God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
[Anger] devours almost all other good emotions. It deadens the soul. It numbs the heart to joy and gratitude and hope and tenderness and compassion and kindness.
" A bruised reed shall he not break, and smoking flax shall he not
quench, till he send forth judgment unto victory." MATTHEW xii.
20.
MATTHEW is telling us how his Master loved to
work in quietness, and how, when His works of
mercy were the most abundant and the crowd grew
greatest, Christ withdrew Himself, and charged
those whom He had healed that they should not
make Him known.
And Matthew goes on to declare that this was
done that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by
Esaias the prophet; and then he goes back and
quotes the words in which 750 years before, Isaiah
had written the description of the servant of the
Lord who was to come. In that description are
these words: "A bruised reed shall he not break,
and the smoking flax shall he not quench. He shall
bring forth judgment unto truth."
We cannot doubt that Matthew had often heard
his Master quote these words, and take them to
Himself. As Christ grew up to maturity, and
recognized the purpose of His life, and found how
exceptional He was among men, we can well under-
stand what a strength and delight it must have been
for Him to look back and see that, here and there,
words had been spoken and lives had been lived,
which had anticipated and prepared for Him. The
world was not all unready for His coming. Men in
other times had dreamed of such a life as He had at
last come to live; and though they had not suc-
ceeded in realizing their dream, and, so far as they
had attempted it, the world had always hated it and
cast it out ; yet still their shining presences in his-
tory made a true line of light which might now lead
the eyes of men to Him, and cause Him to be com-
prehensible to them. There were souls which were
His own, to which He could come. Some of them
would perhaps receive Him. He was not astray in
the world. He was in fulfilment of its loftiest pur-
poses and divinest hopes. Its highest standards,
which had been partially realized by its best men,
bore witness to Him that it was His Father's world.
Therefore in it, though it ignored Him and mis-
understood Him, and even crucified Him, He could
still count Himself at home. This is the pathetic
side of Christ's quotations of prophecies, with re-
gard to Himself, from the Old Testament prophets.
This is the feeling which we can discover beating
underneath this, His quotation from Isaiah.
Let us study that word of Isaiah and of Christ.
It is a declaration of the way in which the true ser-
vant of God will always do his best and most crea-
tive work. Through the tumult of the old Hebrew
history, through the uproar of the temple and the
days of Herod, through each there is seen walking
some one figure which bears the true impress of
creative energy. In each of these times it is from
this figure that the power is to proceed which is to
draw forth and keep all of the good that the past
has in it, and which is to make all things new. And
the great characteristic of each of those figures is its
quietness. Of each of them it is said, "He shall
not strive, nor cry, neither shall his voice be heard
in the streets." How that gives us a new key with
which to unlock the puzzles of History! The crea-
tive powers are quiet. It is the destructive forces
which make the noise. The tornado, the hailstorm,
and the thunderbolt shake the earth and make it
tremble. The dew, the shower, and the sunshine
come noiselessly.
The destructive forces, indeed, cannot be spared.
The earth needs them again and again to clear the
way for the work of creation which is to follow. No
book resounds more than some parts of the Bible do
with the fury of the forces of destruction doing their
terrible work. From the flashing of the fiery swords
over the closed gate of Eden, to the plunge of the
beast and the false prophet as they are cast together
into the lake of brimstone, in the Apocalypse, the
voice of destruction, of revolution, of restraint, is
ever breaking forth from time to time. But he
reads the Bible very feebly and superficially who
does not know that it is not these passages which
make the Bible to really be the Bible, the Book of
God. It is in the record of creative force ; it is in
the story of the soundless Genesis of life ; it is in
the peaceful harmony of harps that the real power
and music of the Book abide.
Oh, that we could realize that this is true through
all the history of man ! that we could see how it is
almost always the destructive forces which make the
noise and win the wonder and applause of men, and
realize that however the destructive forces may have
their true place, and the noisy outcry may be some-
times necessary, the real strength of life is in creative
effort which moves as quietly among the tasks of
men as Jesus Christ walked along the lanes of
Galilee.
