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THE GREATEST THING IN THE WORLD
by Henry
Drummond
First
Published c1880
THOUGH I speak with the tongues
of men and of angels, and have not love, I am become as a sounding brass, or a
tinkling cymbal. And though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all
mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could
remove mountains, and have not LOVE I am nothing. And though I bestow all my
goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned, and have not
Love, it profiteth me nothing.
Love suffereth long, and is kind;
Love envieth not;
Love vaunteth not itself is not
puffed up,
Doth not behave itself unseemly,
Seeketh not her own,
Is not easily provoked,
Thinketh no evil;
Rejoiceth not in iniquity, but
rejoiceth in the truth;
Beareth all things, believeth all
things, hopeth all things, endureth all things.
Love never faileth: but whether
there be prophecies, they shall fail; whether there be tongues, they shall
cease; whether there be knowledge, it shall vanish away. For we know in part,
and we prophesy in part. But when that which is perfect is come, then that which
is in part shall be done away. When I was a child, I spake as a child, I
understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away
childish things. For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face:
now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known. And now
abideth faith, hope, Love, these three; but the greatest of these is Love.--I
COR xiii.
EVERY one has asked himself the great question of
antiquity as of the modern world: What is the summum bonum--the supreme
good? You have life before you. Once only you can live it. What is the noblest
object of desire, the supreme gift to covet?
We have been accustomed to be told that the
greatest thing in the religious world is Faith. That great word has been the
key-note for centuries of the popular religion; and we have easily learned to
look upon it as the greatest thing in the world. Well, we are wrong. If we have
been told that, we may miss the mark. I have taken you, in the chapter which I
have just read, to Christianity at its source; and there we have seen, "The
greatest of these is love." It is not an oversight. Paul was speaking of
faith just a moment before. He says, "If I have all faith, so that I can
remove mountains, and have not love, I am nothing. "So far from forgetting,
he deliberately contrasts them, "Now abideth Faith, Hope, Love," and
without a moment's hesitation, the decision falls, "The greatest of these
is Love."
And it is not prejudice. A man is apt to recommend
to others his own strong point. Love was not Paul's strong point. The observing
student can detect a beautiful tenderness growing and ripening all through his
character as Paul gets old; but the hand that wrote, "The greatest of these
is love," when we meet it first, is stained with blood.
Nor is this letter to the Corinthians peculiar in
singling out love as the summum bonum. The masterpieces of Christianity
are agreed about it. Peter says, "Above all things have fervent love among
yourselves." Above all things. And John goes farther, "God is
love." And you remember the profound remark which Paul makes elsewhere,
"Love is the fulfilling of the law." Did you ever think what he meant
by that? In those days men were working their passage to Heaven by keeping the
Ten Commandments, and the hundred and ten other commandments which they had
manufactured out of them. Christ said, I will show you a more simple way. If you
do one thing, you will do these hundred and ten things, without ever thinking
about them. If you love, you will unconsciously fulfil the whole law. And you
can readily see for yourselves how that must be so. Take any of the
commandments. "Thou shalt have no other gods before Me." If a man love
God, you will not require to tell him that. Love is the fulfilling of that law.
"Take not His name in vain." Would he ever dream of taking His name in
vain if he loved Him? "Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy."
Would he not be too glad to have one day in seven to dedicate more exclusively
to the object of his affection? Love would fulfil all these laws regarding God.
And so, if he loved Man, you would never think of telling him to honour his
father and mother. He could not do anything else. It would be preposterous to
tell him not to kill. You could only insult him if you suggested that he should
not steal -.how could he steal from those he loved? It would be superfluous to
beg him not to bear false witness against his neighbour. If he loved him it
would be the last thing he would do. And you would never dream of urging him not
to covet what his neighbours had. He would rather they possessed it than
himself. In this way "Love is the fulfilling of the law." It is the
rule for fulfilling all rules, the new commandment for keeping all the old
commandments, Christ's one secret of the Christian life.
Now Paul had learned that; and in this noble
eulogy he has given us the most wonderful and original account extant of the summum
bonum. We may divide it into three parts. In the beginning of the short
chapter, we have Love contrasted; in the heart of it, we have Love analysed;
towards the end we have Love defended as the supreme gift.
THE CONTRAST
PAUL begins by contrasting Love with other things
that men in those days thought much of. I shall not attempt to go over those
things in detail. Their inferiority is already obvious.
He contrasts it with eloquence. And what a noble
gift it is, the power of playing upon the souls and wills of men, and rousing
them to lofty purposes and holy deeds. Paul says, "If I speak with the
tongues of men and of angels, and have not love, I am become as sounding brass,
or a tinkling cymbal." And we all know why. We have all felt the brazenness
of words without emotion, the hollowness, the unaccountable unpersuasiveness, of
eloquence behind which lies no Love.
