On An Errand for Jesus.
You remember there were four times
that Jesus picked out a group of men, and sent them
on a special errand. About the middle of the second
year of His public life, He chose out twelve men and
commissioned them for a special bit of work.
Six months before the tragic end, He chose seventy
others and sent them out in twos into all the places
He was planning to visit Himself. It was a remarkable
campaign for carrying the news which He was preaching
into all the villages of that whole country through
which His journey south lay.
Then the evening of that never-to-be-forgotten
resurrection day, under wholly changed conditions,
He again commissions ten men of that first twelve.
Things had radically changed with Jesus. And there
had been a bad break in the loyalty of these men.
Two of their number are absent. Judas has gone
to his own place, and Thomas was not there that evening.
His absence cost him a week of doubting and mental
distress. Ten of the old inner circle are commissioned
anew. And then do you remember the last time
they were together? It was about six weeks later,
on the rounded top of the old Olives Mount, the eleven
men with the Master. Four times He commissioned
a group of men for some service He wanted done.
There are two things in these four
commissions that make them alike. The same two
things are in each. The first thing is this:
they are bidden to “go.” That ringing
word “go ye” is in, each time. “As
the Father hath sent Me even so send I you.”
It is a familiar word to every follower of Jesus then,
and now, and always. A true follower of His always
is stirred by a spirit of "go." A going Christian
is a growing Christian. A going church has always
been a growing church. Those ages when the church
lost the vision of her Master’s face on Olives,
and let other sounds crowd out of her ears the sound
of His voice, were stagnant ages. They are commonly
spoken of in history as the dark ages. “Go”
is the ringing keynote of the Christian life, whether
in a man or in the church.
The second thing found always in each
of these commissions is this: they were qualified,
or empowered to go. Whom God calls He always qualifies.
Where His voice comes His Spirit breathes. If
there has come to you some bit of a call to service,
to teach a class, or write a special letter, or speak
a word, or take up something needing to be done.
And you hesitate. You think that you cannot.
You are not fit, you think, not qualified. The
thing to do is to do it.
If the call is clear go ahead.
Need is one of the strong calling voices of God.
It is always safe to respond. Put out your
foot in the answering swing, even though you cannot
see clearly the place to put it down. God
attends to that part. Power comes as we go.
The Parting Message.
Just now I want to talk with you a
bit about the last one of these commissions, the Olivet
commission. I do not know just what day it was
given or at what hour. But I have thought it was
in the twilight of a Sabbath evening. There’s
a yellow glow of light filling all the western sky
running along the broken line of those hills yonder,
and through the trees, and in upon this group of men
standing.
Here in full view lies little Bethany
fragrant with memories of Jesus’ power.
Over yonder, those tree tops down in a bit of valley
with the brook-that is Gethsemane.
And farther over there is the fortress city of Jerusalem.
And just outside its wall is the bit of a knoll called
Calvary. Here under these trees every night
that last week of the tragedy Jesus had slept out
in the open, with His seamless coat wrapped about
Him. This is the spot He chooses for the good-by
word. It is full of most precious, fragrant memories.
Here is the man who has been Simon,
but out of whom a new man was coming these days, Peter,
the man of rock. And here are John and James,
sons of fire and of thunder, sons of their mother.
And there, little Scotch Andrew. At least our
Scotch friends seem to have adopted him as their very
own. And close by his side is his friend with
the Greek name, Philip. And here the man to whom
Jesus paid the great tribute of naming him the guileless
man.
And the others, not so well known
to us, but very well known to Jesus, and to be not
a whit less faithful than their brothers these coming
days. But somehow as you look you are at once
irresistibly drawn past these to Him-the
Man in the midst. The Man with the great face,
torn with the thorns, and cut with the thongs, but
shining with a sweet, wondrous, beauty light.
It is the last time they are together.
He is going away; coming back soon, they understand.
They do not know just how soon. But meanwhile
in His absence they are to be as He Himself would
be if He remained among men. They are to stand
for Him. And so with eyes fixed on His face they
look, and listen, and wonder a bit, just what the
last word will be.
What would you expect it to be?
It was the good-by word between men who were lovers,
dearest friends. The tenderest thing would be
said and the most important. The one going away
would speak of that which lay closest down in His
own heart. And whatever He might say would sink
deepest into their hearts, and control their action
in the after days.
He had been talking to them very insistently,
about an hour before, down in the city, about waiting
there until the Holy Spirit came upon them.
