The Laver in the Life of Jesus
He poureth water into a basin, and began to wash the
disciples feet, and to wipe them with a towel wherewith He was girded. John
xii.
In the court of the Temple there were
two objects that arrested the eye of the entering
worshipper the Brazen Altar, and the Laver.
The latter was kept always full of pure, fresh water,
for the constant washings enjoined by the Levitical
code. Before the priests were consecrated for
their holy work, and attired in the robes of the sacred
office, they washed there (Ex. xxi. Before
they entered the Holy Place in their ordinary ministry,
and before Aaron, on the great Day of Atonement, proceeded
to the Most Holy Place, with blood, not his own, it
was needful to conform to the prescribed ablutions.
“He shall bathe his flesh in water” (Lev.
xv.
First, then, the Altar, and then the
Laver; the order is irreversible, and the teaching
of the types is as exact as mathematics. Hence,
when the writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews invites
us to draw near, and make our abode in the Most Holy
Place, he carefully obeys the Divine order, and bids
us “draw near, with a true heart, in full assurance
of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil
conscience, and our bodies washed with pure water.”
In this scene (John xii-14), on
the eve of our Lord’s betrayal, we find the
spiritual counterpart of the Laver, just as the Cross
stands for the Brazen Altar.
I. The circumstance that
led to this act of love. In
order fully to understand this touching incident,
it is necessary to remember the circumstances out
of which it sprang. On the way from Bethany to
the upper room in which the Supper had been prepared,
and on entering therein, our Lord must have been deeply
absorbed in the momentous events in which He was to
be the central figure; but He was not unmindful of
a contention which had engaged His disciples, for they
had been disputing one with another as to which of
them should be the greatest. The proud spirit
of the flesh, which so often cursed the little group,
broke out in this awful hour with renewed energy, as
though the prince of this world would inflict a parting
blow on his great Antagonist, through those whom He
loved best. It was as if he said, “See
the results of Thy tears and teachings, of Thy prayers
and pleadings; the love which Thou hast so often inculcated
is but a passing sentiment, that has never rooted
itself in the soil of these wayward hearts.
It is a plant too rare and exotic for the climate of
earth. Take it back with Thee to Thine own home
if Thou wilt, but seek not to achieve the impossible.”
It was heartrending that this exhibition of pride
should take place just at this juncture. These
were the men who had been with Him in His temptations,
who had had the benefit of His most careful instructions,
who had been exposed to the full influence of His
personal character; and yet, notwithstanding all,
the rock-bed of pride, that cast the angels down from
heaven, that led to the fall of man, obtruded itself.
This occasion in which it manifested itself was very
inopportune; already the look of Calvary was on the
Saviour’s face, and the sword entering His heart.
Surely, they must have been aware that the shadow
of the great eclipse was already passing over the
face of their Sun. But even this did not avail
to restrain the manifestation of their pride.
Heedless of three years of example and teaching;
unrestrained by the symptoms of our Lord’s sorrow;
unchecked by the memory of happy and familiar intercourse,
which should have bound them forever in a united brotherhood,
they wrangled with high voices and hot faces, with
the flashing eye and clenched fist of the Oriental,
as to who should be first.
And if pride thus asserted itself
after such education, and under such
circumstances, let us be sure that it is not far away
from any one of us. We do not now contend, in
so many words, for the chief places; courtesy, politeness,
fear of losing the respect of our fellows, restrain
us. But our resentment to the fancied slight,
or the assumption by another of work which we thought
our own; our sense of hurtness when we are put aside;
our jealousy and envy; our detracting speeches, and
subtle insinuations of low motive, all show how much
of this loveless spirit rankles in our hearts.
We have been planted in the soil of this world, and
we betray its flavor; we have come of a proud stock,
we betray our heredity.
II. Love's sensitiveness to sin on the part of its beloved
It was unusually tender. When
the hour of departure approaches, though slight reference
be made to it, love lives with the sound of the departing
wheels, or the scream of the engine, always in its
ear; and there are given a tenderness to the tone,
a delicacy to the touch, a thoughtfulness for the
heartache of those from which it is to be parted,
which are of inexpressible beauty. All that was
present with Christ. He was taking that Supper
with them before He suffered. He knew that He
would soon depart out of this world unto the Father;
His ear was specially on the alert; His nature keenly
alive; His heart thrilling with unusual tenderness,
as the sands slowly ran out from the hour-glass.
