giveth songs in the night, turning the raven's croak into the nightingale's warble ! God be praised ! there is such a thing as rhythm of life, an inward life- psahn, and so an outward — heaven the phone, earth the antiphone. Our heavenly Father, thy will be done, as in heaven so on earth ! The real liturgy, after all, is the service of daily character. Thus warbling on earth, we shall be trained to take our place in the celestial choir of the true Gai. iv, 26. Notre Dame, even Mother Jerusalem, which is above and free, and where, with the saints of all lands, and ages, and names, we shall chant world Eev. v, 12. without end the true Magnificat : Worthy is the Lamb that hath been slain to receive the power, and riches, and wisdom, and might, and honor, and glory, and blessing ! Amen and amen ! Collect. O Lord Jesus Christ, in whom the whole fullness of the Godhead and manhead, without sin, dwelleth in one Person forever ; who, for us men and for our salvation, didst die and rise again, and now sittest at the right hand of the Father Almighty as our Prophet, Priest, and King, able and willing to save to the uttermost all that come unto God by thee : Thou art worthy to receive the grateful homage of all ages and creeds and tongues ; and, with the glorious com- pany of the apostles, with the goodly fellowship of the prophets, with the noble army of martyrs, with the holy Church throughout all the world, with the heavenly Jeru- salem, the joyful assembly of the first-born on high, with the innumerable host of angels around thy throne, the heaven of heavens, and all the powers therein, we worship and adore thy glorious name, saying with a loud voice : Blessing, and honor, and glory, and power be unto him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb, for ever and ever ! Amen ! THE BIRTH AND TRAINING OF JOHN THE BAPTIST. Luke i, 57-80. Behold, I send my messenger, and he shall prepare the way before me. Malachi iii, 1. VL THE BIRTH AND TRAINING OF JOHN THE BAPTIST. Luke 1, 57-80. The promise made by the angel Gabriel to the The Birth and aged Zacharias in Jerusalem's temple has been ami °S- fulfilled. In one of the quiet towns of the hill country of Judea a son has been born to the saintly Elisabeth. Neighbors and kinsfolk, true to the instincts of a nature not yet dulled by the forced proprieties of an overwrought civilization, gather around her to offer their congratulations. On the arrival of the eighth clay they hold a formal gathering, to celebrate the Abrahamic rite which would make the new-born child a member of Jehovah's covenant people, and also to give him his name. In accordance with a custom of the times, and indeed an instinct of humanity, they are about to call him Zacharias, after the name of his father. The devout mother, remembering Gabriel's bidding in the temple, refuses consent : " Not so ; but he shall be called John [Jehovah's Luke i, 13. grace]." The company, surprised by this decision of the mother, protest : " There is none of thy kindred that is called by this name." Confident 86 THE DIVINE MAN. that the father would in paternal pride insist that his son should bear his own name, thej turn to him, and, making signs, ask how he would have him named. The mute old man asks for a writing- tablet, and pens the simple words : " His name is John." ]STo sooner has he penned this than his tongue, which has been locked for months, is loosed, and he speaks, praising God. The sudden return of the power of speech and his evidently rapt state fill the spectators with amazement, and, recalling, it may be, the ancient and precious prophecy of the coming Messiah, they exclaim, " What, then, shall this child be \ " Nor is this all. The Holy Spirit takes possession of the aged priest, he is filled with the prophetic rapture, and, Luke i, 46-55. as Mary weeks before had chanted her Magnificat^ so now Zacharias chants his Benedictus : The Benedic- Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel ; tus - For he hath visited and wrought redemption for his Luke i, 68-79. people, And hath raised up a horn of salvation for us In the house of his servant David (As he spake by the mouth of his holy prophets which have been of old), Salvation from our enemies, and from the hand of all that hate us ; To shew mercy towards our fathers, And to remember his holy covenant ; The oath which he sware unto Abraham our father, To grant unto us that we being delivered out of the hand of our enemies Should serve him without fear, In holiness and righteousness before him all our days. Yea and thou, child, shalt be called the prophet of the Most Hkh: BIRTH AND TRAINING OF JOHN THE BAPTIST. 