And that word has fastened itself into their minds
with newly sharpened hooks of steel points. Now
He talks about their being His witnesses, here at
home among their own folks, and out among their half-breed
Samaritan neighbors, whom they didn’t like,
and then-with eyes looking yearningly out
and finger pointing steadily out-to the
farthest reach of the planet. And now, as He
is about to go, this is the word that comes from those
lips:
“All power hath been
given unto Me.
Therefore go ye,
And make disciples of all
nations.”
A Secret Life of Prayer.
There are four things in that good-by
word. Three are directly spoken, and one is not
spoken, but directly implied. First is this, your
chief work is to win men. That is directly said.
The second is implied-it is the toughest
task you ever undertook. That is implied in this
that it will take more power than they have.
A power that only He has. A supernatural power.
And we all know how true that is. Of all luggage
man is the hardest to move. He won’t
move unless he will. Every man of us that
has ever tried to change somebody’s else purpose
knows how impossible it is unless by the inward pull.
You simply cannot without the man’s consent.
The third thing is this: I have all the power
needed. The fourth this: You go.
And the Master meant to tell them,
and to tell us, this: that a man should lead
a triple life, three lives in one. We sometimes
hear of a man leading a double life in a bad sense.
In a good sense, every one of us should be living
a triple life, three distinct lives in one. The
first of these three lives is this: a secret
life, lived with Jesus, hidden from the eyes of men.
An inner life of closest contact with Him, that the
outside folks know nothing about.
Notice again the four statements in
that good-by word. Your chief concern is to win
men. It is the toughest task you ever undertook:
it will take supernatural power. I have all the
power you need. Instinctively you feel as though
the fourth thing should be, “I will go.”
That would seem to be the logical conclusion.
“No,” Jesus says, “you go.”
Plainly if we are to do something taking supernatural
power, and we haven’t any such power of ourselves,
there must be the closest kind of contact with the
source of power. The man who is to go must be
in the most intimate contact with the Man who has
the powers needed in the going.
And this is simply a law of all life,
given to us here by life’s greatest Philosopher.
The seen depends upon the secret always. The outer
keys upon the inner. The life that men see depends
wholly upon the life that only the Master sees.
David had power to slay the lion and bear in secret,
away from the gaze of men, before he had power to
slay the giant before the wondering eyes of two nations.
The closet becomes the swivel of the street.
In crossing the ocean there are two
great dangers to be dreaded and guarded against, aside
from the storms that may arise. The greater of
these is an abandoned ship. One that through some
stress of storm has been left by the sailors in the
attempt to save their lives. It is most dangerous
because it sends no warning ahead of its presence.
In crossing the Atlantic by the more northern routes
the other danger is from the icebergs that may be
met in the steamer’s path. If a fog obscure
the lookout the boat is slowed down, and a man kept
busy with line and thermometer taking the temperature
of the water. The iceberg is kindlier than the
derelict, in the chill it sends out. The presence
of the danger can so be detected, and measures taken
to avoid it.
But the great danger here is not simply
in the huge mountain of ice that you see looming up
against the sky, great as that is. It is in the
unseen ice. Hidden away below is a mountain of
ice twice as large and heavy as that seen above the
water’s surface. The danger lies in the
terrific force of a blow from this hidden pile that
would crush the strongest steel steamer, as I might
crush an egg-shell in my fingers.
We all admire the beauty of the trees
that rear their heads, and send out their branches,
and make the world so beautiful with their soft green
foliage. But have you thought of the twin tree,
the unseen tree that belongs to these we see?
For every tree that grows up and out with its beauty
and fruit there is another. The twin tree goes
down and out.
Sometimes, as far as this we see goes
up, the other goes down; as far as the
branches go out so far do the underneath branches go
out, sometimes farther. This unseen tree is ever
busy drawing moisture, and food from the soil and
sending it, ceaselessly sending it, up to the upper
tree. The beauty and fruitfulness above are because
of this secret life of the tree.
I remember as a boy going to the bathroom
in our home one day to draw some water. But none
came. There were a few drops, and some sputtering-there’s
very apt to be sputtering when there is nothing else-but
no flow of water. And I wondered why. Soon
I found that the main pipe in the street was being
fixed, and the water had been cut off at the curb.
There was water in the pipe clear from the curbstone
up to the spigot, but I could not get it because the
reservoir connection under the ground had been turned
off.
