The Master’s Invitation.
It was about six months before the
tragic end that Jesus sent out thirty-five deputations
of two each. He was beginning that slow memorable
journey south that ended finally at the cross.
These men are sent ahead to prepare the way.
By and by they return and make a glad exultant report
of the good results attending their work. Even
the demons had acknowledged the power of Jesus’
name on their lips.
As He was listening Jesus looked up,
and said, “Father, I thank Thee.”
And then, as though He could see those great crowds
to whom they had been ministering in His name, He
said, “Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are
heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take My
yoke upon you, and learn of Me; for I am meek and
lowly in heart; and ye shall find rest unto your souls.
For My yoke is easy and My burden is light.”
There are two invitations here, “come”
and “take.” There are two sorts of
people. Those who are tugging and straining at
work, and carrying heavy burdens, and then those who
have received rest, and are now asked to go a step
farther. There are two kinds of rest, a given
rest, and a found rest. The given rest cannot
be found. It comes as a sheer out gift, from Jesus’
own hand. The found rest cannot be given, may
I say? It comes stealing its gentle way in as
one fits into Jesus’ plan for his life.
Many folks have accepted the first
of these invitations. They have “come”
to Jesus, and received sweet rest from His hand.
But they have gone no farther. At the close of
that first invitation there is a punctuation period,
a full stop. Some of the old schoolbooks used
to say that one should stop at a period and count
four. Well, a great many people have followed
that old rule here, and more than followed. They
have stopped at that period, and never gotten past
it. I want just now to ask you to come with me
as we talk together a bit about this second invitation,
“Take My yoke.”
Jesus used several different words
in tying people up to Himself. There is a growth
in them, as He draws us nearer and nearer. First
always is the invitation “Come unto Me.”
That means salvation, life. Then He says, “Follow
Me,” “Come after Me.” That means
discipleship. “Learn of Me” means
training in discipleship. “Yoke up with
Me” means closest fellowship. “Abide
in Me” leads one out into abundant life.
“As the Father hath sent Me, even so send I
you,” means living Jesus’ life over again.
And then the last “Go ye” is the outer
reach of all, service for a world.
Surrender a Law of Life.
Just now we want to talk together
over this little three-worded sentence from Jesus’
lips, “Take My yoke.” What does it
mean? Well, that word yoke is used in all literature
outside of this book, as well as here, to mean this:
surrender by one and mastery by another one. Where
two nations have fought and the weaker has been forced
to yield, it is quite commonly spoken of as wearing
the yoke of the stronger nation. The Romans required
their prisoners of war to pass under a yoke, sometimes
a common cattle yoke, sometimes an improvised yoke,
to indicate their utter subjugation. These Hebrews
to whom Jesus is speaking are writhing with sore shoulders
under the galling yoke of the Romans. One can
imagine an emphasis placed on the “My.”
As though Jesus would say, “You have one yoke
now; change yokes. Take My yoke.”
There is too a higher, finer meaning
to this surrender when by mutual arrangement and free
consent there is a yielding of one to another for a
purpose. And so what Jesus means here is simply
this-surrender. Bend your head
down, bend down your neck, even though it’s a
bit stiff going your own way, and fit it into this
yoke of mine. Surrender to Me as your Master.
And somebody says, “I don’t
like that. ‘Surrender!’ that sounds
like force. I thought salvation was free.”
Will you please remember that the principle of surrender
is a law of all life. It is the law of military
life, inside the army. Every man there has surrendered
to the officers above him. In some armies that
surrender has amounted to absolute control of a man’s
person and property by the head of the army. It
is the law of naval service. The moment a man
steps on board a man-of-war to serve he surrenders
the control of his life and movements absolutely to
the officer in command.
It is the law in public, political
life. A man entering the President’s cabinet,
as a secretary of some department, surrenders any divergent
views he may have to those of his chief. With
the largest freedom of thought that must always be
where there are strong men, yet there must of necessity
be the one dominant will if the administration is to
be a powerful one. It is the law of commercial
life. The man entering the employ of a bank,
a manufacturing concern, a corporation of any sort,
in whatever capacity, enters to do the will of somebody
else. Always there must be the one dominant will
if there is to be power and success.
And then may I hush my voice and speak
of the more sacred things very softly and remind you
of this. Surrender is the law of the highest form
of life known to us men. I mean wedded life.