He contrasts it with prophecy. He contrasts it
with mysteries. He contrasts it with faith. He contrasts it with charity. Why is
Love greater than faith? Because the end is greater than the means. And why is
it greater than charity? Because the whole is greater than the part. Love is
greater than faith, because the end is greater than the means. What is the use
of having faith? It is to connect the soul with God. And what is the object of
connecting man with God? That he may become like God. But God is Love. Hence
Faith, the means, is in order to Love, the end. Love, therefore, obviously is
greater than faith. It is greater than charity, again, because the whole is
greater than a part. Charity is only a little bit of Love, one of the
innumerable avenues of Love, and there may even be, and there is, a great deal
of charity without Love. It is a very easy thing to toss a copper to a beggar on
the street; it is generally an easier thing than not to do it. Yet Love is just
as often in the withholding. We purchase relief from the sympathetic feelings
roused by the spectacle of misery, at the copper's cost. It is too cheap--too
cheap for us, and often too dear for the beggar. If we really loved him we would
either do more for him, or less.
Then Paul contrasts it with sacrifice and
martyrdom. And I beg the little band of would-be missionaries and I have the
honour to call some of you by this name for the first time--to remember that
though you give your bodies to be burned, and have not Love, it profits
nothing--nothing! You can take nothing greater to the heathen world than the
impress and reflection of the Love of God upon your own character. That is the
universal language. It will take you years to speak in Chinese, or in the
dialects of India. From the day you land, that language of Love, understood by
all, will be pouring forth its unconscious eloquence. It is the man who is the
missionary, it is not his words. His character is his message. In the heart of
Africa, among the great Lakes, I have come across black men and women who
remembered the only white man they ever saw before--David Livingstone; and as
you cross his footsteps in that dark continent, men's faces light up as they
speak of the kind Doctor who passed there years ago. They could not understand
him; but they felt the Love that beat in his heart. Take into your new sphere of
labour, where you also mean to lay down your life, that simple charm, and your
lifework must succeed. You can take nothing greater, you need take nothing less.
It is-not worth while going if you take anything less. You may take every
accomplishment; you may be braced for every sacrifice; but if you give your body
to be burned, and have not Love, it will profit you and the cause of Christ
nothing.
THE ANALYSIS
AFTER contrasting Love with these things, Paul, in
three verses, very short, gives us an amazing analysis of what this supreme
thing is. I ask you to look at it. It is a compound thing, he tells us. It is
like light. As you have seen a man of science take a beam of light and pass it
through a crystal prism, as you have seen it come out on the other side of the
prism broken up into its component colours--red, and blue, and yellow, and
violet, and orange, and all the colours of the rainbow--so Paul passes this
thing, Love, through the magnificent prism of his inspired intellect, and it
comes out on the other side broken up into its elements. And in these few words
we have what one might call the Spectrum of Love, the analysis of Love. Will you
observe what its elements are? Will you notice that they have common names; that
they are virtues which we hear about every day; that they are things which can
be practised by every man in every place in life; and how, by a multitude of
small things and ordinary virtues, the supreme thing, the summum bonum,
is made up?
The Spectrum of Love has nine ingredients:--
Patience . . . . . . "Love suffereth
long."
Kindness . . . . . . "And is kind."
Generosity . . . . "Love envieth not."
Humility . . . . . . "Love vaunteth not
itself, is not puffed up."
Courtesy . . . . . . "Doth not behave itself
unseemly."
Unselfishness . . "Seeketh not her own."
Good Temper . . "Is not easily
provoked."
Guilelessness . . "Thinketh no evil."
Sincerity . . . . . . "Rejoiceth not in
iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth."
Patience; kindness; generosity; humility;
courtesy; unselfishness; good temper; guilelessness; sincerity--these make up
the supreme gift, the stature of the perfect man. You will observe that all are
in relation to men, in relation to life, in relation to the known to-day and the
near to-morrow, and not to the unknown eternity. We hear much of love to God;
Christ spoke much of love to man. We make a great deal of peace with heaven;
Christ made much of peace on earth. Religion is not a strange or added thing,
but the inspiration of the secular life, the breathing of an eternal spirit
through this temporal world. The supreme thing, in short, is not a thing at all,
but the giving of a further finish to the multitudinous words and acts which
make up the sum of every common day.
There is no time to do more than make a passing
note upon each of these ingredients. Love is Patience. This is the normal
attitude of Love; Love passive, Love waiting to begin; not in a hurry; calm;
ready to do its work when the summons comes, but meantime wearing the ornament
of a meek and quiet spirit. Love suffers long; beareth all things; believeth all
things; hopeth all things. For Love understands, and therefore waits.