I have met some people since then
that made me think of that. There is a reservoir
of water, clear and sweet, with which they have had
connection, and are supposed still to have. But
when some thirsty body comes up for a bit of refreshment,
there’s some sputtering, some noise, may be a
few stray drops-but no more. And folks
seem thirstier because they were expecting a cool,
satisfying drink that never came.
I think I know why it is so.
The secret connection with the reservoir has been
tampered with. There must be the secret
contact with Jesus cultivated habitually if there
is to be a sweet, strong outer life. And not
cultivated by hothouse methods. Such plants won’t
stand the chilly air outside the glass-house.
Cultivated by natural, simple contact with Jesus,
over His Word, habitually, until everything comes under
the influence of that secret life.
One day a man was standing on a busy
downtown thoroughfare in Cleveland waiting for a car.
There was a thick, dirty wire hanging down from the
cross arm high up of the wire pole. He happened
to stop there. And absorbed in thought, he mechanically
put out his hand and took hold of the wire. Instantly
a look of intense agony came into his face. His
arm, and whole body began twisting and writhing.
Then he fell to the ground lifeless. The dirty-looking
wire had direct connections with the power-house.
It was throbbing with a strong current. It was
a “live” wire.
Some men who have seemed quite unattractive
in the light of some modern standards have been found
on touch to be charged with a life current of tremendous
power. And some others, outwardly more attractive,
have been found to be as powerless as a dead wire.
And some there have been, and are, very winsome and
attractive in themselves, and charged with the life
current too. The great thing is the secret connections
carefully maintained with the source of power.
There must be the closest kind of
touch with God if His plan through us for a planet
is to carry out. We do not run on the storage
battery plan, but on the trolley plan, or the third
rail. There must be constant full touch with
the feed wire or rail. And that “must”
should be spelled in capitals, and printed in red,
and triply underscored.
A man must plan for the bit
of quiet time daily, preferably in the early morning,
alone with Jesus; with the door shut, the Book open,
the spirit quiet, the mind alert, the knee bent, the
will bent too. If it be resolutely planned
for it can be gotten in every life. If not planned
for with a bit of red iron in the will, it will surely
slip out. And the man will surely slip down.
Here is found the spirit in which
a man may live all the day long, wherever his feet
may tread, in the fierce competition of trade, or in
the deadly enervation of some society circles.
Out of such a man shall breathe, all unconsciously
to himself, an atmosphere fragrant as a mountain breeze
over a field of wild roses. This is the first
life Jesus bids us live.
An Open Life of Purity.
The second life we are to live is
the exact reverse of this. It is indeed the outer
side of this: an open life of purity lived
among men for Jesus. Note again the logic
of that good-by word. Your chief business is
to be down there in the thick of the crowd, winning
men out of the dust and dirt up into a new life of
purity. It is the hardest job any man ever undertook.
It is practically impossible unless you have a power
quite more than human. Jesus quietly says, “I
have the power that will do it.”
Again you feel that He must say next,
“I will go.” The thing must
be done. It is the one thing worth while.
It will require a power we haven’t. He
has it. You feel as though He must do the
going. “No,” He says, with great
emphasis. “You go. You be I; you
live my life over again, down there among men.”
The “Ye” and “Me” in that sentence
are meant to be interchangeable words.
He is asking us to live His life over
again among men. No, it is more than that.
He is asking us to let Him live His life over again
in each of us. The Man with the power that men
can’t resist would reach out to them through
us. He would be touching them in us. Jesus
said, “As the Father hath sent Me, even so send
I you.” He said again, “He that hath
seen Me hath seen the Father.” Jesus embodied
the Father to men. He asks us to take His place
and embody Himself to men.
Paul understood this thoroughly.
In writing to the friends throughout Galatia, whom
he had won up to Jesus, he says, “I have been
crucified with Christ.” There is an old
dead “I.” “Nevertheless I live.”
There is a new living “I.” “Yet
not I-the old I-but Christ liveth
in me.” He was the new I. There was a
new personality within Paul. I never weary of
recalling what Martin Luther said about that verse
in the comment he made on Galatians. You remember
he said, “If somebody should knock at my heart’s
door, and ask who lives here, I must not say ’Martin
Luther lives here.’ I would say ‘Martin
Luther-is-dead-Jesus-Christ-lives-here.’”
I wonder if any of us has ever been
taken for Jesus. I wonder if anybody has ever
mistaken any of us for Him. You remember,
He used to move among men after the resurrection,
and while they would feel the gentle winsomeness of
His presence and talk, they did not recognize Him.
