A Day of Startling
Joyous Surprises
“Halts by me that footfall:
Is my gloom, after all, Shade of His hand
outstretched caressingly? ’Ah, fondest,
blindest, weakest, I am He whom thou seekest!
Thou drawest love from thee, who drawest Me.’”
“After I am raised
up I will go before you into Galilee.”-Mark
xi.
The Appointment.
Jesus had made an appointment.
It was with these dear friends who had responded so
lovingly to His wooing. It was a significant appointment,
most significant. He had appointed to meet them
three days after His death. He had made a further
appointment to meet them in Galilee. What a stupendous
appointment to make!
It was a sacred appointment, sacred
as the love that made it, sacred to Jesus as the friendship
of these men with whom it was made, sacred as His
word that never was broken. Our Scottish friends
use a most significant word for appointment, the word
tryst. They used to use it some for ordinary
appointments, but chiefly it is used for friendship
and for love-appointments. The appointment is
a tryst.
Tryst is the same word as trust.
In the old Gothic language it was one of the words
used for a covenant or treaty. In medieval Latin
it was a pledge given that an agreement would be kept.
It is a fine turn of a word that uses the very spirit
of confidence in one’s heart in another as the
name for the appointment made with him. The trust
in the heart gives the name to the appointment.
It’s an appointment with one who can
be trusted to keep his word, and who is trusted.
So an appointed tryst becomes more
than a mere appointment. It is a pledge of faith.
Now this is the real force of the word here. Jesus
had appointed a tryst with these men, and in making
it He was plighting His troth, pledging His word to
them. He had asked them to risk all for Him.
In this tryst He is pledging all to them.
He never forgot that sacred appointment.
He had thought much before He made it. He knew
it would involve much to keep it. The power of
God was at stake in the making and the keeping of
it. He knew that. He thought of it.
He made the appointment and He kept it. Jesus
keeps His appointments. His word never fails.
Not even the gates of death, nor the power of the
evil one, can prevail against it.
This was a staggering appointment.
It took so much for granted. It reckons God’s
power is as big as it is. But then that’s
a way Jesus had, and has. And it is a way he
will come to have who companions much with Jesus.
Jesus had spoken of this indirectly
but distinctly when first He told His disciples of
His suffering and death, six months before. And
each time afterwards when He told them of His death
the words were always added, “and the third
day rise again." I The two things are nearly
always linked. But they hadn’t seemed to
sense what He meant. The thing seems quite beyond
them.
He spoke of it again on that never-to-be-forgotten
night of the betrayal, the night of the feet-washing,
and that last long talk, and that wondrous Kidron-prayer.
He spoke of it more than once that night.
It was a very emphatic word He spoke
as they were walking along the darkly shadowed Jerusalem
streets out towards the east gate. He said, “a
little while and ye shall behold Me no more; and again
a little while and ye shall see Me." And the
disciples pick this up and puzzle over it.
And the Master explains rather carefully
and at some length. There was a time of sore
trouble coming for Him and for them. And while
they were sorrowing the outer crowd would be making
merry. But it would be just as with the expectant
mother, He said. All the while even when the pains
cut she is thinking of the great delight that is to
be hers. Her after-joy clean wipes out of her
thought the sharp cutting of the pain.
So it would be. “I will see
you again,” He said in plainest speech.
And again that same night He said, “after I am
raised up, I will go before you into Galilee.”
Could any appointment be more explicit as to time
and place?
But they forget. Aye, there’s
the bother, this thing of forgetting. The memory
is ever the index of the heart and the will and the
understanding. You can tell the one by the other.
Some things are never forgot. A bit embarrassing
and odd this thing of forgetting what Jesus says.
His enemies remembered, and
took special pains to head off any breaking of their
careful plans. And even when the angels remind
the women of the promised appointment, and they with
great joy repeat the reminder to the disciples, it
seems like “idle talk” and is not
accepted. The thing couldn’t be, they think.
Finally the evidence becomes so convincing that they
start off for the trysting place, “into Galilee,
unto the mountain where Jesus had appointed them."
How the Appointment Was Kept.
Let us look a bit at the wonderful
keeping, so unexpected, of this sacred tryst.
It’s the third day now since Jesus’ death.
It is in the dark dusk of the early morning.
A little knot of women make their way slowly along
the road leading out of the city gate. Mary Magdalene
is in the lead, so far ahead of the others as to be
alone. They are carrying packages of perfumed
ointments. They are thinking only of a dear dead
body and of clinging fragrant memories.
They are troubling themselves about
how to get the big stone at the tomb pushed aside.
It was too much for their strength. As she drew
near the tomb Mary Magdalene’s love-quickened
eyes notice something quite unexpected. The stone
is moved aside! She naturally thinks some one
has taken the body secretly away in the night.
Quickly she turns and runs back towards
the city to tell Peter and John. And as quickly
as they hear the startling news they are off on a smart
run towards the tomb. Meanwhile the other women
go on into the tomb. They are further startled
to see a glorious looking person who assures them
that Jesus is living, having risen up out of death.
All a-quiver with fear intermingled with the first
glimmering light of a great hope that they hardly
dare hope, they flee hastily back to town to tell the
others.
Now Peter and John, who have been
eagerly running, arrive breathless, with John in the
lead. Gazing reverently, intently, in through
the opening John sees, not a body, but on the spot
where the body had been laid, the linen wrappings
lying, held up in the shape of a body by Nicodemus’
abundant and heavy ointments just as when they held
the body of Jesus. But clearly there is nothing
in them now.