Kindness. Love active. Have you ever
noticed how much of Christ's life was spent in doing kind things--in merely
doing kind things? Run over it with that in view and you will find that He spent
a great proportion of His time simply in making people happy, in doing good
turns to people. There is only one thing greater than happiness in the world,
and that is holiness; and it is not in our keeping; but what God has put
in our power is the happiness of those about us, and that is largely to be
secured by our being kind to them.
"The greatest thing," says some one,
"a man can do for his Heavenly Father is to be kind to some of His other
children." I wonder why it is that we are not all kinder than we are? How
much the world needs it. How easily it is done. How instantaneously it acts. How
infallibly it is remembered. How superabundantly it pays itself back--for there
is no debtor in the world so honourable, so superbly honourable, as Love.
"Love never faileth". Love is success, Love is happiness, Love is
life. "Love, I say, "with Browning, "is energy of Life."
"For life, with
all it yields of joy and woe
And hope and
fear,
Is just our
chance o' the prize of learning love--
How love
might be, hath been indeed, and is."
Where Love is, God is. He that dwelleth in Love
dwelleth in God. God is love. Therefore love. Without distinction,
without calculation, without procrastination, love. Lavish it upon the poor,
where it is very easy; especially upon the rich, who often need it most; most of
all upon our equals, where it is very difficult, and for whom perhaps we each do
least of all. There is a difference between trying to please and giving
pleasure Give pleasure. Lose no chance of giving pleasure. For that is the
ceaseless and anonymous triumph of a truly loving spirit.
"I shall pass through this world but once.
Any good thing therefore that I can do, or any kindness that I can show to any
human being, let me do it now. Let me not defer it or neglect it, for I shall
not pass this way again."
Generosity. "Love envieth not"
This is Love in competition with others. Whenever you attempt a good work you
will find other men doing the same kind of work, and probably doing it better.
Envy them not. Envy is a feeling of ill-will to those who are in the same line
as ourselves, a spirit of covetousness and detraction. How little Christian work
even is a protection against un-Christian feeling. That most despicable of all
the unworthy moods which cloud a Christian's soul assuredly waits for us on the
threshold of every work, unless we are fortified with this grace of magnanimity.
Only one thing truly need the Christian envy, the large, rich, generous soul
which "envieth not."
And then, after having learned all that, you have
to learn this further thing, Humility-- to put a seal upon your lips and
forget what you have done. After you have been kind, after Love has stolen forth
into the world and done its beautiful work, go back into the shade again and say
nothing about it Love hides even from itself. Love waives even
self-satisfaction. "Love vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up."
The fifth ingredient is a somewhat strange one to
find in this summum bonum: Courtesy. This is Love in society, Love
in relation to etiquette. "Love doth not behave itself unseemly."
Politeness has been defined as love in trifles. Courtesy is said to be love in
little things. And the one secret of politeness is to love. Love cannot behave
itself unseemly. You can put the most untutored person into the highest society,
and if they have a reservoir of love in their heart, they will not behave
themselves unseemly. They simply cannot do it. Carlyle said of Robert Burns that
there was no truer gentleman in Europe than the ploughman-poet. It was because
he loved everything--the mouse, and the daisy, and all the things, great and
small, that God had made. So with this simple passport he could mingle with any
society, and enter courts and palaces from his little cottage on the banks of
the Ayr. You know the meaning of the word "gentleman." It means a
gentle man--a man who does things gently, with love. And that is the whole art
and mystery of it. The gentleman cannot in the nature of things do an ungentle,
an ungentlemanly thing. The un-gentle soul, the inconsiderate, unsympathetic
nature cannot do anything else. "Love doth not behave itself
unseemly."
Unselfishness. "Love seeketh not her
own." Observe: Seeketh not even that which is her own. In Britain the
Englishman is devoted, and rightly, to his rights. But there come times when a
man may exercise even the higher right of giving up his rights. Yet Paul does
not summon us to give up our rights. Love strikes much deeper. It would have us
not seek them at all, ignore them, eliminate the personal element altogether
from our calculations. It is not hard to give up our rights. They are often
external. The difficult thing is to give up ourselves. The more difficult thing
still is not to seek things for ourselves at all. After we have sought them,
bought them, won them, deserved them, we have taken the cream off them for
ourselves already. Little cross then, perhaps, to give them up. But not to seek
them, to look every man not on his own things, but on the things of others--id
opus est. "Seekest thou great things for thyself? "said the
prophet; "seek them not." Why? Because there is no greatness in
things. Things cannot be great. The only greatness is unselfish love. Even
self-denial in itself is nothing, is almost a mistake. Only a great purpose or a
mightier love can justify the waste. It is more difficult, I have said, not to
seek our own at all, than, having sought it, to give it up. I must take that
back. It is only true of a partly selfish heart. Nothing is a hardship to Love,
and nothing is hard. I believe that Christ's yoke is easy. Christ's
"yoke" is just His way of taking life. And I believe it is an easier
way than any other. I believe it is a happier way than any other. The most
obvious lesson in Christ's teaching is that there is no happiness in having and
getting anything, but only in giving. I repeat, there is no happiness in
having or in getting, but only in giving. And half the world is on the wrong
scent in the pursuit of happiness. They think it consists in having and getting,
and in being served by others. It consists in giving, and in serving others. He
that would be great among you, said Christ, let him serve. He that would be
happy, let him remember that there is but one way--it is more blessed, it is
more happy, to give than to receive.