Where the surrender is not by one to the other, but
by each to the other. Two wills, always two wills
where there is strong life, yet in effect but one.
Two persons but only one purpose.
And so you see, Jesus, the Master,
the greatest of earth’s teachers and philosophers,
is striking the keynote of life when here He asks us
to surrender freely and wholly to Himself as the autocrat
of our lives. He asks us to bend our strong wills
to His, to yield our lives, our plans, our ambitions,
our friendships, our gold, absolutely to His control.
Free Surrender.
And if you still do not like the sound
of that word surrender. It has a harsh sound
that grates upon your nerves. Will you please
notice the first word of that little sentence-“Take.”
Jesus does not say in sharp, hard tones, “Come
here; bend down; I’ll put this yoke on
you.” Never that. If you will, of
your own glad accord, freely, winsomely take
the yoke upon you-that is what He asks.
In military usage surrender is forced.
Here it must be free. Nothing else would
be acceptable to Jesus.
When our commissioners went a few
years ago to Paris to treat with the Spaniards, the
latter are said to have desired certain changes in
the language of the protocol. With the polished
suavity for which they are noted the Spaniards urged
that there be made slight changes in the words:
no real change in the meaning, they said, simply in
the verbiage. And our Judge Day at the head of
the American Commissioners, listened politely and
patiently until the plea was presented. And then
he quietly said, “The article will be signed
as it reads.” And the Spaniards
protested, with much courtesy. The change asked
for was trivial, merely in the language, not in the
force of the words. And our men listened patiently
and courteously. Then Mr. Day is said to have
locked his little square jaw and replied very quietly,
“The article will be signed as it reads.”
And the article was so signed. That is military
usage. The surrender was forced. The strength
of the American fleets, the prestige of great victory
were back of the quiet man’s demand.
But that is not the law here.
Jesus asks for only what we give freely and spontaneously.
He does not want anything except what is given with
a free, glad heart. This is to be a voluntary
surrender. Jesus is a voluntary Saviour.
He wants only voluntary followers. He would have
us be as Himself. The oneness of spirit leads
the way into the intimacy of closest friendship.
And that is His thought for us.
Do you remember those fine lines,
“The quality of mercy is not strained”-if
the thing be forced through a strainer, there is no
mercy there-“it droppeth as the gentle
rain from heaven upon the place beneath.”
Only what the warm current of His love draws out does
Jesus desire from us. It is to be a free
surrender.
“Him.”
And if you still knit your mental
brows, and shrug your shoulder. The thing hasn’t
yet shaken off the harshness you have been clothing
it with. Please notice the second word of that
sentence-“My.” “Take
My Yoke.” May I say gently but frankly
that I would not surrender the control of my life
to any of you who are listening so kindly. And
I surely would not ask that I should be the autocrat
of any of your lives. But-when-Jesus
comes along. The Man with the marvelous face all
torn and scarred, but with that great, soft, shining
light. I do not know just how all of you feel.
I can guess how some of you feel. But I know one
man who cannot respond too quickly and eagerly.
The only thing to do is to make the will as strong
as it can be made, and then to use all of its strength
in surrendering eagerly to this matchless Man Jesus.
Doubtless many of you know fully that same eagerness,
and maybe more.
I remember a simple story that twined
its clinging tendril lingers about my heart.
It was of a woman whose long years had ripened her
hair, and sapped her strength. She was a true
saint in her long life of devotion to God. She
knew the Bible by heart, and would repeat long passages
from memory. But as the years came the strength
went, and with it the memory gradually went too, to
her grief. She seemed to have lost almost wholly
the power to recall at will what had been stored away.
But one precious bit still stayed.
She would sit by the big sunny window of the sitting
room in her home, repeating over that one bit, as though
chewing a delicious titbit, “I know whom I have
believed and am persuaded that He is able to keep
that which I have committed unto Him against that
day.” By and by part of that seemed to slip
its hold, and she would quietly be repeating, “that
which I have committed to Him.”
The last few weeks as the ripened
old saint hovered about the border land between this
and the spirit world her feebleness increased.
Her loved ones would notice her lips moving.
And thinking she might be needing some creature comfort
they would go over and bend down to listen for her
request. And time and again they found the old
saint repeating over to herself one word, over and
over again, the same one word, “Him-Him-Him.”
She had list the whole Bible but one word. But
she had the whole Bible in that one word. Did
she not? This is a surrender to Him, the
Man of the Book. The Man of all life.