87 For thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to make ready his ways ; To give knowledge of salvation unto his people In the remission of their sins, Because of the tender mercy of our God, "Whereby the dayspring from on high shall visit us, To shine upon them that sit in darkness and the shadow of death ; To guide our feet into the way of peace. ISTor "has that ancient JBenedictus of Zaeharias lost its power. Like the Magnificat of Mary, it is still chanted in many of our temples, and will continue to be the Church's song of inspiration till the day- spring from on high, even the bright morning star, sparkles again in the horizon of the new heav- ens and earth, nevermore to set And the child grew, and waxed strong in TiainiDgofthe spirit, and was in the deserts till the day of his Forerunner, shewing unto Israel. Then began to be fulfilled, in outline, at least, Gabriel's prophecy to Zaeha- rias, as he was serving by the altar of incense, touching his coming Son : " He shall be great in Luke i, 15. the sight of the Lord, and he shall drink no wine nor strong drink ; and he shall be filled with the Holy Spirit, even from his mother's womb." The child John seems to have grown up in strictest seclusion and self-denial, according to the ancient law of the JNazarite. His home, if home it might be called, was the wilderness of Judea — the rug- ged desert west of the Dead Sea ; his garb a rai- Matt, m, 4. ment of camel's hair and a leathern girdle; his food locusts and wild honey; himself the very counterpart of Elijah the Tishbite. 2 Kings i, 8. 88 THE DIVINE MAN. Parneirs "Her- Far in the wild, unknown to public view, From youth to age a reverend hermit grew; The moss his bed, the cave his humble cell, His food the fruits, his drink the crystal well : Remote from man, he spent his days, Prayer all his business, all his pleasure praise. Thus grew up in desert obscurity and Nazarite asceticism, John, the Forerunner, till the time, Luke ui, 23. when about thirty years old, he was manifested unto Israel, suddenly bursting forth as a meteor in the shy of the Hebrew night. Such is the story of the birth and training of the Harbinger. The story suggests many lessons. I will men- tion but two. "Coming And, first, it is a fine illustration of the prov- their S Shad- er ^' " Coming events cast their shadows before." owsBefore." It was meet that the King of kings, in making advent, should have his avant-courier. It is glori- ous to know that, when he did make his advent, John, the son of Zacharias, emerged from his Lukein, i-3. seclusion, and came into all the region about Jor- dan, preaching the baptism of repentance unto remission of sins, saying : " Repent ye : for the kingdom of heaven is at hand " ; thus fulfilling a prediction already seven hundred years old, even the prophecy of the son of Amoz : Isaiah xl, 3-5. The voice of one that crieth, Prepare ye in the wilderness the way of Jehovah, Make straight in the desert a high way for our God. Every valley shall be exalted, And every mountain and hill shall be made low ; And the crooked shall be made straight, < - 1 - 1 1 1 - BIRTH AND TRAINING OF JOHN THE BAPTIST. 89 And the rough places plain, And the glory of Jehovah shall he revealed, And all flesh shall see it together : For the mouth of Jehovah hath spoken it. Yes, it was meet that the Sun of Righteousness should have His morning star. Secondly, The place of asceticism in the Chris- Place of Ohri tian life. For it can not be denied that Christ's S^ Asccti - religion demands as one of its essential conditions self-denial. Presupposing a fallen, inverted na- ture, where the outward has usurped the inward — the flesh, the spirit — Christianity undertakes a restoration of the primal order, proposing victory in the very sphere of defeat. It cages the wild beasts of the lusts of the flesh, and scourges re- fractory passions. Thus, St. Paul himself buffeted Kis own body, and brought it into bondage. It is a sure way to get spiritual robustness. Much is said in our day about the need of "muscular Christianity." Would God as much were said about the need of Christian muscle ! As a matter of fact, the stalwart, majestic characters of Script- ure were in the habit of putting themselves ever and anon under an ascetic regimen. It was true of Moses, of David, of Daniel. Our blessed Lord himself went into the wilderness, and fasted forty days and forty nights. So, also, many of the noblest characters in Christian history have been ascet- ics : witness a Basil, Gregory Nazianzen, Chrysos- tom, Jerome, Columba, Augustine of Canterbury. Their power lay, in part at least, in