I will read to you once again the
words which I have read before, the words of Jesus
in the eighth chapter of the Gospel of St. John:
As He spake these words, many believed on Him. Then said Jesus to
those Jews which believed on Him, if ye continue in My word, then are ye My
disciples indeed; and ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you
free. They answered Him, We be Abrahams seed, and were never in bondage to
any man: how sayest Thou, Ye shall be made free? Jesus answered them,
Verily, verily, I say unto you. Whosoever committeth sin is the servant of
sin. And the servant abideth not in the house forever: but the Son abideth
ever. If the Son therefore shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed.
I do not know how any man can stand
and plead with his brethren for the higher life, that
they will enter into and make their own the life of
Christ and God, unless he is perpetually conscious
that around them with whom he pleads there is the
perpetual pleading and the voice of God Himself.
Unless a man believes that, everything that he has
to say must seem, in the first place, impertinent,
and, in the second place, almost absolutely hopeless.
Who is man that he shall plead with his fellow-man
for the change of a life, for the entrance into a whole
new career, for the alteration of a spirit, for the
surrounding of himself with a new region in which
he has not lived before? But if it be so, that
God is pleading with every one of His children to
enter into the highest life; if it be so, that God
is making His application and His appeal to every
soul to know Him, and in Him to know himself, then
one may plead with earnestness and plead with great
hopefulness before his brethren. And so it is.
The great truth of Jesus Christ is that, that God is
pleading with every soul, not merely in the words
which we hear from one another, not merely in the
words which we read from His book, but in every influence
of life; and, in those unknown influences which are
too subtle for us to understand or perceive, God is
forever seeking after the souls of His children.
I cannot stand before you for the
last time that I shall stand In these meetings, my
friends, without reminding myself and without reminding
you of that; without reminding myself also and without
trying to remind you of how absolutely conformable
it is to everything that man does in this world.
The great richness of nature, the great richness of
life, comes when we understand that behind every specific
action of man there is some one of the more elemental
and primary forces of the universe that are always
trying to express themselves. There is nothing
that man does that finds its beginning within itself,
but everything, every work of every trade, of every
occupation, is simply the utterance of some one of
those great forces which lie behind all life, and in
the various ways of the different generations and
of the different men are always trying to make their
mark upon the world. Behind the power that the
man exercises there always lies the great power of
life, the continual struggle of nature to write herself
in the life and work of man, the power of beauty struggling
to manifest itself, the harmony that is always desiring
to make itself known. To the merchant there are
the great laws of trade, of which his works are but
the immediate expression. To the mechanic there
are the continual forces of nature, gravitation uttering
itself in all its majesty, made no less majestic because
it simply takes its expression for the moment in some
particular exercise of his art. To the ship that
sails upon the sea there are the everlasting winds
that come out of the treasuries of God and fulfil
His purpose in carrying His children to their destination.
There is no perfection of the universe and of the
special life of man in the universe until it comes
to this. The greatest of all forces are ready
without condescension, are ready as the true expression
of their life, to manifest themselves in the particular
activities which we find everywhere, and which are
going on everywhere. The little child digs his
well in the sea-shore sand, and the great Atlantic,
miles deep, miles wide, is stirred all through and
through to fill it for him. Shall it not be so
then here to-day, and shall it not be the truth, upon
which we let our minds especially dwell, and which
we keep in our souls all the time that I am speaking
and you are listening, that however He may be hidden
from our sight God is the ultimate fact and the final
purpose and power of the universe, and that everything
that man tries to do for his fellow-man is but the
expression of that love of God which is everywhere
struggling to utter itself in blessing, to give itself
away to the soul of every one for whom He cares?
It is in this truth that I find the
real secret, the deepest meaning, of the everlasting
dissatisfaction of man that is always ready to be
stirred. We moralize, we philosophize about the
discontent of man. We give little reasons for
it; but the real reason of it all is this, that which
everything lying behind it really signifies: that
man is greater than his circumstances, and that God
is always calling to him to come up to the fulness
of his life. Dreadful will be the day when the
world becomes contented, when one great universal
satisfaction spreads itself over the world. Sad
will be the day for every man when he becomes absolutely
contented with the life that he is living, with the
thoughts that he is thinking, with the deeds that
he is doing, when there is not forever beating at
the doors of his soul some great desire to do something
larger, which he knows that he was meant and made to
do because he is the child of God. And there
is the real secret of the man’s struggle with
his sins. It is not simply the hatefulness of
the sin, as we have said again and again, but it is
the dim perception, the deep suspicion, the real knowledge
at the heart of the man, that there is a richer and
a sinless region in which it is really meant for him
to dwell. Man stands separated from that life
of God, as it were, by a great, thick wall, and every
effort to put away his sin, to make himself a nobler
and a purer man, is simply his beating at the inside
of that door which stands between him and the life
of God, which he knows that he ought to be living.