Yoked Service.
They tell me that on a farm the yoke
means service. Cattle are yoked to serve, and
to serve better, and to serve more easily. This
is a surrender for service, not for idleness.
In military usage surrender often means being kept
in enforced idleness and under close guard. But
this is not like that. It is all up on a much
higher plane. Jesus has every man’s life
planned. It always awes me to recall that simple
tremendous fact. With loving strong thoughtfulness
He has thought into each of our lives, and planned
it out, in whole, and in detail. He comes to a
man and says, “I know you. I have
been thinking about you.” Then very
softly-“I-love-you.
I need you, for a plan of Mine. Please
let Me have the control of your life and all your
power, for My plan.” It is a surrender
for service.
It is yoked service. There
are two bows or loops to a yoke. A yoke in action
has both sides occupied, and as surely as I bow down
My head and slip it into the bow on one side-I
know there is Somebody else on the other side.
It is yoked living now, yoked fellowship, yoked service.
It is not working for God now. It is working
with Him. Jesus never sends anybody ahead
alone. He treads down the pathway through every
thicket, pushes aside the thorn-bushes, and clears
the way, and then says with that taking way of His,
“Come along with Me. Let’s go together,
you and I.”
A man got up in a meeting to speak.
It was down in Rhode Island, out a bit from Providence.
He was a farmer, an old man. He had become a Christian
late in life, and this evening was telling about his
start. He had been a rough, bad man. He
said that when he became a Christian even the cat knew
that some change had taken place. That caught
my ear. It had a genuine ring. It seemed
prophetic of the better day coming for all the lower
animal creation. So I listened.
He said that the next morning after
the change of purpose he was going down to the village
a little distance from his farm. He swung along
the road, happy in heart, singing softly to himself,
and thinking about the Saviour. All at once he
could feel the fumes coming out of a saloon ahead.
He couldn’t see the place yet, but his keen trained
nose felt it. The odors came out strong, and
gripped him.
He said he was frightened, and wondered
how he would get by. He had never gone by before,
he said; always gone in; but he couldn’t go in
now. But what to do, that was the rub. Then
he smiled, and said, “I remembered, and I said,
’Jesus, you’ll have to come along and help
me get by, I never can by myself.’” And
then in his simple, illiterate way he said, “and
He come-and we went by, and
we’ve been going by ever since.”
Ah, the old Rhode Island farmer had
found the whole simple philosophy of the true life.
Our Yokefellow is always there alongside. Every
temptation that comes to us He has felt the sharp
edge of, and can overcome. Every problem, every
difficulty, every opportunity He knows, and is right
there, swinging in rhythmic step alongside. It’s
yoked living and yoked service.
In Step with Jesus.
Then please mark keenly that this
surrender is for surrendered service.
No free-lancing here. No guerrilla warfare, no
bushwhacking. There seems to be quite a lot of
that, in this army. Some earnest folks are very
busy “helping God out,” regardless of
the general movement of the whole army. And a
great help they are too-they think.
It would be difficult to see how God would ever get
along without them-they seem to think.
Poor folks, they have gotten so covered with the dust
made by their own feet that they’ve completely
lost track of things. There is a Lord to this
harvest. There is a great Commander-in-chief to
this campaign. He has the whole campaign for
a world carefully planned out. And each
man’s part in it is planned too. He knows
best what needs to be done. He sees keenly the
strategic points, and the emergencies. If only
He could but depend on our ears being trained to know
His voice, and our wills trained to simple, full obedience,
how much difference it would make to Him. Simple,
full strong obedience seems to take the keenest intelligence,
the strongest will, and the most thorough discipline.
“Just to ask Him what
to do,
All
the day.
And to make you quick and
true
To
obey."
This surrender is for glad, obedient surrendered service.
And note too that it is for training
in service. They tell me that where cattle are
yoked for work it is usual to put a young restive beast
with an old, steady-going animal. The old worker
sets the pace, and pulls evenly, steadily ahead, and
by and by the young undisciplined beast gradually
comes to learn the pace. That seems to fit in
here with graphic realness. So many of us seem
to be full of an undisciplined unseasoned strength.
There are apt to be some hard drives ahead, and then
pulling back with a sudden jerk, and side lunges this
way and that. There is splendid strength, and
eager willingness, but not much is accomplished for
lack of the steady, steady going regardless of rocks
or ruts.
Jesus says, “Yoke up with Me.
