TALK TWENTY-FIVE. MY DREAM MESSAGE
Solomon says that dreams come “through
the multitude of business.” Our night thoughts
are like our day thoughts, except that our faculties
being partly asleep, our dreams usually lack the coherence
and the reasonableness of our waking thoughts.
God does occasionally, at rare intervals, operate
upon men’s minds to cause them to dream something;
but even the prophets with whom he thus communicated
more than with ordinary men received such messages
only now and then, and their other dreams had no significance.
Many people are always trying to find
some hidden meaning in their dreams. If they
have some peculiar dream, they try to interpret it
or to get somebody else to do so. Now, God is
reasonable. He knows that we can better comprehend
when we are awake than when we are asleep; so he usually
communicates with us during our waking hours.
We sometimes have very striking dreams, but this does
not signify that the Lord originated them. I
have known people to act very unwisely as the result
of following dreams. One night a preacher, who
was holding a series of meetings, dreamed of having
a terrible fight with a great snake. When he awoke,
he felt that surely the Lord was trying to show him
something. He interpreted the dream to mean that
somebody in the congregation was represented by that
snake. The next day he told his dream in the meeting
and said that he thought he knew who the snake was.
He began acting upon his supposition. The result
was that at least two of the congregation backslid
over it, and the whole church was thrown into confusion.
A dream is a dream, and possibly not
more than one in ten thousand come from God.
There are times, however, when we may learn good lessons
from our dream thoughts as well as from our waking
thoughts. One such dream I once had, and the
lesson I derived from it has been good for my soul.
I dreamed that I stood beside a gigantic wild rosebush.
In my hand I held one of the beautiful fragrant flowers.
I looked at it and drank in its rich perfume, but
I saw a great number of flowers, and I desired more
than the one, so I held it in my left hand and began
to reach up for others. They were very high,
so I pressed against the outer limbs and stretched
to my utmost, but they were too high; I could not
get them. I stepped back from the bush.
As I did so, my gaze fell upon the rose in my hand
just in time to see its petals fall to the ground.
In stretching for those beyond my reach, I had ruined
the one that was already mine. I gazed upon the
empty stem in my hand and at the bruised petals upon
the ground with a feeling of regret.
The scene changed. I sat at a
desk with pencil and paper, and in my dream wrote
these words: “If you have but one rose,
enjoy it to the full. Do not let its perfume
be wasted upon the empty air, and its beauty go unnoticed,
while you spend your time in vain longing for the unattainable.”
When I awoke I wrote down the words that I had written
in my dream, and through the years they have preached
to me many a sermon.
How natural it is for us to forget
what we have while we look at others whom we think
to be more fortunate! We look at the blessings
that others enjoy and forget to be thankful for our
own. We look at others’ possessions, and
because they are greater than ours, we fail to appreciate
what we have. Our position in life may be very
humble, but however humble, our life is full of blessings
if we but have eyes to see them.
When I had this dream, my health was
gone, and I lay alone in my bed throughout the long
hours of the day while my wife was away working for
our support. My eyes were so I could read but
a very little. We had two rooms in a house with
another family. All around us were people with
health and plenty. I could easily realize the
difference between my situation and theirs. Sometimes
I would look out of the window and see people passing,
strong and vigorous and care-free. I would hear
the gay laughter and the sound of happy voices, while
I there I lay suffering and alone.
How easy it was to see their blessings! and in seeing
theirs, how easy it was to forget my own!
But this dream came upon the morning
of my birthday; and as I lay there thinking it over,
I determined that in the coming year I would not let
my one rose be spoiled because I was reaching for
that which was beyond my reach. I decided to
enjoy my own blessings. If others were more blessed
than I, should I not rejoice in the fact? Longing
to be like them would not make me so. If I had
but little to enjoy, I would enjoy that little.
So I began to look at my blessings, and as I looked
them over I found them greater than I had supposed.
I had many things to give me comfort. I had food
to satisfy my hunger. I had a home and clothing.
I had the loving care of a faithful wife. I had
kind friends who gave to me freely of their sympathy
and who were ready to grant my every wish so far as
it lay in their power. Better than all else,
I had the peace of God in my heart. I began to
realize that my state might be far worse.
The more I thought, the more I saw
for which to be thankful. The more I considered
my blessings, the more I appreciated them. And
many a time since have I looked out upon the passers-by
or listened to their merriment, and have said to myself,
“I would not exchange places with you; for I
am saved; I have the treasure of God’s love;
I have the presence of the Holy Spirit; I have the
joys of salvation; I have a mansion in heaven.”
I knew that most of the passers-by did not have these
things, and so I was blessed more than they.
What were health and strength when put to a wrong
use? What were temporal blessings that ministered
only to selfishness? What were the joy and gaiety
that ignored God? What were the pleasures of
sin, when they only laid up a harvest of sorrow?
Ah no, I had no reason to envy them, for my blessings
were greater and would not fade away like mist before
the sun.
My brother, my sister, you may be
happy in your own little corner if you will learn
the lesson of enjoying what you have. Learn to
be content with common things. Learn that the
truest joy does not come from external things.
It springs spontaneously from a contented heart.
If God wills that you be situated as you are, will
he not make you happy where you are? The Bible
says, “Godliness with contentment is great gain
... Having food and raiment let us be therewith
content” (1 Ti: 6-8). You may not
have much of this world’s goods; you may not
have many talents; your blessings may seem few; but
remember my dream message “If you
have but one rose, enjoy it to the full.”
If another has both hands filled, he may enjoy them
less than you enjoy your one, unless you look with
envious eyes. Sometimes a little perfume is sweeter
than an abundance. Do not spend your days in
vain longing. Do not despise what you have because
it is not greater. Cultivate the habit of thankfulness
and appreciation. Be glad for what you have.
Be contented. Better your condition if you can,
but do not spoil what you have in reaching for more.
If you have but one talent, use it for the Lord and
be thankful for it. Do not depreciate it because
others have several talents. Use it and be content.
Happiness consists not in the things we have, but
in our appreciation and use of them. So enjoy
your one rose. Drink in its sweet perfume; gaze
upon its beauteous colors. Enjoy it to the full.