It is like the prisoner hidden in his cave, who feels
through all the thick wall that shuts him out from
it the sunlight and the joyous life that is outside,
who knows that his imprisonment is not his true condition,
and so with every tool that his hands can grasp and
with his bleeding hands themselves beats on the stone,
that he may find his way out. And the glory and
the beauty of it is that while he is beating upon
the inside of the wall there is also a noble power
praying upon the outside of that wall, The life to
which he ought to come is striving in its turn, upon
its side, to break away the hindrance that is keeping
him from the thing he ought to be, that is keeping
him from the life he ought to live. God, with
His sunshine and lightning, with the great majestic
manifestations of Himself, and with all the peaceful
exhibitions of His life, is forever trying, upon His
side of the wall, to break away the great barrier
that separates the sinner’s life from Him.
Great is the power, great is the courage of the sinner,
when through the thickness of the walls he feels that
beating life of God, when he knows that he is not
working alone, when he is sure that God is wanting
him just as truly, far more truly, than he wants God.
He bears himself to a nobler struggle with his enemy
and a more determined effort to break down the resistance
that stands between him and the higher life.
Our figure is all imperfect, as all our figures are
so imperfect, because it seems to be the man all by
himself, working by himself, until he shall come forth
into the life of God, as if God waited there to receive
him when he came forth the freed man, and as if the
working of the freedom upon the sinner’s side
had not something also of the purpose of God within
him. God is not merely in the sunshine; God is
in the cavern of the man’s sin. God is
with the sinner wherever he can be. There is
no soul so black in its sinfulness, so determined in
its defiant obstinacy, that God has abandoned his
throne room at the centre of the sinner’s life,
and every movement is the God movement and every effort
is the God force, with which man tries to break forth
from his sin and come forth into the full sunlight
of a life with God. Do you not think how full
of hope it is? Do you not see that when this great
conception of the universe, which is Christ’s
conception, which beamed in every look that He shed
upon the world, which was told in every word that
He spoke and which was in every movement of His hand-do
you not see how, when this great conception of the
universe takes possession of a man, then all his struggle
with his sin is changed, it becomes a strong struggle,
a glorious struggle. He hears perpetually the
voice of Christ, “Be of good cheer. I have
overcome the world. You shall overcome it by
the same strength which overcame with Me.”
And then another thing. When
a man comes forth into the fulness of that life with
God, when at last he has entered God’s service
and the obedience to God’s will, and the communion
with God’s life, then there comes this wonderful
thing, there comes the revelation of the man’s
past. We dare to tell the man that if he enters
into the divine life, if he makes himself a servant
of God and does God’s will out of obedient love,
he shall then be strong and wise. One great element
of his strength is going to be this: A marvellous
revelation that is to come to him of how all his past
has been filled with the power of that spirit with
which he has at last entered into communion, to which
he has at last submitted himself. Man becomes
the child of God, becomes the servant of Jesus Christ,
and this marvellous revelation amazes him. He
sees that back through all the years of his most obstinate
and careless life, through all his wilfulness and
resistance, through all his profligacy and black sin,
God has been with him all the time, beating himself
upon his life, showing him how He desired to call him
to Himself, and that the final submission does not
win God. It simply submits to the God who has
been with the soul all the time. Can there be
anything more winning to the soul than that, anything
that brings a deeper shame to you, than to have it
revealed to you, suddenly or slowly, that from the
first day that you came into this world, nay, before
your life was an uttered fact in this world, God has
been loving you, and seeking you, and planning for
you, and making every effort that He could make in
consistency with the free will with which He endowed
you from the centre of His own life, that you might
become His and therefore might become truly yourself?