Let’s pull together, you and I.” And
if we will pull steadily along, content to be by His
side, and to be hearing His quiet voice, and always
to keep His pace, step by step with Him, without
regard to seeing results, all will be well, and by
and by the best results and the largest will be found
to have come. And remember that as on the farm,
so here, the yoke is always carefully adjusted so that
the young learner may have the easier pulling.
But it is well to put in this bit
of a caution. If a man put his head into the
yoke, and then pull back-well, there’ll
be a man with a badly chafed, sore neck in that neighborhood,
and oil will be in demand. The one safe rule
is swinging straight ahead, steady, steady, without
even stopping to decide if the plow has cut properly,
or if it is worth while.
The Scar-marks of Surrender.
Then Jesus adds this: “Learn
of Me.” I used to wonder just what that
means. But I think I know a part of its meaning
now. You remember the Hebrews had a scheme of
qualified slavery. A man might sell his service
for six years but at the end of that time he was scot-free.
On the New Year’s morning of the seventh year
he was given his full liberty, and given some grain
and oil to begin life with anew.
But if on that morning he found himself
reluctant to leave, all his ties binding him to his
master’s home, this was the custom among them.
He would say to his master, “I don’t want
to leave you. This is home to me. I love
you and the mistress. I love the place. All
my ties and affections are here. I want to stay
with you always.” His master would say,
“Do you mean this?” “Yes,”
the man would reply, “I want to belong to you
forever.”
Then his master would call in the
leading men of the village or neighborhood to witness
the occurrence. And he would take his servant
out to the door of the home, and standing him up against
the door-jamb would pierce the lobe of his ear through
with an awl. I suppose like a shoemaker’s
awl. Then the man became not his slave, but his
bond-slave, forever. It was a personal surrender
of himself to his master; it was voluntary; it was
for love’s sake; it was for service; it was after
a trial; it was for life.
Now that was what Jesus did.
If you will turn to that Fortieth Psalm, from which
we read, you will find words that are plainly prophetic
of Jesus, and afterwards quoted as referring to Him.
“Mine ears hast Thou opened, or digged or pierced
for me.” And in the fiftieth chapter of
Isaiah, revised version, are these words likewise
prophetic of Jesus. “The Lord God hath
opened mine ear, and I was not rebellious,
neither turned away backward. I gave my back to
the smiters, and my cheeks to them that plucked off
the hair; I hid not my face from shame and spitting.”
And the truth is this. May the
Spirit of God burn it deep into our hearts. Jesus
was a surrendered Man. Stop a bit and think into
what that means. Jesus is the giant Man of the
human race, thought of just now as a man, though He
was so much more, too. In His wisdom as a teacher,
His calm poised judgment, the purity of His life,
the tremendous power of His personality in swaying
man, He clear overtops the whole race of men.
Now that Master Man, that giant of the race, was a
surrendered Man. For instance run through John’s
Gospel, and pick out the negatives on His lips, the
“nots.” Not His own will, nor His
own words, nor His own teaching, nor His own works.
Jesus came to earth to do Somebody’s else will.
With all His giant powers He was utterly absorbed in
doing what some One else wished done. And now
this giant Man, this surrendered Man, says, “You
do as I have done. Learn of Me: I am wholly
given up to doing My Father’s will. You
be wholly surrendered to Me, and so together we will
carry out the Father’s will.”
Some one of a practical turn says,
“That sounds very nice, but is it not a bit
fanciful? The lobe of Jesus’ ear was not
pierced through, was it?” No. You are right.
The scar-mark of Jesus’ surrender was not in
His ear, as with the old Hebrew slave. You are
quite right. It was in His cheek, and brow, on
His back, in His side and hands and feet. The
scar-marks of His surrender were-are-all
over His face and form. Everybody who surrenders
bears some scar of it because of sin, his own or somebody’s
else. Referring to the suffering endured in service
Paul tenderly reckons it as a mark of Jesus’
ownership-“I bear the scars, the stigmata,
of the Lord Jesus.” Even of the Master
Himself is this so.
And that scarred Jesus whose body
told and tells of His surrender to His Father comes
to us. And with those hands eagerly outstretched,
and eyes beaming with the earnestness of His great
passion for men, He says, “Yoke up with Me,
please. Let Me have the control of all your splendid
powers, in carrying out our Father’s will for
a world.”
Full Power through Rhythm.