You who are called to fight for truth it may be
your duty to take error by the throat and drown its
war-cries with loud denunciation. If that is your
duty, do it ! Do it unsparingly and bravely. Do
it so that your destruction of the error may be as
final and complete as possible. But be thoroughly
glad when it is done, and you may go on to better
work. Do not let yourself think that noisy de-
nunciation, however necessary it may be, is the best
work that a man can do. Honor and do not despise
the men who are quietly creative. Value it as the
best part of your life if, anywhere in the midst of
the tumult of destruction, you are able to put your
finger under any load and lift it, or fasten with your
encouragement any stone of real purposeful achieve-
ment in its place.
But I must come more directly to the point of my
sermon. In the text, Jesus Christ is speaking of
the treatment which He and all the true servants of
God will give to weakness and limitation. It is
surely something which we should like to know.
Here is our world all full of failure. Here are our
lives which, all of them, more or less, are failures.
We know a little, but we do not know enough.
We can do something, but our strength speedily
breaks down. There is a little character and a little
faith, but they are very little; and to think for a
moment that they are more than little only proves
what feeble standards of faith and character we have.
So it is to-day ; and so it has been always.
Now, suppose that it becomes clearly known to us
that into this world there is coming an absolutely
perfect Being, a Being positively perfect, a Being
who not merely never does what is wrong, but who
is vividly, eagerly, thoroughly alive in every good
activity. Will not the question spring up in our
hearts: "How will this Perfect One, who sets no
limits to His own duty and enthusiasm, deal with
the poor half-hearted folk into whose streets and
houses He has come? "
We know the answer to that question which our
experience of men suggests. We know how often
men who have reached proficiency in any good
attainment grow contemptuous about the feeble,
fitful efforts after the same attainment which less
devoted or less able men are making. The man
whose whole life is given up to one great cause, to
the freeing of the slave or the rescue of the drunk-
ard, loses all patience with his neighbor who gives
to either of these pressing needs only a little share
of the interest which he divides among many causes.
The devoted student of a special science thinks le$s
than nothing of the amateur trifling with his favorite
study, which is all that the man who is busily occu-
pied with pressing duties has time for.
Most noteworthy of all, the passionate searcher
after character, the man who is struggling to resist
temptation and to do his duty, he is not able always
to see value in these poor, temporary outbursts of
ambition to be holy which occasionally break forth
out of the lives of men, who in general are given up
to selfishness. It must be hard for him. He is a
man to whom life has come to mean simply one
long, intense struggle after goodness. He sleeps
and wakes in the presence of his enemies, which are
his passions and temptations. His armor is never
off. His every thought is trying to devise some
new means for his warfare. And then he looks
about him and sees you and me feebly praising vir-
tue, provided it is not too excessively and fanatic-
ally virtuous, feebly tying a riband in our cap and
marching in processions in honor of goodness, when
the road is safe and when the day is bright. No
wonder that he is moved with something like con-
tempt ! It is the feeling of the regular army for the
holiday militia. No wonder that he is almost ready
to say, "If you are not ready for more serious work
than that, put off your armor altogether. Do not
pretend to be struggling for righteousness, if you
have no more energy to put into the fight than
that. If the reed is so bruised, better break it alto-
gether. If the lamp with its smoking flaxen wick is
so nearly gone out, better let it die, aye, better
even quench and extinguish it."
This is all natural enough natural, that is, in
the lower range of probability, as an expression of
the baser and weaker side of men.
But now here comes Jesus Christ, and at Him we
look with anxious curiosity, for in Him we know
that we shall see this problem, like so many prob-
lems, lighted up with new illumination. He comes,
a burning and a shining light; and all around Him
are these flickering and smoking wicks. He comes
with the true divine fibre of humanity unharmed in
Him ; and all around him are these twisted, crushed,
broken lives, bruised from without and with subtle,
lurking poison corrupting them within. Look at
Him, as He shines there in the pages of the Gospels !
What do you see? Is there a symptom of con-
tempt? Is there not, on the contrary, the tenderest
and most reverent care for everything which there
is of good, or of effort to be good, in every man or
woman, no matter how little it may be?
I think of Jesus Christ as He sat by the woman
of Samaria beside the well; I think of Him as He
stretched out His hand to raise the faithless, sinking
Peter; I think of Him as He turned His weary head
upon the cross to catch the mere whisper of faith
that fluttered on the last breath of the dying thief;
I let these, and a multitude of other remembrances
of Him, open to me the whole spirit of His life. I
bid that spirit of His life stand out in general from
the whole body of the graphic record, and how plain
it all is! There could not be a grain of true gold in
any life, that Jesus Christ did not see it and love it.