Through all the years in which you were obstinate
and rebellious, through all the years in which you
defied Him, nay, through the years in which you denied
Him and said that He did not exist, He was with you
all the time. What shall I say to my friend who
is an atheist? Shall I believe that until he comes
to a change of his opinions and recognizes that there
is indeed a ruling love, a great and fatherly God
for all the world, that he has nothing to do with
that God? Shall I believe that God has nothing
to do with him until he acknowledges God? God
would be no God to me if He were that, if He left
the man absolutely unhelped until the man beat at the
doors of His divine helpfulness and said, “I
believe in Thee at last. Now help me.”
And to the atheist there appears the light of the God
whom he denies. Into every soul, just so far
and just so fast as it is possible for that soul to
receive it, God beats His life and gives His help.
That is what makes a man hopeful of all his fellow-men
as he looks around upon them and sees them in all
the conditions of their life.
And this could only be if that were
true, if that is true, which we are dwelling upon
constantly, the absolute naturalness of the Christian
life, that it is man’s true life, that it is
no foreign region into which some man may be transported
and where he lives an alien to all his own essential
nature and to all the natural habitudes in which he
is intending to exist. There are two ideas of
religion which always have abounded, and our great
hope is, our great assurance for the future of the
world is, that the true and pure idea of religion some
day shall grow and take possession of the life of
man. One idea, held by very earnest people, embodied
in very faithful and devoted lives, is the strangeness
of religion to the life of man, as if some morning
something dropped out of the sky that had had no place
upon our earth before, as if there came the summons
to man to be something entirely different from what
the conditions of his nature prophesied and intended
that he should be. The other idea is that religion
comet by the utterance of God from the heavens, but
comes up out of the human life of man; that man is
essentially and intrinsically religious; that he does
not become something else than man when he becomes
the servant of Jesus Christ, but then for the first
time he becomes man; that religion is not something
that is fastened upon the outside of his life, but
is the awakening of the truth inside of his life;
the Church is but the true fulfilment of human life
and society; heaven is but the New Jerusalem that completes
all the old Jerusalem and Londons and Bostons
that have been here upon our earth. Man, in the
fulfilment of his nature by Jesus Christ, is man-not
to be something else, our whole humanity is too dear
to us. I will cling to this humanity of man,
for I do love it, and I will know nothing else.
But when man is bidden to look back into his humanity
and see what it means to be a man, that humanity means
purity, truthfulness, earnestness, and faithfulness
to that God of which humanity is a part, that God
which manifested that humanity was a part of it, when
the incarnation showed how close the divine and human
belonged together-when man hears that voice,
I do not know how he can resist, why he shall not
lift himself up and say, “Now I can be a man,
and I can be man only as I share in and give my obedience
to and enter into communion with the life of God,”
and say to Christ, to Christ the revealer of all this,
“Here I am, fulfil my manhood.”
And do not you see how immediately
this sweeps aside, as one gush of the sunlight sweeps
aside the darkness, do not you see how it sweeps aside
all the foolish and little things that people are saying?
I say to my friend, “Be a Christian.”
That means to be a full man. And he says to me,
“I have not time to be a Christian. I have
not room. If my life was not so full. You
don’t know how hard I work from morning to night.
What time is there for me to be a Christian?
What time is there, what room is there for Christianity
in such a life as mine?” But does not it come
to seem to us so strange, so absurd, if it was not
so melancholy, that man should say such a thing as
that? It is as if the engine had said it had
no room for the steam. It is as if the tree had
said it had no room for the sap. It is as if
the ocean had said it had no room for the tide.
It is as if the man said that he had no room for his
soul. It is as if life said that it had no time
to live, when it is life. It is not something
that is added to life. It is life. A man
is not living without it. And for a man to say
that “I am so full in life that I have no room
for life,” you see immediately to what absurdity
it reduces itself. And how a man knows what he
is called upon by God’s voice, speaking to him
every hour, speaking to him every moment, speaking
to him out of everything, that which the man is called
upon to do because it is the man’s only life!
Therefore time, room, that is what time, that is what
room is for-life. Life is the thing
we seek, and man finds it in the fulfilment of his
life by Jesus Christ.
Now, until we understand this and
take it in its richness, all religion seems, becomes
to us such a little thing that it is not religion at
all. You have got to know that religion, the
service of Christ, is not something to be taken in
in addition to your life; it is your life. It
is not a ribbon that you shall tie in your hat, and
go down the street declaring yourself that you have
accepted something in addition to the life which your
fellow-men are living. It is something which,
taken into your heart, shall glow in every action
so that your fellow-men shall say, “Lo, how
he lives! What new life has come into him?”