It was supreme love. “Having
loved His own that were in the world, He loved them
unto the end.” Those last words have been
thought to refer to the end of life, but it surely
were superfluous to tell us that the strong waters
of death could not quench the love of the Son of Man.
When once He loves, He loves always. It is needless
to tell us that the Divine heart which has enshrined
a soul will not forsake it; that the name of the beloved
is never erased from the palms of the hands, that
the covenant is not forgotten though eternity elapse.
Of course Christ loves to the end, even though that
end reaches to endlessness. We do not need to
be assured that the Immortal Lover, who has once taken
us up to union with Himself, can never loose His hold.
Therefore it is better to adopt the alternative suggested
by the margin of the Revised Version, “He loved
them to the uttermost.” There was nothing
to be desired. Nothing was needed to fill out
the ideal of perfect love. Not a stitch was
required for the needle-work of wrought gold; not
a touch demanded for the perfectly achieved picture;
not a throb additional to the strong pulse of affection
with which He regarded His own.
It is very wonderful that He should
have loved such men like this. As we pass them
under review at this time of their life, they seem
a collection of nobodies, with the exception perhaps
of John and Peter. But they were His own, there
was a special relationship between Him and them.
They had belonged to the Father, and He had given
them to the Son as His special perquisite and belonging.
“Thine they were, and Thou gavest them Me.”
May we dare, in this meaning, to apply to Christ
that sense of proprietorship, which makes a bit of
moorland waste, a few yards of garden-ground, dear
to the freeholder?
“Breathes there the man with soul
so dead,
Who never to himself hath said,
This is my own . . .?”
It was because these men were Christ’s
own, that the full passion of His heart set in toward
them, and He loved them to the utmost bound; that
is, the tides filled the capacity of the ocean-bed
of possibility.
It was bathed in the sense of His
Divine origin and mission. The curtain
was waxing very thin. It was a moment of vision.
There had swept across His soul a realization of
the full meaning of His approaching triumph.
He looked back, and was hardly conscious of the manger
where the horned oxen fed, the lowly birth, the obscure
years, in the sublime conception that He had come
forth from God. He looked forward, and was hardly
conscious of the cross, the nail, the thorn-crown,
and the spear, because of the sublime consciousness
that He was stepping back, to go to Him with whom
He realized His identity. He looked on through
the coming weeks, and knew that the Father had given
all things into His hands. What the devil had
offered as the price of obeisance to himself, that
the Father was about to give Him, nay, had already
given Him, as the price of His self-emptying.
And if for a moment He stooped, as we shall see He
did, to the form of a servant, it was not because
of any failure to recognize His high dignity and mission,
but with the sense of Godhead quick on His soul.
The love which went out toward this
little group of men had Deity in it. It was
the love of the Throne, of the glory He had with the
Father before the worlds were, of that which now fills
the bosom of His ascended and glorified nature.
He was aware of the task to which
He was abandoning these men. He knew
that as He was the High Priest over the house of God,
they were its priests. He knew that cleansing
was necessary before they could receive the anointing
of the Holy Ghost. He knew that the great work
of carrying forward His Gospel was to be delegated
to their hands. He knew that they were to carry
the sacred vessels of the Gospel, which must not be
blurred or fouled by contact with human pride or uncleanness.
He knew that the very mysteries of Gethsemane and
Calvary would be inexplicable, and that none might
stand on that holy hill, save those that had clean
hands and a pure heart; and because of all this, He
turned to them, by symbol and metaphor, to impress
upon their heart and memory the necessity of participating
in the cleansing of which the Laver is the type.
The highest love is ever quickest
to detect the failures and inconsistencies of the
beloved. Just because of its intensity, it can
be content with nothing less than the best, because
the best means the blessedest; and it longs that the
object of its thought should be most blessed forever.
It is a mistake to think that green-eyed jealousy
is quickest to detect the spots on the sun, the freckles
on the face, and the marring discords in the music
of the life; love is quicker, more microscopic, more
exacting that the ideal should be achieved. Envy
is content to indicate the fault, and leave it; but
love detects, and waits and holds its peace until
the fitting opportunity arrives, and then sets itself
to remove, with its own tenderest ministry, the defect
which had spoiled the completeness and beauty of its
object.
Perhaps there had never been a moment
in the human consciousness of our Lord, when, side
by side with this intense love for His own, there had
been so vivid a sense of oneness with His Father, of
His unity with the source of Infinite Purity and Blessedness.