Now Peter comes up, and, just like
him, goes straight in, and is at once struck by the
arrangement of these cloths, just as John had been.
Then they comment on the fact that the head cloths
are lying where they naturally would be, a little
apart from the others, the distance of the head from
the body.
The evidence convinces them that Jesus’
spirit had indeed returned to His body, and that He
had risen up through the cloths, and gone.
And they start back to town in a great maze of wonder
and delight.
And now Mary Magdalene, knowing nothing
of all this, comes slowly back absorbed with her thoughts
that the body has been secretly removed. She
stands at the open tomb weeping. Then for the
first time she stoops down and looks in. She
is startled to see two angels left there to explain
matters.
They gently say “Why weepest
thou?” Still sobbing, she says, “They have
taken away my Lord, and I know not where they have
laid Him.” And turning aside as she speaks
she sees some One standing near her. Her tear-misted
eyes think Him the attendant in charge of the garden.
Again the question by this man, “Why weepest
thou?” How strangely they talk, these angels
and this gardener! She makes a plea for the body.
Then the one word, her name, spoken
in that voice she knew so well-“Mary.”
Ah! there’s no question about that voice.
She needs no explanation nor evidence more than this,
as she cries out, “Oh, my beloved Master.”
Then He acts so like Himself; He gives her an errand
to do for Him. And off she goes. She has
had the wondrous privilege of the first sight of Him,
and the first errand for Him. The tryst has been
kept with Mary Magdalene.
And now the other women who had gone
running down the road after hearing the angels’
startling message are amazed to meet Jesus standing
in the roadway in front of them. And the same
quiet rich voice so gently and simply gives them the
usual “good-morning” salutation. At
once they are on their knees at His feet. And
He softly says, “Don’t be afraid.
Go tell My brethren to meet Me at the old place appointed,
up by the blue waters of Galilee.” And
again the tryst is kept.
But before all this, the soldiers
on guard, terror-stricken by the earthquake that had
taken place, and dazed at the sight of the “angel
of the Lord” had fled at top speed to the chief
priests with their startling story. Here was
a wholly unexpected bothersome finish to the thing.
But quick consultation follows. And then free
use of money makes the soldiers willing to tell what
they know to be a lie. And so the two utterly
different stories, the truth and the lie, get into
circulation at once. The soldiers and the chief
priests’ circle have learned that the appointment
was kept.
Meanwhile Peter has gone down the
road back to town in a maze of conflicting emotions.
John, lighter of foot, had hurried ahead, very likely
to tell the great news to Jesus’ mother, now
his own. Peter plods slowly along, thinking hard.
It was still early morning, the air so still and fragrant
with the dew. Maybe down by some big trees he
is walking, absorbed, when all at once, some One
is by his side. It’s the Master.
The appointment has been kept with Peter. But
we must leave them alone together. Peter has
some things to straighten out. That’s a
sacred interview meant only for him.
That afternoon two disciples walking
out to a little village a few miles away are joined
by a Stranger whose talk makes their hearts burn like
the Master’s used to. And as they gather
about the evening meal with Him, and He gives thanks
and breaks the loaf, all at once their eyes see.
It is Jesus Himself who has been with them all
the time. Again the appointment is kept.
At once they hasten back to town,
and are just telling the news in joyously broken speech
to the disciples gathered in an upper room with locked
doors when again, all at once, Jesus appears in their
midst, and eats some bread and fish, and tells them
to know by the feel that it is really Himself with
them. He has kept His sacred appointment with
the Twelve. Then a week later He comes in like
manner among them again for the sake of one man, Thomas.
So He keeps the appointment with Thomas, also.
Our Guarantee of His Promises.
Two things stand out sharply.
The resurrection was not expected. It was the
most tremendous surprise. The news was received
at first by those most interested with utter stubborn
unbelief. Then the evidence was so clear and
repeated, and incontestable that these same men staked
their lives on it. They suffered to the extreme
for their witness that Jesus had indeed risen.
Jesus rose from the dead. His
body was re-inhabited by His spirit. The spirit
didn’t die. Spirits neither sleep nor die.
The body died. Then life came into it again.
It was a real body that could eat and be touched.
It was recognized as the same one they had known.
But it was changed. The old limitations were
gone. New powers had come.
Jesus keeps His appointments.
His pledged word never fails. Not a word He has
spoken can ever be broken. Some day He is coming
back. It is an appointment. Then we, too,
who have slipped the tether of life and left our bodies
temporarily in the dust, shall rise up again to meet
Him. It is a sacred appointment He has made with
us.
And some of us who live in that day
shall be changed instead of dying, and shall be caught
up to meet Him and our own loved ones in the air.
That’s His true tryst with us up in the blue,
some day. And He will keep it.
And meanwhile everything He has promised
us in the Book is sure, as being His plighted word.
His resurrection is our bond, our guarantee. As
surely as He rose on that third morning He will keep
His word regarding every matter to you and me.
His appointments never fail, whether
of guidance, of bodily health and strength, of supplies
for every sort of need, of peace, of power, of victory.
The power that raised Jesus up from out the dead is
pledged to us for every promise of this Book for to-day’s
life. He will do an act of creation before He
will let His Word fail. He will leave no power
unused to keep the appointment of His Word with us.
Let us trust His Word to us fully.
And let us live our trust.