It is that insistence upon the great essentialness
of the religious life, it is the insistence that religion
is not a lot of things that a man does, but is a new
life that a man lives, uttering itself in new actions
because it is the new life. “Except a man
be born again he cannot see the kingdom of God.”
So Jesus said to Nicodemus the ruler, Nicodemus the
amateur in religions, who came and said, “Perhaps
this teacher has something else that I can bind into
my catalogue of truths and hold it.” Jesus
looked him in the face and said: “It is
not that, my friend, it is not that; it is to be a
new man, it is to be born again. It is to have
the new life, which is the old life, which is the
eternal life. So alone does man enter into the
kingdom of God.” I cannot help believing
all the time that if our young men knew this, religion
would lift itself up and have a dignity and greatness-not
a thing for weak souls, but a thing for the manliest
soul. Just because of its manliness it is easy.
“Is it easy or is it hard, this religion of
yours?” people say to us. I am sure I do
not know the easy and the hard things. I cannot
tell the difference. What is easier than for
a man to breathe? And yet, have you never seen
a breathless man, a man in whom the breathing was
almost stopped, a drowning man, an exhausted man?
have you never seen, when the breath was put once
more to his nostrils and brought down once more into
his empty lungs, the struggle with which he came back
to it? It was the hardest thing for him to do,
so much harder for him to live than it was for him
to die. But by and by see him on his feet, going
about his work, helping his fellow-men, living his
life, rejoicing in his days, guarding against his
dangers, full of life. Is life a hard thing for
him? You don’t talk about its being hard
or easy any more than you talk about life itself.
The man who lives in God knows no life except the life
of God. Let men know that it is not mere trifling,
it is not a thing to be dallied with for an instant,
it is not a thing for a man to convince himself by
an argument, and then keep as it were locked in a shelf:
it is something that is so deep and serious, so deep
and serious that when a man has once tested it there
is no more chance of his going out of it than there
is of his going out of the friendship and the love
which holds him with its perpetual expression, with
the continued deeper and deeper manifestation of the
way in which the living being belongs to him who has
a right to his life.
Now in the few moments that remain
I want to take it for granted most seriously, most
earnestly, that the men who are listening to me are
in earnest, and I want to try to tell them as a brother
might tell a brother, as I might tell to you or try
to tell to you if sitting before my fireside, I want
to try to answer the question which I know is upon
your hearts. “What shall I do about this?”
I know you say; “Is this all in the clouds?
Is there anything I can do in the right way?”
If you are in earnest, I shall try to tell you what
I should do, if I were in your place, that I might
enter into that life and be the free man that we have
tried to describe, of whom we believe certain special
and definite things. What are they? In the
first place I would put away my sin. There is
not a man listening to me now who has not some trick
of life, some habit that has possession of him, which
he knows is a wrong thing. The very first thing
for a man to do is absolutely to set himself against
them. If you are foul, stop being licentious,
at least stop doing licentious things. If you,
in any part of your business, are tricky, and unsound,
and unjust, cut that off, no matter what it costs you.
There is something clear and definite enough for every
man. It is as clear for every man as the sunlight
that smites him in his eyes. Stop doing the bad
thing which you are doing. It is drawing the bolt
away to let whatever mercy may come in come in.
Stop doing your sin. You can do that if you will.
Stop doing your sin, no matter how mechanical it seems,
and then take up your duty, whatever you can do to
make the world more bright and good. Do whatever
you can to help every struggling soul, to add new
strength to any staggering cause, the poor sick man
that is by you, the poor wronged man whom you with
your influence might vindicate, the poor boy in your
shop that you may set with new hope upon the road
of life that is beginning already to look dark to him.
I cannot tell you what it is. But you know your
duty. No man ever looked for it and did not find
it.
And then the third thing-pray.
Yes, go to the God whom you but dimly see and pray
to Him in the darkness, where He seems to sit.
Ask Him, as if He were, that He will give you that
which, if He is, must come from Him, can come from
Him alone. Pray anxiously. Pray passionately,
in the simplest of all words, with the simplest of
all thoughts. Pray, the manliest thing that a
man can do, the fastening of his life to the eternal,
the drinking of his thirsty soul out of the great fountain
of life. And pray distinctly. Pray upon
your knees. One grows tired sometimes of the
free thought, which is yet perfectly true, that a man
can pray anywhere and anyhow. But men have found
it good to make the whole system pray. Kneel
down, and the very bending of these obstinate and
unused knees of yours will make the soul kneel down
in the humility in which it can be exalted in the
sight of God.