We might have supposed that this would have alienated
Him from His poor friends, but in this our thoughts
are not as His. Just because of His awful holiness,
He was quick to perceive the unholiness of His friends,
and could not endure it, and essayed to rid them of
it. Just because of His Divine goodness He could
detect the possibilities of goodness in them, and be
patient enough to give it culturing care.
The most perfect musician may be most
tortured by incompetence; but he will be most likely
to detect true merit, and give time to its training.
“The powerfullest magnet will pick out, in the
powdered dust of the ironstone, fine particles of
metal that a second or third-rate magnet would fail
to draw to itself.” Do not dread the awful
holiness of Jesus; it is your hope. He will
never be content till He has made you like Himself;
and side by side with His holiness, never fail to
remember His gentle, tender love.
III. The divine humility,
that Copes with human sin. “He
riseth from supper, and layeth aside His garments;
and He took a towel and girded Himself.”
This is what the apostle calls taking upon Himself
the form of a servant. The charm of the scene
is its absolute simplicity. You cannot imagine
Christ posturing to the ages. There was no aiming
at effect, no thought of the beauty or humility of
the act, as there is when the Pope yearly washes the
feet of twelve beggars, from a golden basin, wiping
them with a towel of rarest fabric! Christ did
not act thus for show or pretence, but with an absolutely
single purpose of fulfilling a needed office.
And in this He set forth the spirit of our redemption.
This is the key to the Incarnation. With
slight alteration the words will read truly of that
supreme act. He rose from the throne, laid aside
the garments of light which He had worn as His vesture,
took up the poor towel of humanity, and wrapped it
about His glorious Person; poured His own blood into
the basin of the Cross, and set Himself to wash away
the foul stains of human depravity and guilt.
As pride was the source of human sin,
Christ must needs provide an antidote in His absolute
humility a humility which could not grow
beneath these skies, but must be brought from the world
where the lowliest are the greatest, and the most
childlike reign as kings.
This is the key to every act of
daily cleansing. We have been washed.
Once, definitely, and irrevocably, we have been bathed
in the crimson tide that flows from Calvary.
But we need a daily cleansing. Our feet become
soiled with the dust of life’s highways; our
hands grimy, as our linen beneath the rain of filth
in a great city; our lips are fouled, as the white
doorstep of the house, by the incessant throng of
idle, unseemly and fretful words; our hearts cannot
keep unsoiled the stainless robes with which we pass
from the closet at morning prime. Constantly
we need to repair to the Laver to be washed.
But do we always realize how much each act of confession,
on our part, involves from Christ, on His? Whatever
important work He may at that moment have on hand;
whatever directions He may be giving to the loftiest
angels for the fulfillment of His purposes; however
pressing the concerns of the Church or the universe
upon His broad shoulders, He must needs turn from
all these to do a work He will not delegate.
Again He stoops from the throne, and girds Himself
with a towel, and, in all lowliness, endeavors to
remove from thee and me the strain which His love
dare not pass over. He never loses the print
of the nail; He never forgets Calvary and the blood;
He never spends one hour without stooping to do the
most menial work of cleansing filthy souls. And
it is because of this humility He sits on the Throne
and wields the sceptre over hearts and worlds.
This is the key to our ministry
to each other. I have often thought
that we do not often enough wash one another’s
feet. We are conscious of the imperfections
which mar the characters of those around us.
We are content to note, criticise, and learn them.
We dare not attempt to remove them. This failure
arises partly because we do not love with a love like
Christ’s a love which will brave resentment,
annoyance, rebuke, in its quest, and partly
because we are not willing to stoop low enough.
None can remove the mote of another,
so long as the beam is left in the eye, and the sin
unjudged in the life, None can cleanse the stain, who
is not willing to take the form of a servant, and go
down with bare knees upon the floor. None is
able to restore those that are overtaken in a fault,
who do not count themselves the chief of sinners and
the least of saints.
We need more of this lowly, loving
spirit: not so sensitive to wrong and evil as
they affect us, as anxious for the stain they leave
on the offender. It is of comparatively small
consequence how much we suffer; it is of much importance
that none of Christ’s disciples should be allowed
to go on for a moment longer, with unconfessed and
unjudged wrongs clouding their peace, and hindering
the testimony which they might give. Let us
therefore watch for each other’s souls:
let us consider one another to provoke to love and
good works; let us in all sincerity do as Christ has
done, washing each other’s feet in all humility
and tender love. But this spirit is impossible
save through fellowship with the Lamb of God, and
the reception of His holy, humble nature into the
inmost heart, by the Holy Ghost.