The next ingredient is a very remarkable one: Good
Temper. "Love is not easily provoked." Nothing could be more
striking than to find this here. We are inclined to look upon bad temper as a
very harmless weakness. We speak of it as a mere infirmity of nature, a family
failing, a matter of temperament, not a thing to take into very serious account
in estimating a man's character. And yet here, right in the heart of this
analysis of love, it finds a place; and the Bible again and again returns to
condemn it as one of the most destructive elements in human nature.
The peculiarity of ill temper is that it is the
vice of the virtuous. It is often the one blot on an otherwise noble character.
You know men who are all but perfect, and women who would be entirely perfect,
but for an easily ruffled, quick-tempered, or "touchy" disposition.
This compatibility of ill temper with high moral character is one of the
strangest and saddest problems of ethics. The truth is there are two great
classes of sins--sins of the Body, and sins of the Disposition.
The Prodigal Son may be taken as a type of the first, the Elder Brother of the
second. Now society has no doubt whatever as to which of these is the worse. Its
brand falls, without a challenge, upon the Prodigal. But are we right? We have
no balance to weigh one another's sins, and coarser and finer are but human
words; but faults in the higher nature may be less venial than those in the
lower, and to the eye of Him who is Love, a sin against Love may seem a hundred
times more base. No form of vice, not worldliness, not greed of gold, not
drunkenness itself, does more to un-Christianise society than evil temper. For
embittering life, for breaking up communities, for destroying the most sacred
relationships, for devastating homes, for withering up men and women, for taking
the bloom off childhood; in short, for sheer gratuitous misery-producing power,
this influence stands alone. Look at the Elder Brother, moral, hard-working,
patient, dutiful--let him get all credit for his virtues--look at this man, this
baby, sulking outside his own father's door. "He was angry," we read,
"and would not go in." Look at the effect upon the father, upon the
servants, upon the happiness of the guests. Judge of the effect upon the
Prodigal--and how many prodigals are kept out of the Kingdom of God by the
unlovely characters of those who profess to be inside? Analyse, as a study in
Temper, the thunder-cloud itself as it gathers upon the Elder Brother's brow.
What is it made of? Jealousy, anger, pride, uncharity, cruelty,
self-righteousness, touchiness, doggedness, sullenness--these are the
ingredients of this dark and loveless soul. In varying proportions, also, these
are the ingredients of all ill temper. Judge if such sins of the disposition are
not worse to live in, and for others to live with, than sins of the body. Did
Christ indeed not answer the question Himself when He said, "I say unto
you, that the publicans and the harlots go into the Kingdom of Heaven before
you." There is really no place in Heaven for a disposition like this. A man
with such a mood could only make Heaven miserable for all the people in it.
Except, therefore, such a man be born again, he cannot, he simply cannot, enter
the Kingdom of Heaven. For it is perfectly certain-- and you will not
misunderstand me--that to enter Heaven a man must take it with him.
You will see then why Temper is significant. It is
not in what it is alone, but in what it reveals. This is why I take the liberty
now of speaking of it with such unusual plainness. It is a test for love, a
symptom, a revelation of an unloving nature at bottom. It is the intermittent
fever which bespeaks unintermittent disease within; the occasional bubble
escaping to the surface which betrays some rottenness underneath; a sample of
the most hidden products of the soul dropped involuntarily when off one's guard;
in a word, the lightning form of a hundred hideous and un-Christian sins. For a
want of patience, a want of kindness, a want of generosity, a want of courtesy,
a want of unselfishness, are all instantaneously symbolised in one flash of
Temper.
Hence it is not enough to deal with the temper. We
must go to the source, and change the inmost nature, and the angry humours will
die away of themselves. Souls are made sweet not by taking the acid fluids out,
but by putting something in--a great Love, a new Spirit, the Spirit of Christ.