And then read your Bible. How
cold that sounds! What, read a book to save my
soul? Read an old story that my life in these
new days shall be regenerated and saved? Yes,
do just that, for out of that book, if you read it
truly, shall come the divine and human person.
If you can read it with your soul as well as with
your eyes, there shall come the Christ there walking
in Palestine. You shall see Him so much greater
than the Palestine in which he walks, that at one
word of prayer, as you bend over the illuminated page,
there shall lift up that body-being of the Christ,
and come down through the centuries and be your helper
at your side. So read your Bible.
And then seek the Church-oh,
yes, the Church. Do you think, my friends, you
who stand outside the Church, and blame her for her
inconsistencies, and tell of her shortcomings, and
point out the corruptions that are in her history,
all that are in her present life to-day-do
you really believe that there is an earnest man in
the Church that does not know the Church’s weaknesses
and faults just as well as you do? Do you believe
that there is one of us living in the life and heart
of the Church who don’t think with all his conscience,
who don’t in every day in deep distress and
sorrow know how the Church fails of the great life
of the Master, how far she is from being what God meant
she should be, what she shall be some day? But
all the more I will put my life into that Church,
all the more I will drink the strength that she can
give to me and make what humble contribution to her
I can bring of the earnestness and faithfulness of
my life. Come into the Church of Jesus Christ.
There is no other body on the face of the earth that
represents what she represents-the noble
destiny of the human soul, the great capacity of human
faith, the inexhaustible and unutterable love of God,
the Christ, who stands to manifest them all.
Now those are the things for a man
to do who really cares about all this. Those
are the things for an earnest man to do. They
have no power in themselves, but they are the opening
of the windows. And if that which I believe is
true, God is everywhere giving himself to us, the
opening of the windows is a signal that we want Him
and an invitation that He will be glad enough to answer,
to come. Into every window that is open to Him
and turned His way, Christ comes, God comes. That
is the only story. There is put aside everything
else. Election, predestination, they can go where
they please. I am sure that God gives Himself
to every soul that wants Him and declares its want
by the open readiness of the signal which He knows.
How did the sun rise on our city this morning?
Starting up in the east, the sun came in its majesty
into the sky. It smote on the eastward windows,
and wherever the window was all closed, even if it
were turned eastward, on the sacred side of the city’s
life, it could not come in; but wherever any eastward
window had its curtains drawn, wherever he who slept
had left the blinds shut, so that the sun when it
came might find its way into his sleepiness, there
the sun came, and with a shout awoke its faithful servant
who had believed in him even before he had seen him,
and said, “Arise, arise from the dead, and I
will give thee life.” This is the simplicity
of it all, my friends. A multitude of other things
you need not trouble yourselves about. I amaze
myself when I think how men go asking about the questions
of eternal punishment and the duration of man’s
torment in another life, of what will happen to any
man who does not obey Jesus Christ. Oh, my friends,
the soul is all wrong when it asks that. Not
until the soul says, “What will come if I do
obey Jesus Christ?” and opens its glorified
vision to see all the great things that are given to
the soul that enters into the service of the perfect
one, the perfect love, not until then the perfect
love, the perfect life, come in. A man may be-I
believe it with all my heart-so absolutely
wrapped up in the glory of obedience, and the higher
life, and the service of Christ, that he never once
asks himself, “What will come to me if I do not
obey?” any more than your child asks you what
you will do to him if he is not obedient. Every
impulse and desire of his life sets toward obedience.
And so the soul may have no theory of everlasting or
of limited punishment, or of the other life.
Simply now, here, he must have that
without which he cannot live, that without which there
is no life. Jesus the soul must have, the one
yesterday, to-day, and forever; He that is and was
and is to be. Men dwell upon what He was, upon
what He is; I rather think to-day of what He is to
be. And when I see these young men here before
me looking to the future and not to the past,-nay,
looking to the future and not to the present, valuing
the present only as it is the seed ground of the future,
the foundation upon which the structure is to rise
whose pinnacle shall some day pierce the sky,-I
want to tell them of the Jesus that shall be.