Has somebody run across you or me sometime, and been
with us a little while, and then gone away saying
to himself, “I wonder if that was Jesus back
again in disguise. He seemed so much like what
I think Jesus must have been-I wonder.”
Well, if it were so, of course we
would not be conscious of it. A Jesus-man is
never absorbed in thinking about himself. He is
taken up with Jesus, and with folks. A man is
always least conscious of the power of his own presence
and life. Everybody else knows more about it than
he does. Plainly this is the Master’s plan
for each of us. And more, it is the result when
He is allowed free sway.
The controlling principle of His life
was to please His Father. The pervading purpose
and passion was to win men out and up. The characteristics
of His life were purity, unselfishness, sympathy, and
simplicity. We are to be as He. He was the
Father to all the race of men. Each of us is
to be Jesus to his circle.
Please notice I’m not talking
about lips just now but about lives. The life
is the indorsement of the lips. It makes the words
of the lips more than they sound or seem. Or,
it makes them less, sometimes pitiably less, little
more than a discount clerk ever busily at work.
The words ever go to the level of the life, up or
down. Water seeks its level persistently.
So do one’s words, and they find it more quickly
than the water, for they go through all obstructions.
And the life is the leveler of the words, up or down.
So far as this second life is concerned
a man’s lips might be sealed, and his tongue
dumb, but his life in its purity and simplicity, its
unselfishness and sympathetic warmness will ever be
spelling out Jesus. And He will be spelled out
so big and plain that the man hurriedly running, or
lazily creeping, or half blind in a cloud of dust,
will be stopping and reading. If there were but
more re-incarnations of Jesus how folks would be coming
a-running to Him.
Do you remember that prayer in blank
verse of the old Scottish preacher and poet and saint,
Horatius Bonar? He said:
“Oh, turn me, mould
me, mellow me for use.
Pervade my being with Thy
vital force,
That this else inexpressive
life of mine
May become eloquent and full
of power,
Impregnated with life and
strength divine.
Put the bright torch of heaven
into my hand,
That I may carry it aloft
And win the eye of weary wanderers
here below
To guide their feet into the
paths of peace.
I cannot raise the dead,
Nor from this soil pluck precious
dust,
Nor bid the sleeper wake,
Nor still the storm, nor bend
the lightning back,
Nor muffle up the thunder,
Nor bid the chains fall from
off creation’s long enfettered limbs.
But I can live a life
that tells on other lives,
And makes this world less
full of anguish and of pain;
A life that like the pebble
dropped upon the sea
Sends its wide circles to
a hundred shores.
May such a life be mine.
Creator of true life, Thyself
the life Thou givest,
Give Thyself, that Thou mayst
dwell in me, and I
in Thee.”
An Active Life of Service.
The third life is a life of active
service, of aggressive earnestness in winning men.
I say aggressive. That word does not mean noise
and dust, shuffling of feet, and bustling confusion.
It means rather the steady, steady movement of the
sun which noiselessly, dustlessly, moves onward, hour
after hour, day in and day out, regardless of any storms,
or disturbances. It means the quiet, peaceful,
but resistless uninterrupted movement of the moon
rising night after night, and going through its circle
of action. Earnestness means the burning of the
inner spirit. Its fires dim not, for they are
fed continually from secret sources.
This third life is spoken of directly:
“Go ye and make disciples.” The going
is to be continued until folks farthest away have heard.
Some people are bounded by the horizon of the town
where they live, some by the particular church to
which they belong, some the denomination, some the
state, or even the nation. Jesus fixes the horizon
of His follower as that of the world. Jesus was
visionary. He talked about all nations, a race,
a world.
All are to go. They are to go
to all. Some may be made wholly free, by arrangement
with their fellow-followers, to give their full strength
and time to the direct going and telling. These
are highly favored in privilege. Some of these
may go to deserted darkened places in the home land.
Some may go to the city slum, which in its dire need
is of close kin to the foreign-mission land.
These are yet more highly favored in privilege.
Some may go to those far distant lands
where Jesus is not known, where the need of Him is
so pathetically great. These are the most highly
favored in the privilege of service accorded them.
Many others have been left free of the necessity of
earning bread and home and clothing and so have a rare
opportunity of devoting themselves to the going, as
the Spirit of Jesus guides. Many are given the
talent to earn easily, and so, if they will, may give
much strength to service.