Christ, the Spirit of Christ, interpenetrating ours, sweetens, purifies,
transforms all. This only can eradicate what is wrong, work a chemical change,
renovate and regenerate, and rehabilitate the inner man. Will-power does not
change men. Time does not change men. Christ does. Therefore "Let that mind
be in you which was also in Christ Jesus." Some of us have not much time to
lose. Remember, once more, that this is a matter of life or death. I cannot help
speaking urgently, for myself, for yourselves. "Whoso shall offend one of
these little ones, which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone
were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the
sea." That is to say, it is the deliberate verdict of the Lord Jesus that
it is better not to live than not to love. It is better not to live than not
to love.
Guilelessness and Sincerity may
be dismissed almost with a word. Guilelessness is the grace for suspicious
people. And the possession of it is the great secret of personal influence. You
will find, if you think for a moment, that the people who influence you are
people who believe in you. In an atmosphere of suspicion men shrivel up; but in
that atmosphere they expand, and find encouragement and educative fellowship. It
is a wonderful thing that here and there in this hard, uncharitable world there
should still be left a few rare souls who think no evil. This is the great
unworldliness. Love "thinketh no evil," imputes no motive, sees the
bright side, puts the best construction on every action. What a delightful state
of mind to live in! What a stimulus and benediction even to meet with it for a
day! To be trusted is to be saved. And if we try to influence or elevate others,
we shall soon see that success is in proportion to their belief of our belief in
them. For the respect of another is the first restoration of the self-respect a
man has lost; our ideal of what he is becomes to him the hope and pattern of
what he may become.
"Love rejoiceth not in iniquity, but
rejoiceth in the truth." I have called this Sincerity from the words
rendered in the Authorised Version by "rejoiceth in the truth." And,
certainly, were this the real translation, nothing could be more just. For he
who loves will love Truth not less than men. He will rejoice in the
Truth--rejoice not in what he has been taught to believe; not in this Church's
doctrine or in that; not in this ism or in that ism; but "in the Truth."
He will accept only what is real; he will strive to get at facts; he will search
for Truth with a humble and unbiased mind, and cherish whatever he finds at any
sacrifice. But the more literal translation of the Revised Version calls for
just such a sacrifice for truth's sake here. For what Paul really meant is, as
we there read, "Rejoiceth not in unrighteousness, but rejoiceth with the
truth," a quality which probably no one English word--and certainly not Sincerity--adequately
defines. It includes, perhaps more strictly, the self-restraint which refuses to
make capital out of others' faults; the charity which delights not in exposing
the weakness of others, but "covereth all things"; the sincerity of
purpose which endeavours to see things as they are, and rejoices to find them
better than suspicion feared or calumny denounced.
So much for the analysis of Love. Now the business
of our lives is to have these things fitted into our characters. That is the
supreme work to which we need to address ourselves in this world, to learn Love.
Is life not full of opportunities for learning Love? Every man and woman every
day has a thousand of them. The world is not a play-ground; it is a schoolroom.
Life is not a holiday, but an education. And the one eternal lesson for us all
is how better we can love What makes a man a good cricketer? Practice.
What makes a man a good artist, a good sculptor, a good musician? Practice. What
makes a man a good linguist, a good stenographer? Practice. What makes a man a
good man? Practice. Nothing else. There is nothing capricious about religion. We
do not get the soul in different ways, under different laws, from those in which
we get the body and the mind. If a man does not exercise his arm he develops no
biceps muscle; and if a man does not exercise his soul, he acquires no muscle in
his soul, no strength of character, no vigour of moral fibre, nor beauty of
spiritual growth. Love is not a thing of enthusiastic emotion. It is a rich,
strong, manly, vigorous expression of the whole round Christian character--the
Christlike nature in its fullest development. And the constituents of this great
character are only to be built up by ceaseless practice.
What was Christ doing in the carpenter's shop?
Practising. Though perfect, we read that He learned obedience, He increased
in wisdom and in favour with God and man. Do not quarrel therefore with your lot
in life. Do not complain of its never-ceasing cares, its petty environment, the
vexations you have to stand, the small and sordid souls you have to live and
work with. Above all, do not resent temptation; do not be perplexed because it
seems to thicken round you more and more, and ceases neither for effort nor for
agony nor prayer. That is the practice which God appoints you; and it is having
its work in making you patient, and humble, and generous, and unselfish, and
kind, and courteous. Do not grudge the hand that is moulding the still too
shapeless image within you. It is growing more beautiful though you see it not,
and every touch of temptation may add to its perfection. Therefore keep in the
midst of life. Do not isolate yourself. Be among men, and among things, and
among troubles, and difficulties, and obstacles. You remember Goethe's words: Es
bildet ein Talent sich in der Stille, Doch ein Character in dem Strom der Welt.
"Talent develops itself in solitude; character in the stream of life."