In fuller comprehension of Him, with deeper understanding
of His life, with a more entire impression of what
He is and of what He may be to the soul, so men shall
understand Him in the days to be, and yet He shall
be the same Christ still. The future belongs
to Jesus Christ, yes, the same Christ that I believe
in and that I call upon you to believe in to-day,
but a larger, fuller, more completely comprehended
Christ, the Christ that is to be, the same Christ
that was and suffered, the same Christ that is and
helps, but the same Christ also who, being forever
deeper and deeper and more deeply received into the
souls of men, regenerates their institutions, changes
their life, opens their capacities, surprises them
with themselves, makes the world glorious and joyous
every day, because it has become the new incarnation,
the new presence of the divine life in the life of
man.
Men are talking about the institutions
in which you are engaged, my friends, about the business
from which you have come here to worship for this
little hour. Men are questioning about what they
care to do, what they can have to do with Christianity.
They are asking everywhere this question: “Is
it possible for a man to be engaged in the activities
of our modern life and yet to be a Christian?
Is it possible for a man to be a broker, a shopkeeper,
a lawyer, a mechanic, is it possible for a man to
be engaged in a business of to-day, and yet love his
God and his fellow-man as himself?” I do not
know. I do not know what transformations these
dear businesses of yours have got to undergo before
they shall be true and ideal homes for the child of
God; but I do know that upon Christian merchants and
Christian brokers and Christian lawyers and Christian
men in business to-day there rests an awful and a
beautiful responsibility: to prove, if you can
prove it, that these things are capable of being made
divine, to prove that a man can do the work that you
have been doing this morning and will do this afternoon,
and yet shall love his God and his fellow-man as himself.
If he cannot, if he cannot, what business have you
to be doing them? If he can, what business have
you to be doing them so poorly, so carnally, so unspiritually,
that men look on them and shake their heads with doubt?
It belongs to Christ in men first to prove that man
may be a Christian and yet do business; and, in the
second place, to show how a man, as he becomes a greater
Christian, shall purify and lift the business that
he does and make it the worthy occupation of the Son
of God.
What shall be our universal law of
life? Can we give it as we draw toward our last
moment? I think we can. I want to live, I
want to live, if God will give me help, such a life
that, if all men in the world were living it, this
world would be regenerated and saved. I want to
live such a life that, if that life changed into new
personal peculiarities as it went to different men,
but the same life still, if every man were living
it, the millennium would be here; nay, heaven would
be here, the universal presence of God. Are you
living that life now? Do you want your life multiplied
by the thousand million so that all men shall be like
you, or don’t you shudder at the thought, don’t
you give hope that other men are better than you are?
Keep that fear, but only that it may be the food of
a diviner hope, that all the world may see in you the
thing that man was meant to be, that is, the Christ.
Ah, you say, that great world, it is too big; how
can I stretch my thought and imagination and conscience
to the poor creatures in Africa and everywhere?
Then bring it home. Ah, this dear city of ours,
this city that we love, this city in which many of
us were born, in which all of us are finding the rich
and sweet associations of our life, this city, whose
very streets we love because they come so close to
everything we do and are, cannot we do something for
it? Cannot we make its life diviner? Cannot
we contribute something that it has not to-day?
Cannot you put in it, some little corner of it, a
life which others shall see and say, “Ah, that
our lives may be like that!” And then the good
Boston in which we so rejoice, which we so love, which
we would so fain make a part of the kingdom of God,
a true city of Jesus Christ, we shall not die without
having done something for it.
I linger, and yet I must not linger.
Oh, my friends, oh, my fellow-men, it is not very
long that we shall be here. It is not very long.
This life for which we are so careful-it
is not very long; and yet it is so long, because,
long, long after we have passed away out of men’s
sight and out of men’s memory, the world, with
something that we have left upon it, that we have
left within it, will be going on still. It is
so long because, long after the city and the world
have passed away, we shall go on somewhere, somehow,
the same beings still, carrying into the depths of
eternity something that this world has done for us
that no other world could do, something of goodness
to get now that will be of value to us a million years
hence, that we never could get unless we got it in
the short years of this earthly life. Will you
know it? Will you let Christ teach it to you?
Will you let Christ tell you what is the perfect man?
Will you let Him set His simplicity and graciousness
close to your life, and will you feel their power?
Oh! be brave, be true, be pure, be men, be men in
the power of Jesus Christ. May God bless you!
May God bless you! Let us pray.