There could not be the lightest tremble of desire for
good in any soul of all the multitude before Him,
that did not touch His heart and make it tremble
too. Not one indication is there anywhere in His
life of that which I have just described, the despis-
ing, by Him who stands upon the summit of the
pyramid, of the poor crawling aspirants who are just
starting at the base.
This is surely one of the most noteworthy things
in the whole history of Christ. When we look for
its explanation, and try to see what characteristic of
His nature lay at the root of this habit of His action,
I think we find what we are seeking in that intense
appreciation of the real qualities of things which
belonged supremely to Him, as it belongs, in its
degree, to all true and fine characters. The com-
mon nature, the vulgar man, cares not so much for
qualities as for quantities. His eye is fixed on bulk,
not essence. He thinks more of a great villain than
of a little saint. And no sainthood is a real thing
to him, unless it is clothed in light, and brilliantly
shines upon the world. He can perceive no fra-
grance, unless the air is heavy with it. He can hear
no zephyr till it swells into a whirlwind. The fact
that an act has the true quality of greatness, though
it has so little of it that the act itself is not a great
act, this fact does not interest the vulgar man.
The fact that a man has the true quality of unselfish-
ness or devotion, though it is so broken and distorted
that it can make no great and brilliant sacrifices,
seems to him insignificant.
Do you not recognize what I mean when I say
that, with Christ and with men who are like Christ,
all this is different? With them the perception of
the quality of things is instant and unerring; and
when good quality is found in anything it wins from
them precisely the same kind of honor, whatever
may be its degree. The same true quality of fire is
in the smouldering lamp-wick that is in the blazing
sun. The true quality of woody fibre is in the poor
twig, crushed and trampled out of shape under
men's feet in the muddy roadway, as well as in the
splendid oak that fronts the sunlight on the hill!
Whatever value belongs essentially to fire and fibre,
the wise and fine man gives to the qualities of those
things always, in their least as well as in their great-
est exhibitions. They are precious in themselves,
and the hope of the growth which is proper to fire
and to fibre is never lost so long as those qualities
are truly there.
How many are the instances in which this distinc-
tion between the reverence for pure quality, or
essence, and the reverence for quantity, or bulk,
applies. Take our pride in our country. What a
difference there is between the patriot who simply
boats of her that she is "big," and the other patriot
whose eye is fastened with anxiety on the things
which, great or little, make her an object of interest
and value, a true, fresh contribution to the multi-
tude of national life which fills the world. Let her
be little, let her be inglorious, if only she is pure,
and gives her people freedom, and helps them in
their freedom to live useful, happy, upright lives.
What a difference there is between the traveller
who, in foreign lands, boasts of his country's
population, and the other traveller who, wherever he
goes, praises and maintains his country's principles !
The country which is proud of its bulk is sure to be
contemptuous and, if the temptation comes, to be
a bully towards the nations that are small. The
country that believes and rejoices in her principles
will be quick with sympathy and help for any least
and most degraded nations in whose heart the faint-
est fire of those principles is burning.
Then think in the same way of the Church. It
was recently said to me that the most important
question for the Church in our time is the financial
question. Alas for us, if the Church came to think
like that ! The financial question is a question of
bulk. It has no relation to character. It inquires,
"How great can we make the Church ? not, What
can we make the Church?" You might make the
Church as rich as you please, and make her narrower
and baser all the time. The questions of faith, of
worship, of spiritual life, of missions, are questions
of essential quality. No Church is healthy which
is not ready to see herself made indefinitely small
and poor, if only she can keep and feel growing
within her the love of God and love of man which
are the essence of the Church's life.
Or, think of your own faith. The question must
be, my dear friends, first of all, not "What do we
believe?" but, "How do we believe?" It is not
the length of our creed, but the way in which we
hold it, long or short, that marks our real worth as
believers. What we have most of all to dread is
not the limitation, but the degradation of belief. I
know that He who desires for us that we should
hold all truth, who means for us that ultimately
every one of us shall hold all truth, would far rather,
as He looks into our hearts, see one fragment of
truth spiritually, unselfishly, lovingly held there,
than a great mass of truth, however true, feebly
grasped, and valued, in any degree, for the advan-
tage which it brings to us the holders.