Then Jesus, with a sweep, gathers
up all the results in a single sentence, “Ye
shall find rest unto your souls.” Some one
may be thinking, “I do not feel the need of
rest or peace so much. I am hungry for power.”
Will you please notice that Jesus is going to the
very root of the thing here. There must be peace
before there can be power. You shall find peace.
Others shall find power. You will be conscious
of the sweet sense of peace within. Others will
be conscious of the fragrant power breathing out of
your life, and service, and your very person.
These things, peace and power, are
the same. They are different movements of the
same river of God. The presence of God in fine
harmony with you, that it is that brings the sweet
peace. And that too it is that brings the gracious
power into the life. The inward flow of the river
is peace. The outward flow of the same stream
is power. There cannot be power save as there
is peace. There is nothing that hinders and holds
back power as does friction. That is true in
mechanics: a bit of friction grit between the
wheels will check the full working of the machinery.
A small nut fallen down out of place will completely
stop the machine and bring all of its power to a standstill.
This is heart rest. The
heart is the center, the citadel of the life.
When the heart rests all is at rest. If the citadel
can be captured the outworks are included. It
is a found rest. It comes quietly stealing
its soft way in as you go about your regular round
of life. Just where you are, in the thick of
the old circumstances and conditions, there comes
breathing gently into your very being the great fragrant
peace of God. You find it coming in. There
is all the zest of finding.
It is rest in service.
To many folks those two words “yoke” and
“rest” have seemed to jar, as though they
did not get along well together. But they do.
The jarring is not in them but in our misunderstanding
of them. A yoke, we have thought, means work.
Rest means quitting work; no more need of work.
But that is a bit of the hurt of sin that gets so many
things wrong end to.
“Rest is not quitting
The busy
career;
Rest is the fitting
Of self
to its sphere."
True rest is in the unhurried rhythm
of action. Have you thought of when your heart
rests? It does not stop, of course, while life
lasts. But it rests. It rests between beats.
A beat and a rest. A throb of power and a moment
of perfect rest. A mighty motion that sends the
warm red life through all the intricate machinery
of the body; then quiet composed rest. The secret
of the immeasurable power of this organ we call the
heart lies just here. There is enough power in
a normal human heart to batter down Bunker Hill Monument
if it could be centered upon it. The secret of
that power is in the rhythm of action that combines
motion with rest. We call rhythm of color, beauty.
Rhythm of sound is music. Rhythm of action is
power.
I have often stood as a boy on the
streets of old Philadelphia, and watched a gang of
foreign laborers at work. As a rule they could
speak only the language of their own fatherland.
There would be a gang-boss to direct their movements.
Perhaps it was a huge stone to be moved, or a piece
of structural iron, or a heavy rail to be torn up.
The ends of their crowbars were fitted under the thing
to be moved. Then they waited a moment for the
gang-boss to give the word. He would say, “heave
ho!”
Then all together they would sing
“heave ho,” and push. And a “heave
ho,” and push; a “heave ho,” and
a push. They made perfect music. There was
always a small crowd gathered, watching and enjoying
the simple music. Their work was easier because
done rhythmically. This, of course, is the simple
philosophy that provides music for soldiers on march.
The men can walk much longer, and farther, with less
fatigue if they go to the sound of music.
The story is told of the contracts
for some bridge-building in the Soudan being carried
off by American bidders. Their competitors in
the bidding specified a year’s time or so, for
the work. The Americans agreed to do it in three
months. They were awarded the contract, and to
the others’ surprise had the work completed
within the specified time.
One of the contractors who had bid
for the job on the basis of a year’s time said
afterwards to the successful contractor, “I wish,
if you wouldn’t mind doing so, you would tell
me how you ever got that work done in so short a time
with those undisciplined Soudanese natives for workmen.
I have had them on other contracts and I know I couldn’t
have done it. How did you ever do it?”
And the American, whose blood was
British a generation or two back, and farther back
yet Teutonic, smiled as he quietly said, “We
had a band of native musicians playing the liveliest
music they knew within earshot of every gang of laborers,
while our gang-bosses kept them steadily at work.”
Rhythm is the secret of power.
Full rhythm is possible only where there is full obedience
to nature. The man in full sweet harmony with
God in all of his life knows the stilling ecstasy
of peace, and the marvelous outgoings of real power.
You shall find within your heart the great stilling
calm of God, as steadying as the rock of ages, as
exhilarating as the subtle fragrance of flowers, and
as restful as a mother’s bosom to her babe.