their asceti- cism. It certainly was so in the case of John of the Desert. His hermit-life gave him simplicity 90 THE DIVINE MAN. of manners, freedom from the entanglements of society and the elaborate artifices of a complicated civilization. It also gave him self- reliance, forti- tude, courage. An ascetic life is ever apt to make what in some respects is a grand character. It was the secret of John's famous power when, in the Matt, iu, 5, 6. day of his shewing to Israel, Jerusalem, and all Juclea, and all the region round about Jordan, went out unto him, to be baptized by him in the river Jordan, confessing their sins. Asceticism Yet an ascetic life is fraught with perils. It Peril? Wlth tempts to self-righteousness, morbid gloom, and fanaticism. We only need recall the abominable vices of the mediaeval monks — their indolence, avarice, hypocrisy, and sensuality — to be certified that monasticism has no just jjlace in the Christian economy. Happy the day for those European countries when the monasteries were suppressed ! ]STo, man was made for man. He may escape so- ciety; but in escaping society, he disowns duty. Matt, xiii, 33. The leaven of the kingdom must be put into the meal of the world. Yiewecl in this light, monas- Miiton's "Areo- ticism is both selfish and cowardly. "I cannot praise," said John Milton, " a fugitive and clois- tered virtue, unexercised and unbreathed, that never sallies out and sees her adversaries, but slinks out of the race, where the immortal garland is to be run for, not without dust and heat." The asceticism which Jesus Christ, alike by word and by example, demands is self-denial, not for self- denial's own sake, but for the sake of others. The gallant Sir Philip Sidney, fatally wounded on the field of Zutphen, and calling in his fever for drink, pagitica. BIRTH AND TRAINING OF JOHN THE BAPTIST. 91 and then observing a wounded comrade, and bid- ding the bottle to be carried to him, saying, " Thy necessity is greater than mine," is an exquisite instance of the true asceticism. Christian self- denial means vicarious self-sacrifice. And the Divine Man is here as everywhere Jesus, not else our blessed model. He was in the world, but ^° o b d °'j our ho was not of the world ; and as he was, so we are John xvii; 16 . to be. Asceticism is not a form ; but a spirit : not a will-worship, and willful humiliation, and severity coi. a, 23. to the body ; but a mortification of our evil pas- coi. m, 5. sions. It is easier to follow John the Hermit than to follow Jesus the Comrade. And so he that is Matt, xi, 11. least in the kingdom of the Son is greater than John the Baptizer. After all, the followers of Jesus are the true " Knights of St. John," and this because they are the true " Order of Jesuits." Almighty God, by whose providence thy servant John Collect. Baptist was wonderfully born, and sent to prepare the way of thy Son our Saviour, by preaching repentance ; Make us so to follow his doctrine and holy life, that we may truly repent according to his preaching ; and after his ex- ample constantly speak the truth, boldly rebuke vice, and patiently suffer for the truth's sake : through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen. THE ANNUNCIATION TO JOSEPH. Matthew i, 18-25. The name which is above every name. Philippians ii, 9. Resolve. Matt, i, 18, 19. VII. THE ANNUNCIATION TO JOSEPH. Matthew i, 18-25. The promise of a supernatural motherhood The Delicate which had been announced by Gabriel to the vir- gin of Nazareth was a secret as awful as blessed. It was a secret which she, spotless virgin that she was, could not divulge to others, least of all to her affianced. When, therefore, the signs of coining maternity became evident, the virgin's condition was truly and inexpressibly tragical. Profound emblem it was of the unspeakable abasement of the Divine Man himself; a cloud rested on him from the very beginning, the shadow fell on his very cradle. Verily, God sent forth his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh. The betrothed car- penter of Nazareth, ignorant, as we can easily be- lieve, of Gabriel's annunciation to his affianced, would naturally be the first to feel a dark surmise. But he was, as a blessed Providence had graciously arranged, a just, considerate man. Unspeakably grieved though he was, he had a sense of the sacred dignity which belongs to man as the instinctive guardian of woman. And so, though forced by the pressure of circumstances to disown his be- 96 THE DIVINE MAN. The Blessed Annuncia- tion. Matt, i, 20, 21. The Name, Jesus. Saved from Sin. trothed, jet he humanely resolved to disown her as gently and