Talent develops itself in solitude--the talent of prayer, of faith, of
meditation, of seeing the unseen; Character grows in the stream of the world's
life. That chiefly is where men are to learn love.
How? Now, how? To make it easier, I have named a
few of the elements of love. But these are only elements. Love itself can never
be defined. Light is a something more than the sum of its ingredients--a
glowing, dazzling, tremulous ether. And love is something more than all its
elements-- a palpitating, quivering, sensitive, living thing. By synthesis of
all the colours, men can make whiteness, they cannot make light. By synthesis of
all the virtues, men can make virtue, they cannot make love. How then are we to
have this transcendent living whole conveyed into our souls? We brace our wills
to secure it. We try to copy those who have it. We lay down rules about it. We
watch. We pray. But these things alone will not bring Love into our nature. Love
is an effect. And only as we fulfil the right condition can we have the
effect produced. Shall I tell you what the cause is?
If you turn to the Revised Version of the First
Epistle of John you will find these words: "We love, because He first loved
us." "We love," not "We love Him" That is the
way the old Version has it, and it is quite wrong. "We love--because
He first loved us." Look at that word "because." It is the cause
of which I have spoken. "Because He first loved us," the effect
follows that we love, we love Him, we love all men. We cannot help it. Because
He loved us, we love, we love everybody. Our heart is slowly changed.
Contemplate the love of Christ, and you will love. Stand before that mirror,
reflect Christ's character, and you will be changed into the same image from
tenderness to tenderness. There is no other way. You cannot love to order. You
can only look at the lovely object, and fall in love with it, and grow into
likeness to it And so look at this Perfect Character, this Perfect Life. Look at
the great Sacrifice as He laid down Himself, all through life, and upon the
Cross of Calvary; and you must love Him. And loving Him, you must become like
Him. Love begets love. It is a process of induction. Put a piece of iron in the
presence of a magnetised body, and that piece of iron for a time becomes
magnetised. It is charged with an attractive force in the mere presence of the
original force, and as long as you leave the two side by side, they are both
magnets alike. Remain side by side with Him who loved us, and gave Himself for
us, and you too will become a centre of power, a permanently attractive force;
and like Him you will draw all men unto you, like Him you will be drawn unto all
men. That is the inevitable effect of Love. Any man who fulfils that cause must
have that effect produced in him. Try to give up the idea that religion comes to
us by chance, or by mystery, or by caprice. It comes to us by natural law, or by
supernatural law, for all law is Divine. Edward Irving went to see a dying boy
once, and when he entered the room he just put his hand on the sufferer's head,
and said, "My boy, God loves you," and went away. And the boy started
from his bed, and called out to the people in the house, "God loves me! God
loves me!" It changed that boy. The sense that God loved him overpowered
him, melted him down, and began the creating of a new heart in him. And that is
how the love of God melts down the unlovely heart in man, and begets in him the
new creature, who is patient and humble and gentle and unselfish. And there is
no other way to get it. There is no mystery about it We love others, we love
everybody, we love our enemies, because He first loved us.
THE DEFENSE
Now I have a closing sentence or two to add about
Paul's reason for singling out love as the supreme possession. It is a very
remarkable reason. In a single word it is this: it lasts.
"Love," urges Paul, "never faileth." Then he begins again
one of his marvellous lists of the great things of the day, and exposes them one
by one. He runs over the things that men thought were going to last, and shows
that they are all fleeting, temporary, passing away.
"Whether there be prophecies, they shall
fail" It was the mother's ambition for her boy in those days that he should
become a prophet. For hundreds of years God had never spoken by means of any
prophet, and at that time the prophet was greater than the king. Men waited
wistfully for another messenger to come, and hung upon his lips when he appeared
as upon the very voice of God. Paul says, "Whether there be prophecies,
they shall fail" This Book is full of prophecies. One by one they have
"failed"; that is, having been fulfilled their work is finished; they
have nothing more to do now in the world except to feed a devout man's faith.
Then Paul talks about tongues. That was another
thing that was greatly coveted. "Whether there be tongues, they shall
cease." As we all know, many, many centuries have passed since tongues have
been known in this world. They have ceased. Take it in any sense you like. Take
it, for illustration merely, as languages in general--a sense which was not in
Paul's mind at all, and which though it cannot give us the specific lesson will
point the general truth. Consider the words in which these chapters were
written--Greek. It has gone. Take the Latin--the other great tongue of those
days. It ceased long ago. Look at the Indian language. It is ceasing. The
language of Wales, of Ireland, of the Scottish Highlands is dying before our
eyes. The most popular book in the English tongue at the present time, except
the Bible, is one of Dickens's works, his Pickwick Papers. It is largely
written in the language of London streetlife; and experts assure us that in
fifty years it will be unintelligible to the average English reader.