He is Our Peace.
But there is something here finer
yet by far than this. Everything God provides
for us is personal. There is always the personal
touch and presence. Do you remember that during
the earlier days of the recent war with Spain this
occurrence frequently took place? In the Caribbean
waters a Spanish merchantman would be overtaken by
an American warship. A few shots were sent over
the bows of the merchantman with a demand for surrender.
And then the Spanish flag was seen to drop from the
merchantman’s masthead in token of surrender.
Then this was the method of procedure.
A prize crew, consisting of an officer with a few
ensigns, was lowered from the American boat, pulled
across, and taken aboard the captured boat. The
moment the prize crew stepped aboard they were masters
of the boat in their government’s name.
Their presence signified the surrender of the foreigner,
and the forced peace now between the two boats.
On a much higher plane this is what
takes place with us. There has been flying at
my masthead a flag with a big I upon it. As quickly
as I drop it in token of my surrender to Somebody
else, a prize crew is sent aboard to take possession,
and assume control. Who is the prize crew?
The Holy Spirit, whom Jesus the Master sends to represent
Himself. He steps aboard at once.
He paces the deck as the ship’s
Master. His presence is peace. “He
is our peace.” “The fruit of the
Spirit is love, joy, peace.” And
while He occupies the captain’s quarters, with
full cheery obedience on board, there is ever the
fine aroma of peace everywhere, and the fullness of
power.
The Master’s Touch.
One morning a number of years ago
in London a group of people had gathered in a small
auction shop for an advertised sale of fine old antiques
and curios. The auctioneer brought out an old
blackened, dirty-looking violin. He said, “Ladies
and gentlemen, here is a remarkable old instrument
I have the great privilege of offering to you.
It is a genuine Cremona, made by the famous Antonius
Stradivarius himself. It is very rare, and worth
its weight in gold. What am I bid?” The
people present looked at it critically. And some
doubted the accuracy of the auctioneer’s statements.
They saw that it did not have the Stradivarius name
cut in. And he explained that some of the earliest
ones made did not have the name. And that some
that had the name cut in were not genuine. But
he could assure them that this was genuine. Still
the buyers doubted and criticised, as buyers have
always done. Five guineas in gold were bid, but
no more. The auctioneer perspired and pleaded.
“It was ridiculous to think of selling such
a rare violin for such a small sum,” he said.
But the bidding seemed hopelessly stuck there.
Meanwhile a man had entered the shop
from the street. He was very tall and very slender,
with very black hair, middle-aged, wearing a velvet
coat. He walked up to the counter with a peculiar
side-wise step, and without noticing anybody in the
shop picked up the violin, and was at once absorbed
in it. He dusted it tenderly with his handkerchief,
changed the tension of the strings, and held it up
to his ear lingeringly as though hearing something.
Then putting the end of it up in position he reached
for the bow, while the murmur ran through the little
audience, “Paganini.”
The bow seemed hardly to have touched
the strings when such a soft exquisite note came out
filling the shop, and holding the people spellbound.
And as he played the listeners laughed for very delight,
and then wept for the fullness of their emotion.
The men’s hats were off, and they all stood
in rapt reverence, as though in a place of worship.
He played upon their emotions as he played upon the
old soil-begrimed violin.
By and by he stopped. And as
they were released from the spell of the music the
people began clamoring for the violin. “Fifty
guineas,” “sixty,” “seventy,”
“eighty,” they bid in hot haste. And
at last it was knocked down to the famous player himself
for one hundred guineas in gold, and that evening
he held a vast audience of thousands breathless under
the spell of the music he drew from the old, dirty,
blackened, despised violin.
It was despised till the master-player
took possession. Its worth was not known.
The master’s touch revealed the rare value, and
brought out the hidden harmonies. He gave the
doubted little instrument its true place of high honor
before the multitude. May I say softly, some of
us have been despising the worth of the man within.
We have been bidding five guineas when the real value
is immeasurably above that because of the Maker.
Do not let us be underbidding God’s workmanship.
The violin needed dusting, and readjustment
of its strings before the music came. Shall we
not each of us yield this rarest instrument, his own
personality, to the Master’s hand? There
will be some changes needed, no doubt, as the Master-player
takes hold. And then will go singing out of our
persons and our lives, the rarest music of God, that
shall enthrall and bring all within earshot to the
Master-musician.