Bulk has, indeed, its value. A great deal of a
good thing is more precious than a little of the same
good thing. The oak-tree on the hillside is worth
more than the twig lying bruised and trampled in
the muddy road. The sun gives more light than the
smoking flax. I do not forget that the same Bible
which has the Book of Acts has also the Book of
the Revelation. The same New Testament which
has the story of the little company gathered trem-
bling behind closed doors in the upper chamber at
Jerusalem, has also the gorgeous picture of the
multitude which no man can number, of all nations
and kindreds and people and tongues, standing be-
fore the throne and before the Lamb. The Book
of Acts has the indignant Church casting out Simon
Magus, and crying to him, "Thy money perish with
thee! " insisting on purity even when purity could
only be secured at the sacrifice of numbers and of
wealth. But the Book of the Revelation has the
vision of the open-gated City, where there shall be
no night, and into which shall be brought the glory
and honor of the nations, the Church gathering into
herself all the richness and greatness of the whole
world.
It is possible, in other words, to take what I have
been saying and misread it into an affected love of
littleness for its own sake, a praise of constraint and
limitation even when they are not necessary as the
price of purity. So the narrow sectarian not merely
is willing to see his sect small, if so only it can be
orthodox. He has often been ready to think it
orthodox just in proportion as it was small, and to
grudge it the growth which, if it really held the
truth of God, it ought to crave. In a healthily con-
stituted world like ours, in a world over which God
rules, the Good always ought to be reaching out to
become the Large. Only, our truth is this: that
before the Good becomes the Large, while it still
remains the Small, it ought to honor itself, and it
ought to receive honor from others, for its essential
quality of goodness.
Do not the young men need to understand this,
they whose standards of life are every day being
formed? It is no easy thing to keep at once the
deep love of reality which insists that what we have
be true, however small it be ; and at the same time
to keep the aspiration and ambition which desire to
hold as richly as possible every good possession of a
human soul. It is easy to fall into the way of say-
ing: "I believe very little, but, at least, what I do
believe I believe really ; and I do not pretend to be-
lieve what I do not believe, and I do not care to be-
lieve very much" ; or to say about action, "I do not
undertake to do much for fellow-man ; but, at any
rate, in what I do undertake I am no hypocrite, and
I am satisfied with that."
Do you not know such talk, and is there not
something very shallow in it? To believe a great
deal, and yet to believe it all as really as you now
believe your little ; to undertake everything in your
power to help your fellow-man, and yet to be no
hypocrite in any of it, that alone is the worthy
ambition of a manly man. The deliberate sacrifice
of bulk to essence, to genuineness, of quantity to
quality, is a temporary act, done for a temporary
purpose. The time must come when the best shall
be universal. "The earth is the Lord s"; "He is
the King of the whole earth." If, for the moment,
any part of the earth must be reckoned to be not
His but His enemy s, it must be only in order that
on what is really and already His, His power may
gather itself to go forth and conquer and possess the
whole. Great is the power of the young man who,
at the beginning of and throughout an earnest life,
can be possessed with the double power of profound
thoroughness and illimitable hope.
The identity of essence in things which are very
different from one another in size and shape and
look, is one of the most interesting and important
principles alike in the physical and in the moral
world. It is a principle the application of which is
illuminating modern science. A simplicity which
gives new unguessed majesty to nature is seen and
felt everywhere issuing from beneath the complexity
which makes her superficial aspect. In the world
of morals the same principle clears up many obscu-
rities, and scatters many sophistries. It takes two
lives: one of them arrogant, brutal, overbearing;
the other of them gentle, compliant, unobtrusive;
and, unveiling the power and meaning which lie at
the heart of each, it says, "The real essence of the
two is the same. They both mean selfishness." It
takes the feeble sin of the puppet of society, cruel
and heartless in the little world in which he lives,
and makes it evident that it is the same kind of sin
with the stupendous inhumanity of a Roman Em-
peror or an Inquisitor of Spain. Thus it makes that
which is insignificant in degree seem horrible in
kind. It brings out the color in what we call a
small trangression, by the lurid light which stares
out from the more flagrant sin.