The great majority everywhere and
always are absorbed for most of the waking hours of
the day in earning something to eat, and something
to wear, and somewhere to sleep. Yet where there
is the warm touch with Jesus there will come the yearning
for purity, and the life of service. With these
as with all there may be the service, strong and sweetly
fragrant. There is always some bit of spare time,
with planning, that can be used in direct service
in church, or school, or mission. And the secret
life of prayer will give a steadiness that will guard
against the over-use of one’s strength.
There can be a personal going to some
in words tactfully spoken. There is the life
of sweet purity and gentle patience always so winsome,
that speaks all the time in musical tones to one’s
circle. There is an enormous, unconscious aggressiveness
about such a life. Then there can be the going
through gold. And the entire planet can be brought
under one’s thumb of influence through the strangely
simple power of prayer.
I have been running across some new
versions of this last word of Jesus. A sort of
re-revisions they are. I have not found them in
the common print, but printed in lives, the lives
of men. The print is large, chiefly capitals,
easily read. These lives are so noisy as to quite
shut out what the lips may be saying. There are
variations in these translations.
Sometime the message is made to read
like this: “All power hath been given unto
Me, therefore go ye, and make-coins of gold-oh,
belong to church of course-that is proper
and has many advantages-and give too.
There are advantages about that-give freely,
or make it seem freely-give to missions
at home and abroad. That is regarded as a sure
sign of a liberal spirit. But be careful about
the proportion of your giving. For the
real thing that counts at the year’s end is
how much you have added to the stock of dollars in
your grasp. These other things are good, but-merely
incidental. This thing of getting gold is the
main drive.”
Please understand me, I never heard
any of these folks talk in this blunt way with their
tongues. So far as I can hear, they are
saying something quite different. But what their
tongues are saying is made indistinct and blurred
by some noise near by.
Other translations I have run across
have this variation: “Make a place for
yourself, in your profession, in society. Make
a comfortable living;-with a wide margin
of meaning to that word ’comfortable’-belong
to the church, become a pillar, or at least move in
the pillar’s circle, give of course, even freely
in appearance, but remember these are the dust in
the scale, the other is the thing that weighs.
All of one’s energies must be centered on the
main thing.”
May I ask you to listen very quietly,
while I repeat the Master’s own words over very
softly and clearly, so that they may get into the inner
cockles of our hearts anew? “All power hath
been given unto Me; therefore go ye, and make disciples
of all nations.” These other translations
are wrong. They are misleading. The one main
thing is influencing men for Jesus.
The Perspective of True Service.
It is not the only thing by any means.
There is a multitude of things perfectly proper and
that must be done and well done. But through all
their doing is to run this one strong purpose.
These other things are details, important details,
indispensably important, yet details. The other
is the one main thing toward which the doing of all
the others is to bend and blend.
Please mark keenly that there are
three lives here; three in one. The secret life
of prayer, the open life of purity, the active life
of service Not one, nor the other, not any two, but
all three, this is the true ideal. This is the
true rounded life. And note sharply that this
gives the true perspective of service. The service
life grows up out of the other two. Its roots
lie down in prayer and purity. This explains why
so much service is fruitless. It isn’t
rooted. There is no rich subsoil.
It seems to be a part of the hurt
of sin that men do not keep the proportion of things
balanced, and never have. In former days men shut
themselves up behind great walls that they might be
pleasing to God. They shut out the noise that
they might have quiet to pray. They thought to
shut out the sin that they might be pure, forgetting
that they carried it in with them.
In our day things have swung clean
over to the other extreme. Now all is activity.
The emphasis of the time is upon doing. There
is a lot of running around, and rushing around.
There is a great deal of activity that seems inseparable
from dust. The wheels make such a lot of noise
as they go around. Doing that does not root
down in the secret touch with Jesus, may be quite
vigorous for a time, but soon leaves behind as its
only memory withered up branches. This is a practical
age, we are constantly told. Things must be judged
by the standard of usefulness. That is surely
true, and good, but there is very serious danger that
the true perspective of service be lost in the dust
that is being raised.
The imprint of this disproportion
or lack of proportion can even be found in the theological
teaching of long ago and now. At one time religion
was defined as having to do with a man’s relation
to God. That was emphasized to the utter hiding
away of all else. In our own day the swing is
clear over to the other side. Definitions of
religion that make everything of helping one’s
brother and fellow, are the popular thing. There
seems to be a sort of astigmatism that keeps us from
seeing things straight. Though always there have
been those that saw straight and lived truly.
