CHAPTER XVII. Splendid Gifts
“And they came into the house
and saw the young child with Mary his mother; and
they fell down and worshipped him; and opening their
treasures they offered unto him gifts, gold and frankincense
and myrrh.” Is there anything more beautiful
in the Bible, or in all literature? The imagination
of painter or poet may well kindle at the scene.
There are the wondering mother, the worshiping wise
men bowing down, the shining fragrant gifts, and in
the midst, as the center and glory of it all, the
young Child. This Child, which even in its infancy
subordinates mother and wise men and gold to itself,
is indeed a King. Worship is the expression of
reverence, and reverence is the root of all worth and
divineness in life. The human soul is a poor and
pitiful fragment until it is completed and crowned
with worship, a lost child until it finds its Father.
The wise men found a King to worship; they were not
following a false guide across weary wastes into nothingness.
Our instinct of worship is not false, but is true
and is matched with its appropriate satisfaction.
Christ completes our human childhood with divine Fatherhood.
He that hath seen him hath seen the father.
These Persian scholars were forerunners
of other wise men going to Bethlehem. Through
all the Christian centuries men of genius have been
laying their most precious gifts at the feet of Christ.
Columbus had no sooner set foot on a new shore than
he named it San Salvador, Holy Saviour; and thus he
laid his great discovery, America, at the feet of
Jesus. Leonardo da Vinci swept
the golden goblets from the table of his “Last
Supper” because he feared their splendor would
distract attention from and dim the glory of the Master
himself. The hand that rounded St. Peter’s
dome reared it in adoration to Christ, and Raphael
in painting the Transfiguration laid his masterpiece
at the feet of this Child. Mozart there laid
his symphonies, and Beethoven the works of his colossal
genius. Shakespeare, “with the best brain
in six thousand years,” who has poured the many-colored
splendors of his imagination over all our life, wrote
in his will: “I commend my soul into the
hands of God my Creator, hoping and assuredly believing,
through the only merits of Jesus Christ my Saviour,
to be made partaker of life everlasting.”
Tennyson begins his In Memoriam, in the judgment of
many the superbest literary blossom of the nineteenth
century, with the invocation, “Strong Son of
God, immortal Love.”
Though Jesus wrote no book himself
and never wrote any recorded thing except a few words
in the sand which some passing breeze or foot quickly
obliterated, yet out of him have grown vast forests
of literature. It would tear great gaps in the
shelves of any library and leave the remaining volumes
spotted with blank spaces if all the books about him
and references to him were removed. A thousand
books have been written about Lincoln and eighty thousand
about Napoleon, but if all the books that were ever
written about Lincoln and Washington and Napoleon and
Cæsar were piled up in one heap it would look small
beside the mountain of books that have been written
about Jesus Christ. Not only have the writers
written about him above every other figure in history,
but in like degree the artists have painted him and
the musicians have sung about him. He is the
most fertile theme of all literature and art, and
the gifts that genius have heaped about his feet are
an incomparable testimony to the adoration that is
paid to him.
About the first use to which any notable
invention is put is to spread the gospel of Jesus.
The very first book printed on a printing press was
the Bible, and this wonderful and perhaps greatest
human invention has been busier printing this book
than any other to this day and multiplies its copies
by the hundred million over the world. The newspaper
is a mighty means of spreading his principles.
The railway and steamship carry his gospel, and the
airship gives wings to the same good news. Telegraph
and telephone flash it, and wireless waves set the
ether over whole continents and oceans aquiver with
the messages of Jesus Christ. The sewing machine
sews for him, the typewriter writes for him, and even
battle ships and bayonets may fight for him. Sooner
or later every inventor must lay his magic machine
at his feet. For him the statesman legislates,
the scientist investigates, the author writes, the
artist paints and the singer sings. In an increasing
degree Jesus is drawing all men into his service,
and they are laying their treasures at his feet.
The gold of the wise men was only the first gleam of
the shining heaps of wealth that his followers are
now piling on the altar of his service. This
process will go on until the whole world will lie at
his feet.
Every generation sends a more numerous
company to Bethlehem. With every century worshipers
arrive from more distant lands. From every quarter
of the circumference of the globe paths now run to
the manger of this Child, worn deep by millions of
feet. The nations are beginning to come.
By and by these converging paths will be crowded and
all the ends of the earth shall bring their gold and
shall worship at his feet.
What is the explanation of the mighty,
worldwide, attractive power of this Child? There
is only one adequate explanation: “He shall
save his people from their sins.” The world
is tired of men who come to save it with programmes
only an inch long; who have nothing better to propose
than longer laws and cleaner sanitation; who, unmindful
of the experiment in Eden, would have us believe that
if we were only placed in a pleasant garden where
we had plenty to eat and little to do we would all
be good. The weary world wants one who can go
to the root of its unrest, and it is finding out that
this can be done by him who is mighty to save people
from their sins. All who put their trust in him
are blessed with purity and peace. In this great
world, lost in sin and beaten upon by infinite mystery,
there is only one voice that comes like music across
our life with power to cleanse and comfort us; and
this is the Voice whose infant cry was first heard
in Bethlehem. Let us now go even unto Bethlehem
while the song is in the air and see this Child and
worship at his feet.