inconspicuously as possible. Joseph her husband, being a righteous man, and not will- ing to make her a public example, was minded to put her away privily. Now, while Joseph was thinking of these things, behold an angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a dream, saying, " Joseph, thou son of David, fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife ; for that which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost. And she shall bring forth a son : and thou shalt call his name Jesus ; for it is he that shall save his people from their sins." It is a wonderful annunciation. Let us ponder it in detail. And, first, the wonderful name : " Thou shalt call his name Jesus [that is, Jehovah our Salva- tion] ; for it is he that shall save his people from their sins." From this name and from the reason assigned for it we learn three great things : First, there is something to be saved from — it is sins; secondly, there is some one who will save — it is Jesus ; thirdly, there are those whom Jesus will save — it is his people. And, first, there is something to be saved from — Snr. of sin. For it is not possible that sin should not incur the wrath of God ; and God's wrath is sin's penalty. The penal consequence of God's dis- obeyed law is not an appendage arbitrarily annexed to his law : it grows out of his law, or rather out of his very being and nature, spontaneously, nor- mally, naturally, without volition on his part. It THE ANNUNCIATION TO JOSEPH. 9? is not that God by an act of sovereign will chooses to punish sin :.it is that, being what he is, he can not help punishing sin. For that great law, alike written and unwritten, which all mankind have broken and under whose condemnation all mankind lie, is not a piece of legislation, not a statute or edict which God has chosen to frame and impose on our race : but it is a part of his very being, eternal as his nature, immortal as his character, infinite as his perfections. And as God did not frame this law, so God can not destroy it or soften its penalty. Existing by no edict or voli- tion of his own, but consubstantial with himself, he can no more detach or reduce its penalty than he can change or annihilate himself. From the very nature of the case, in simple virtue of his own being and perfections, he is compelled to feel the wrath. And this feeling the wrath must inex- orably issue in the infliction of the penalty. And this penalty is death — death of the spirit, of which death of the body is a consequence, and in some awful sense a symbol and type. Again, man needs to be saved from the guilt of sin. For there is something worse than the being punished — it is the deserving punishment. Remitting the penalty of sin is not the same as cleansing from the guilt of sin. To illustrate : Here is a man who has murdered another in cold blood. He has been detected, tried, convicted, sentenced. The Governor has been persuaded to remit the penalty. The news is brought to the cell of the condemned. Doubtless he feels a great relief. But, after all, is he any purer in soul ? 9 lour 98 THE DIVINE MAN. Has the pardon made him innocent of murder ? Is he not just as much an assassin still as he was the moment he fired the fatal shot ? He might receive from the Governor ten thousand pardons ; the whole world might join in pronouncing him innocent : it matters not; the red stain still is and evermore will be on his guilty soul. Pardon may save from the gallows ; but pardon will not save from guilt. The sinner may be saved from hell ; but that does not make him holy. Man needs to be saved from the guilt of sin not less than from the penalty of sin ; from the wretched sense of being sinful not less than from sin's penal consequences. Once more, man needs to be saved from the 'power of sin. It is not enough that he is rescued from the penalty of sin, not even enough that he is cleansed from the guilt of sin : he also needs to be freed from the sway of sin ; so that sin shall no longer be over him an influence or power. It is not enough that the murderer is absolved from the murder ; he needs to have the evil heart — the pos- sibility of being a murderer — taken out of him. The sinner not only needs cleansing from the past, he also needs protection for the future. lie needs to be lifted into that state of blessed invulnerable- ness in which he will not sin and can not sin.* These, then, are the three things from which man needs to be saved : the doom of sin, the guilt of sin, the sway of sin. Can he be thus saved % s the Sav- Secondly : One there is who will save — Jesus, Beat a ncccssitas honi. — Augustine. THE ANNUNCIATION TO JOSEPH. 