Is the absent Saviour not to be sought?
Martha and Mary knew the direction He had taken.
The last time He had visited their home was at the
Feast of Dedication, during the season of winter, when
the palm-trees were bared of their leaves, and the
voice of the turtle was silent. Jesus, on that
occasion, had to escape the vengeance of the Jews
in Jerusalem by a temporary retirement to the place
where John first baptized, near Enon, on the wooded
banks of the Jordan. It must have been to Him
a spot and season of calm and grateful repose; a pleasing
transition from the rude hatred and heartless formalism
which met Him in the degenerate “City of Solemnities.”
The savour of the Baptist’s name and spirit
seemed to linger around this sequestered region.
John had evidently prepared, by his faithful ministry,
the way for a mightier Preacher, for we read, as the
result of the Saviour’s present sojourn, that
“many believed on him there.”
If we visit with hallowed emotion
the places where first we learned to love the Lord,
to two at least of those who accompanied the Redeemer,
the region He now traversed must have been full of
fragrant memories; there it was that Jesus
had been first pointed out to them as the “Lamb
of God;” there they first “beheld
His glory, the glory as of the only-begotten of the
Father, full of grace and of truth.” (John .)
On His way thither, on the present
occasion, He most probably passed through Bethany,
and apprised His friends of His temporary absence.
Lazarus was then in his wonted vigour-no
shadow of death had yet passed over his brow; he doubtless
parted with the Lord he loved happy at the thought
of ere long meeting again.
But soon all is changed. The
hand of sickness unexpectedly lays him low. At
first there is no cause for anxiety. But soon
the herald-symptoms of danger and death gather fast
and thick around his pillow; “his beauty consumes
away like a moth.” The terrible possibility
for the first time flashes across the minds of the
sisters, of a desolate home, and of themselves being
the desolate survivors of a loved brother. The
joyous dream of restoration becomes fainter and fainter.
Human remedies are hopeless. There was One,
and only ONE, in the wide world who could save
from impending death. His word, they knew, could
alone summon lustre to that eye, and bloom to that
wan and fading cheek. Fifty long miles intervene
between the great Physician and their cottage home.
But they cannot hesitate. Some kind and compassionate
neighbour is soon found ready to hasten along the
Jericho road with the brief but urgent message, “Lord!
behold he whom thou lovest is sick.” If it
only reach in time, they know that no more is needed.
They even indulge the expectation that their messenger
may be anticipated by the Lord Himself appearing.
Others might doubt His omniscience, but they knew its
reality. They had the blessed conviction, that
while they were seated in burning tears by that couch
of sickness, there was a sympathising Being far away
marking every heart-throb of His suffering friend.
Even when the stern human conviction of “no
hope” was pressing upon them, “hoping
against hope,” they must have felt confident
that He would not suffer His faithfulness now to fail.
He had often proved Himself a Brother and Friend in
the hour of joy. Could He fail-can
He fail to prove Himself now a “Brother born
for adversity?”
Although, however, thus convinced
that the tale of their sorrows was known to Jesus,
a messenger is sent,-the means
are employed! They act as though He knew
it not; as if that omniscient Saviour had been
all unconscious of these hours of prolonged and anxious
agony!
What a lesson is there here for us!
God is acquainted with our every trouble; He knows
(far better than we know ourselves) every pang we
heave, every tear we weep, every perplexing path we
tread; but the knee must be bent, the message must
be taken, the prayer must ascend! It is His own
appointed method,-His own consecrated medium
for obtaining blessings. Jesus may have
gone, and probably would have gone to restore
His friend, even though no such messenger had reached
Him: We dare not limit the grace and dealings
of God: He is often (blessed be His name for
it!) “found of them that sought Him not.”
But He loves such messages as this. He loves
the confiding, childlike trust of His own people,
who delight in the hour of their extremity to cast
their burdens upon Him, and send the winged herald
of prayer to the throne of grace on which He sits.
Would that we valued, more than we
do, this blessed link of communication between our
souls and Heaven! More especially in our seasons
of trouble, (when “vain is the help of man,”)
happy for us to be able implicitly to rest in the
ability and willingness of a gracious Redeemer.
Prayer brings the soul near to Jesus,
and fetches Jesus near to the soul. He may linger,
as He did now at the Jordan, ere the answer be vouchsafed,
but it is for some wise reason; and even if the answer
given be not in accordance with our pre-conceived
wishes or anxious desires, yet how comforting to have
put our case and all its perplexities in His hand,
saying, “I am oppressed; undertake Thou for me!
To Thee I unburden and unbosom my sorrows. I
shall be satisfied whether my cup be filled or emptied.
Do to me as seemeth good in Thy sight. He whom
I love and whom THOU lovest is sick; the Lazarus of
my earthly hopes and affections is hovering on the
brink of death. That levelling blow, if consummated,
will sweep down in a moment all my hopes of earthly
happiness and joy. But it is my privilege to confide
my trouble to Thee; to know that I have surrendered
myself and all that concerns me into the hand of Him
who ‘considers my soul in adversity.’
Yes; and should my schemes be crossed, and my fondest
hopes baffled, I will feel, even in apparently unanswered
prayers, that the Judge of all the earth has done
right!”
“It is said,” says Rutherford,
speaking of the Saviour’s delay in responding
to the request of the Syrophenician woman; “It
is said He answered not a word, but it is not
said He heard not a word. These two differ
much. Christ often heareth when He doth not answer.
His not answering is an answer, and speaks thus:
’Pray on, go on and cry, for the Lord holdeth
His door fast bolted not to keep you out, but that
you may knock and knock.’”
“God delays to answer prayer,”
says Archbishop Usher, “because he would have
more of it. If the musicians come to play at our
doors or our windows, if we delight not in their music,
we throw them out money presently that they may be
gone. But if the music please us, we forbear
to give them money, because we would keep them longer
to enjoy their music. So the Lord loves and delights
in the sweet words of His children, and therefore
puts them off and answers them not presently.”
Observe still further, in the case
of these sorrowing sisters of Bethany, while in all
haste and urgency they send their messenger, they
do not ask Jesus to come-they dictate no
procedure-they venture on no positive request-all
is left to Himself. What a lesson also is there
here to confide in His wisdom, to feel that His way
and His will must be the best-that our
befitting attitude is to lie passive at His feet-to
wait His righteous disposal of us and ours-to
make this the burden of our petition, “Lord,
what wouldst Thou have me to do?” “If
it be possible let this cup pass from me, nevertheless,
not as I will, but as Thou wilt.”
Reader! invite to your gates this
celestial messenger. Make prayer a holy habit-a
cherished privilege. Seek to be ever maintaining
intercommunion with Jesus; consecrating life’s
common duties with His favour and love. Day by
day ere you take your flight into the world, night
by night when you return from its soiling contacts,
bathe your drooping plumes in this refreshing fountain.
Let prayer sweeten prosperity and hallow adversity.
Seek to know the unutterable blessedness of habitual
filial nearness to your Father in heaven-in
childlike confidence unbosoming to Him those heart-sorrows
with which no earthly friend can sympathise, and with
which a stranger cannot intermeddle. No trouble
is too trifling to confide to His ear-no
want too trivial to bear to His mercy-seat.
“Prayer is appointed
to convey
The blessings
He designs to give;
Long as they live should
Christians pray,
For only
while they pray, they live.”