The truth which we have been studying from the
words of Christ simply presents this principle upon
the other side. Then it becomes very rich and
gracious. It declares the hope that is in the least
goodness just as the other application of the prin-
ciple declared the danger that is in the least wicked
ness. Are not these two things the things we need
to know? The great goodnesses and the great
wickednesses it is easy to discern. It must be easy,
we think, for the martyrs to know that they are
meeting God's will, and to get the inspiration of
that knowledge. It must be easy for the murderers
to know that they are horribly wicked, and to be
haunted by the horror of their wickedness. But for
the schoolboy to know that his struggle not to tell a
lie is a steadfastness of the same sort as the martyr's
unflinching constancy before the flame ; and for the
quarrelsome slanderer to know that his petulance
belongs in the same category with the crime of mur-
der those are the hard things. Modern mechanics
largely employs itself in turning to use and effect
little streams of force which have heretofore been
usually wasted. It is the waste of the hope which
is in the heart of small endeavors to be good, and
of the fear which ought to come out of the least
flagrant developments of evil, that is always robbing
our moral life of strength.
Christ sets Himself to remedy that waste. He
would fain make the least endeavor for a better life
a ground of hope, and a starting point of higher
struggle. Look at Christ and Simon Peter! See
them some day, as they walk along the road talk-
ing together. We have grown used to the sight
and have forgotten how strange it is, but it is very
strange! How far apart these beings are! One is
the very embodiment of the eternal righteousness,
pure as the spotless heavens, deep and strong as the
vast profundity of space. The other is a poor,
stumbling Jew from Bethsaida. One is a smoking
lamp that hardly keeps itself alive ; the other is the
Sun of Righteousness. One is a bruised reed, all
torn and broken; the other is the Tree of Life
whose leaves are for the healing of the nations.
Yet look ! See the clear eyes of Jesus gazing into
the thick and muddy soul of Peter. He finds Him-
self there. He finds a child of the God whose Son
He is, in that poor fragmentary character. He finds,
in this poor Jew's frantic and fitful struggles, a bit
of the same holiness which fills His own life with
peace. What then? Do you not see what grows
up in the soul of each as they thus walk together
and as Christ thus discerns Peter, and as Peter knows
that Christ has discerned him? Peter is filled with
hope ; Christ is filled with pity. There is no scorn
in the heart of Christ, and in the heart of Peter there
is no despair.
Remember David in the 28th Psalm: "Unto thee
will I cry, my God, my strength ! " He knows how
weak the cry is ! It seems not possible that God can
hear it ! He is a bruised reed, a smoking flax ! We
can see him look up to God with most pathetic ap-
peal: " Think no scorn of me; lest, if thou make as
though thou hearest not, I become like them that
go down into the pit." It is the prayer of the
smoking flax not to be quenched, of the bruised
reed not to be broken. Can there be any answer
but one from God to such a prayer as that the
answer of encouragement and hope? Can there be
any surprise when, by and by, breaks forth from the
Psalmist's soul the triumphant verse: "Blessed be
the Lord, because he hath heard the voice of my
supplications. The Lord is my strength and my
shield."
Two exhortations come, I think, from all our
study.
The first bids us be very tolerant and hopeful
about all the limitation and deadness which we
lament in our fellow-men. You are giving your
life's blood for a great cause, and your friend gives
it nothing but a casual approval, perhaps now and
then a casual dollar or a moment's help. You are
overwhelmed with pity or amazement to see the
little strength which men put out against their sins,
who nevertheless are really fighting them. Be
patient. Make much of the good effort which
there is, small though it be. Never dare to say, "It
might as well not be at all, it is so little." Be sure
that there is no proof so strong that you yourself
are growing rich in righteousness as is to be found
in the growing reverence and value which you feel
for the slightest beginnings of righteousness in other
men.
Then apply all this to God, and the other exhor-
tation comes. Because He is the supreme Right-
eousness, therefore, just for that reason, the least
beginning of righteousness in you is supremely pre-
cious in His sight. Make it, then, precious in your
own. Treasure the smallest faith. Guard the least
flame of love. Take your poor, battered, broken
resolution, smooth it out, cleanse and confirm it
with new consecration, set it up in your safest and
most sacred chamber. Do all this not desperately,
but hopefully; for God is strong, eternity is long,
and that which lives to-day with any spark or fibre
of true life, has in it the promise and potency of all
the holiness of heaven.