Mark keenly that true touch with God
always brings the longing to be pure, and the loving
of one’s fellow. The nearer one gets to
God the nearer will he find himself getting to men.
Often we find ourselves getting new wonderful glimpses
of God as we are eagerly helping somebody. Up
seems to include out, as though the line that drew
us up to God led through men. Yet with that always
goes the other fact that touch with God makes one
long to be alone with Him.
There are always the three turnings
of a true life, upward, inward, outward. Upward
to God, inward to self, outward to the world.
The more one knows God the keener is the longing to
get off with Himself alone, the deeper is the yearning
to be pure, and the stronger is the passion to help
others regardless of any sacrifice involved.
A Long Time Coming.
There is an old story that caught
fire in my heart the first time it came to me, and
burns anew at each memory of it. It told of a
time in the southern part of our country when the
sanitary regulations were not so good as of late.
A city was being scourged by a disease that seemed
quite beyond control. The city’s carts
were ever rolling over the cobble-stones, helping
carry away those whom the plague had slain.
Into one very poor home, a laboring
man’s home, the plague had come. And the
father and children had been carried out until on the
day of this story there remained but two, the mother
and her baby boy of perhaps five years. The boy
crept up into his mother’s lap, put his arms
about her neck, and with his baby eyes so close, said,
“Mother, father’s dead, and brothers and
sister are dead;-if you die, what’ll
I do?”
The poor mother had thought of it,
of course, What could she say? Quieting her voice
as much as possible, she said, “If I die, Jesus
will come for you.” That was quite satisfactory
to the boy. He had been taught about Jesus, and
felt quite safe with Him, and so went about his play
on the floor. And the boy’s question proved
only too prophetic. And quick work was done by
the dread disease. And soon she was being laid
away by strange hands.
It is not difficult to understand
that in the sore distress of the time the boy was
forgotten. When night came, he crept into bed,
but could not sleep. Late in the night he got
up, found his way out along the street, down the road,
in to where he had seen the men put her. And throwing
himself down on the freshly shoveled earth, sobbed
and sobbed until nature kindly stole consciousness
away for a time.
Very early the next morning a gentleman
coming down the road from some errand of mercy, looked
over the fence, and saw the little fellow lying there.
Quickly suspecting some sad story, he called him, “My
boy, what are you doing there?-My boy,
wake up, what are you doing there all alone?”
The boy waked up, rubbed his baby eyes, and said, “Father’s
dead, and brothers and sister’s dead, and now-mother’s-dead-too.
And she said, if she did die, Jesus would come for
me. And He hasn’t come. And I’m
so tired waiting.” And the man swallowed
something in his throat, and in a voice not very clear,
said, “Well, my boy, I’ve come for you.”
And the little fellow waking up, with his baby eyes
so big, said “I think you’ve been a long
time coming.”
Whenever I read these last words of
Jesus or think of them, there comes up a vision that
floods out every other thing. It is of Jesus Himself
standing on that hilltop. His face is all scarred
and marred, thorn-torn and thong-cut. But it
is beautiful, passing all beauty of earth, with its
wondrous beauty light. Those great eyes are looking
out so yearningly, out as though they were
seeing men, the ones nearest and those farthest.
His arm is outstretched with the hand pointing out.
And you cannot miss the rough jagged hole in the palm.
And He is saying, "Go ye." The attitude, the
scars, the eyes looking, the hand pointing, the voice
speaking, all are saying so intently, "Go ye."
And as I follow the line of those
eyes, and the hand, there comes up an answering vision.
A great sea of faces that no man ever yet has numbered,
with answering eyes and outstretching hands. From
hoary old China, from our blood-brothers in India,
from Africa where sin’s tar stick seems to have
blackened blackest, from Romanized South America, and
the islands, aye from the slums, and frontiers, and
mountains in the homeland, and from those near by,
from over the alley next to your house maybe, they
seem to come. And they are rubbing their eyes,
and speaking. With lives so pitifully barren,
with lips mutely eloquent, with the soreness of their
hunger, they are saying, “You’re a long
time coming.”
Shall we go? Shall we not
go? But how shall we best go? By keeping
in such close touch with Jesus that the warm throbbing
of His heart is ever against our own. Then will
come a new purity into our lives as we go out irresistibly
attracted by the attraction of Jesus toward our fellows.
And then too shall go out of ourselves and out of
our lives and service, a new supernatural power touching
men. It is Jesus within reaching men through
us.