99 Son of God and Son of man, the Word made flesh, the Divine Man. Listen to St. Paul, even him who felt himself to be the chief of sinners : " Faithful is the saying 1 Tim. i, 15. and worthy of all acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners." And how does Christ Jesus save sinners ? He saves them, practically speaking, by becoming himself a man, and so getting himself into connection with man's nature and condition and feelings and doom ; by reconciling fallen men to God, assuring them, 2 cor. v, 18-21. through his own blessed sympathies and compas- sions, that God is reconciled to them in Christ ; by winning guilty man's attention and gratitude and reverence and trust and love through his own un- utterable condescension in sharing with him sym- pathetically his trials and woes, bearing his griefs, carrying his sorrows, dying his death ; by divert- ing the sinner's penalty from him, becoming in some mysterious, awfully inexplicable way his substitute before God ; by cleansing him from his sins, bathing him in his own lustrating blood ; by answering the demands of the sinner's con- science hi respect to the vindication of God's law and righteousness, assuring him that he — the Kec- onciler— is God as well as man, and that, if God himself can be willing and just to forgive, the sinner ought also to be willing to be forgiven ; by breaking the power of indwelling sin through " the expulsive power of a new affection " ; by covering the sinner's guilt with his own infinite righteousness ; by drowning the sinner's sense of guilt in the ocean of his own infinite blessedness. 100 THE DIVINE MAN. Tims does the Divine Man save from sin. Right- ly, then, is he named Jesus, that is, Jehovah-Sav- iour. And in no other name is there salvation ; Acts iv, 12. for there is no other name under heaven given among men wherein we must be saved. There is none Qther name than thine, Jehovah Jesus ! Name divine ! On which to rest for sins forgiven, For peace with God, for hope of heaven. Name above every name! thy praise Shall fill the remnant of my days : Jehovah Jesus! Name divine! Rock of salvation ! thou art mine. Jesus' People Thirdly : There are those whom Jesus will Saved. gaye — j^ PE0PLE- There is a sense, indeed, in which it is glori- Heb. ii, 9. ously true that Jesus Christ has, by the grace of i Tim. iv, io. God, tasted death for every man, being the Saviour of all men, specially of them that believe. Ac- cordingly, he has authorized his evangelists to Mark xvi, is. proffer his salvation to every human being : " Go ye into all the world, and preach the glad tidings Rev. xxii, 17. to the whole creation." The Spirit and the bride say, Gome ! And he that heareth, let him say, Come ! And he that is athirst, let him come ; he that will, let him take the water of life freely. But while all this is preciously true — while, to use the language of Andrew Fuller, "the salva- tion which Jesus offers is sufficient for all who will take it, yet it is efficient for only those who do take it." And it is precisely those who do take it whom Jesus Christ calls his people ; and these are THE ANNUNCIATION TO JOSEPH. 101 they whom he will save. Thou shalt call his name Jesus ; for it is he that shall save his people from their sins. And none others will he save. How can he ? Since the Christian salvation implies vol- untary, glad acceptance on the part of him who is saved, as well as gracious power on the part of him who saves, how can Jesus Christ save the man who refuses to be saved ? Omnipotence itself, consid- ered as simple, sheer force, can not compel joyous obedience, glad love, real loyalty of heart. It is of the very essence of a moral nature that its will is free. How, then, can Jesus Christ save a man who will not be saved % In fact, Christ's salvation hinges on this very thing — the willingness to be saved : " Ye will not come to me, that ye may have John v, 40. life." Already under condemnation, and refusing or simply neglecting the great salvation, what right Heb. a, 3. has he to escape if he could ; how can he escape if he would ? He that believeth not is twice con- demned : first, because he has disobeyed Sinai's law ; and secondly, because, having disobeyed Sinai's law, he accepts not Calvary's pardon. The Gospel, therefore, is and must be either a savor of 2 cor. ii, 16. life unto life, or a savor of death unto death. God be praised, he has given his incarnate Son a multitude which no man can number. And these shall never perish, and no one shall snatch Johns, 28. them out of his hand. They are his in the eter- nal council of grace, elect according to the fore- 1 Pet