Then Paul goes farther, and with even greater
boldness adds, "Whether there be knowledge, it shall vanish away." The
wisdom of the ancients, where is it? It is wholly gone. A schoolboy to-day knows
more than Sir Isaac Newton knew. His knowledge has vanished away. You put
yesterday's newspaper in the fire. Its knowledge has vanished away. You buy the
old editions of the great encyclopaedias for a few pence. Their knowledge has
vanished away. Look how the coach has been superseded by the use of steam. Look
how electricity has superseded that, and swept a hundred almost new inventions
into oblivion. One of the greatest living authorities, Sir William Thomson, said
the other day, "The steam-engine is passing away." "Whether there
be knowledge, it shall vanish away." At every workshop you will see, in the
back yard, a heap of old iron, a few wheels, a few levers, a few cranks, broken
and eaten with rust. Twenty years ago that was the pride of the city Men flocked
in from the country to see the great invention; now it is superseded, its day is
done. And all the boasted science and philosophy of this day will soon be old.
But yesterday, in the University of Edinburgh, the greatest figure in the
faculty was Sir James Simpson, the discoverer of chloroform. The other day his
successor and nephew, Professor Simpson, was asked by the librarian of the
University to go to the library and pick out the books on his subject that were
no longer needed. And his reply to the librarian was this: "Take every
text-book that is more than ten years old, and put it down in the
cellar."Sir James Simpson was a great authority only a few years ago: men
came from all parts of the earth to consult him; and almost the whole teaching
of that time is consigned by the science of to-day to oblivion. And in every
branch of science it is the same. "Now we know in part. We see through a
glass darkly."
Can you tell me anything that is going to last?
Many things Paul did not condescend to name. He did not mention money, fortune,
fame; but he picked out the great things of his time, the things the best men
thought had something in them, and brushed them peremptorily aside. Paul had no
charge against these things in themselves. All he said about them was that they
would not last They were great things, but not supreme things. There were things
beyond them. What we are stretches past what we do, beyond what we possess. Many
things that men denounce as sins are not sins; but they are temporary. And that
is a favourite argument of the New Testament. John says of the world, not that
it is wrong, but simply that it "passeth away." There is a great deal
in the world that is delightful and beautiful; there is a great deal in it that
is great and engrossing; but it will not last. All that is in the world, the
lust of the eye, the lust of the flesh, and the pride of life, are but for a
little while. Love not the world therefore. Nothing that it contains is worth
the life and consecration of an immortal soul. The immortal soul must give
itself to something that is immortal. And the only immortal things are these:
"Now abideth faith, hope, love, but the greatest of these is love."
Some think the time may come when two of these
three things will also pass away --faith into sight, hope into fruition. Paul
does not say so. We know but little now about the conditions of the life that is
to come. But what is certain is that Love must last. God, the Eternal God, is
Love. Covet therefore that everlasting gift, that one thing which it is certain
is going to stand, that one coinage which will be current in the Universe when
all the other coinages of all the nations of the world shall be useless and
unhonoured. You will give yourselves to many things, give yourselves first to
Love. Hold things in their proportion. Hold things in their proportion.
Let at least the first great object of our lives be to achieve the character
defended in these words, the character,--and it is the character of
Christ--which is built around Love.
I have said this thing is eternal. Did you ever
notice how continually John associates love and faith with eternal life? I was
not told when I was a boy that "God so loved the world that He gave His
only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should have everlasting
life." What I was told, I remember, was, that God so loved the world that,
if I trusted in Him, I was to have a thing called peace, or I was to have rest,
or I was to have joy, or I was to have safety. But I had to find out for myself
that whosoever trusteth in Him--that is, whosoever loveth Him, for trust is only
the avenue to Love--hath everlasting life The Gospel offers a man life.
Never offer men a thimbleful of Gospel. Do not offer them merely joy, or merely
peace, or merely rest, or merely safety; tell them how Christ came to give men a
more abundant life than they have, a life abundant in love, and therefore
abundant in salvation for themselves, and large in enterprise for the
alleviation and redemption of the world. Then only can the Gospel take hold of
the whole of a man, body, soul, and spirit, and give to each part of his nature
its exercise and reward. Many of the current Gospels are addressed only to a
part of man's nature. They offer peace, not life; faith, not Love;
justification, not regeneration. And men slip back again from such religion
because it has never really held them. Their nature was not all in it. It
offered no deeper and gladder life-current than the life that was lived before.
Surely it stands to reason that only a fuller love can compete with the love of
the world.
To love abundantly is to live abundantly, and to
love for ever is to live for ever. Hence, eternal life is inextricably bound up
with love We want to live for ever for the same reason that we want to live
tomorrow. Why do you want to live tomorrow? It is because there is some one who
loves you, and whom you want to see tomorrow, and be with, and love back. There
is no other reason why we should live on than that we love and are beloved. It
is when a man has no one to love him that he commits suicide. So long as he has
friends, those who love him and whom he loves, he will live; because to live is
to love. Be it but the love of a dog, it will keep him in life; but let that go
and he has no contact with life, no reason to live. The "energy of
life" has failed. Eternal life also is to know God, and God is love. This
is Christ's own definition. Ponder it. "This is life eternal, that they
might know Thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent."
Love must be eternal. It is what God is. On the last analysis, then, love is
life. Love never faileth, and life never faileth, so long as there is love. That
is the philosophy of what Paul is showing us; the reason why in the nature of
things Love should be the supreme thing--because it is going to last; because in
the nature of things it is an Eternal Life. That Life is a thing that we are
living now, not that we get when we die; that we shall have a poor chance of
getting when we die unless we are living now. No worse fate can befall a man in
this world than to live and grow old alone, unloving, and unloved. To be lost is
to live in an unregenerate condition, loveless and unloved; and to be saved is
to love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth already in God. For God is love.
Now I have all but finished. How many of you will
join me in reading this chapter once a week for the next three months? A man did
that once and it changed his whole life. Will you do it? It is for the greatest
thing in the world. You might begin by reading it every day, especially the
verses which describe the perfect character. "Love suffereth long, and is
kind; love envieth not; love vaunteth not itself." Get these ingredients
into your life. Then everything that you do is eternal. It is worth doing. It is
worth giving time to. No man can become a saint in his sleep; and to fulfil the
condition required demands a certain amount of prayer and meditation and time,
just as improvement in any direction, bodily or mental, requires preparation and
care. Address yourselves to that one thing; at any cost have this transcendent
character exchanged for yours. You will find as you look back upon your life
that the moments that stand out, the moments when you have really lived, are the
moments when you have done things in a spirit of love. As memory scans the past,
above and beyond all the transitory pleasures of life, there leap forward those
supreme hours when you have been enabled to do unnoticed kindnesses to those
round about you, things too trifling to speak about, but which you feel have
entered into your eternal life. I have seen almost all the beautiful things God
has made; I have enjoyed almost every pleasure that He has planned for man; and
yet as I look back I see standing out above all the life that has gone four or
five short experiences when the love of God reflected itself in some poor
imitation, some small act of love of mine, and these seem to be the things which
alone of all one's life abide. Everything else in all our lives is transitory.
Every other good is visionary. But the acts of love which no man knows about, or
can ever know about--they never fail.
In the Book of Matthew, where the Judgment Day is
depicted for us in the imagery of One seated upon a throne and dividing the
sheep from the goats, the test of a man then is not, "How have I
believed?" but "How have I loved?" The test of religion, the
final test of religion, is not religiousness, but Love. I say the final test of
religion at that great Day is not religiousness, but Love; not what I have done,
not what I have believed, not what I have achieved, but how I have discharged
the common charities of life. Sins of commission in that awful indictment are
not even referred to. By what we have not done, by sins of omission, we
are judged. It could not be otherwise. For the withholding of love is the
negation of the spirit of Christ, the proof that we never knew Him, that for us
He lived in vain. It means that He suggested nothing in all our thoughts, that
He inspired nothing in all our lives, that we were not once near enough to Him
to be seized with the spell of His compassion for the world. It means that:--
"I lived for myself, I
thought for myself,
For myself, and none beside--
Just as if Jesus had never lived,
As if He had never died."
It is the Son of Man
before whom the nations of the world shall be gathered. It is in the presence of
Humanity that we shall be charged. And the spectacle itself, the mere
sight of it, will silently judge each one. Those will be there whom we have met
and helped: or there, the unpitied multitude whom we neglected or despised. No
other Witness need be summoned. No other charge than lovelessness shall be
preferred. Be not deceived. The words which all of us shall one Day hear, sound
not of theology but of life, not of churches and saints but of the hungry and
the poor, not of creeds and doctrines but of shelter and clothing, not of Bibles
and prayer-books but of cups of cold water in the name of Christ. Thank God the
Christianity of to-day is coming nearer the world's need. Live to help that on.
Thank God men know better, by a hairsbreadth, what religion is, what God is, who
Christ is, where Christ is. Who is Christ? He who fed the hungry, clothed the
naked, visited the sick. And where is Christ? Where?--whoso shall receive a
little child in My name receiveth Me. And who are Christ's? Every one that
loveth is born of God.
-
Now
to Him who is able to keep you from falling, and to make you stand in
the presence of His glory blameless with great joy, to the only God our
Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion and
authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen. Jude
1:24-25

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