Friday, December 30, 2011

"The Holiest of ALL" part CXVI

YET AFTERWARD.
Hebrews 12:11-13   All chastening seems for the present to be not joyous, but grievous: yet afterward it bears peaceable fruit to them that have been exercised thereby, even the fruit of Righteousness. Wherefore, lift up the hands that hang down, and the palsied knees; And; make a straight path for your feet, that that which is lame be not put out of joint, but rather be healed.

Now Continuing in the SECOND HALF-PRACTICAL.
Hebrews Chapters  10:19 - 13:25
Of a Life in the Power of the Great Salvation.

In the ELEVENTH SECTION
Hebrews 12:1-13.
The Patience of Hope.

BY THE REV. ANDREW MURRAY

He chastens us for our profit, that we may be partakers of His Holiness. That word was the summing up of all that there was to say of affliction. Suffering was to be God's messenger to lead us into, not a place or a position, but a Life and an experience, into fitness for and Inner union of being conjoined with the Holiest of All, and the Most Holy One who dwells there. Higher honor have none of God's servants than this one, unwelcome and rejected though it so often be that by way of chosen attitude. By all that is sacred and worthy of desire, the word would have us Know and Believe then receive affliction is a Blessing. And yet it does not ignore the fact that the chastisement causes pain. As an old believer said, when speaking of one of the promises, Yes, it is blessedly true; but still it hurts. Therefore, our writer continues, All chastening for the present seems to be grievous: yet afterward it yields Peaceable Fruit to them that have been exercised thereby, even the Fruit of Righteousness. To the flesh which judges by what is present and by its senses, it is distinctly, often terribly, grievous. Faith which lives in the future and unseen, rejoices in the assurance not only of deliverance, but of the Heavenly Blessing it brings. Even our obedience.

For the present--- yet afterward. These two expressions contain the great contrast between time and eternity, of the visible and the invisible, of sorrow and of joy, of sense and of faith, of backsliding and of progress to perfection. For the present: to be guided by it, and sacrifice all for its gratification, is the sin and the folly and death in which we live by nature. Yet afterward: to throw eternity into the balance, and judge everything by that: this is what even the patriarchs did; this is what Christ taught us, when, for the joy set before Him, He endured the cross; this is what our trusting His faith can teach us in every trial. With that yet afterward of the Peaceable Fruit of Righteousness, the Light of Eternity and its reward shines on the least as on the greatest of our trials, and makes each one the seed of an everlasting harvest, of which we pluck the fruits even here. And so Light arises upon the command, Count it all joy when you fall into manifold temptations. We read it in the light of what Paul said of himself, As sorrowful, yet always rejoicing. When the hurricane is sweeping the ocean into mountain-high waves, down in the deep waters all is serene and quiet the disturbance is only on the surface. And even so the joy of Eternity can keep a soul in perfect peace amid abounding afflictions. For the present is swallowed up in the yet afterward of a Living Faith.

Now there follows, on the strength of what has been said of God's Love and His Blessing, the call to the Hebrews (this same call is for the gentiles who have chosen the better way and have come out from among them, the worldly emphasis added)  to rise up out of their dejection and despair, and gird themselves for the race in the Way in which Jesus leads us to God. Wherefore lift up the hands that hang down, and the palsied knees; and make straight paths for your feet. Take courage, he says, and gird yourselves for the race--- without it the prize can never be won. Lift up hands and knees, choose the straight path for your feet, rouse your whole being, and with your eye once more on Jesus, and in the trusting faith He inspires, follow Him in the path of endurance. See the mistake you made when you thought your trials were an excuse for despondency; accept God's message, that they are the very proof of His Love, the very means of His Grace, the very mark of His own Son. Accept them as a part of your Christian manhood and perfection. Rise up and stand forth as men ready for the race.


That that which is lame be not put out of joint, but rather be healed. That which is lame would, if they continued in their despising state, go from worse to worse and be put entirely out of joint,--- far rather let it be healed. As they lifted up the hands and knees, and roused themselves to enter the straight path, the lame would be healed,--- the courage of trusting and believing faith would give new strength,--- the faith of Jesus would give perfect soundness. Yes, to faith in Jesus the Blessing still comes as to the man of old: Immediately his feet and his ankle bones received strength. And he, leaping up, stood, and began to walk; and he entered into the temple, talking, and leaping, and praising God.

But rather be healed. Is there anyone among my readers who feels that his life is not what it should be, whom the cares and troubles of this life have hindered, and who feels half hopeless as to the possibility of running the race as Jesus the Leader would have--- let him learn from this word what he needs. Let him take courage and rouse himself. Lift up the feeble hands and knees, and make straight path; turn at once boldly to the course, the way Jesus has marked. Yield, surrender, consecrate yourself to be His wholly and forever. This is the first step. And then, as in the name of Jesus, in the faith of all God has spoken in His Son in this Blessed Epistle of a complete Salvation and a Perfect Savior, you rise and step on to the course, you too will know what healing is. Leaping and praising God, you too can enter into the Temple, the Holiest of All, to praise your God, and abide with Him, your mighty Keeper. Despising Christian! There is healing--- choose it, take it. Looking to Jesus, rise, and run the race.


1. Yet afterward. The great word that hope is ever using, as it points to what is still hidden, but surely coming. The section of Patience of Hope began with patience, and ends here with this note of abounding hopefulness--- Yet afterward.
2. The state of absolute resignation to the Will of God, and of a naked Truth in trusting, believing and receptive faith in His infinite Love, is the highest perfection of which the soul is capable. Seek for this with the simplicity of a little child, judging everything by the Heavenly Standard of value, as it helps to bring us nearer to God.
3. Be healed. Let all who complain of hands that hang down and palsied knees, of limbs that are lame or out of joint, hear the voice of Jesus: I say to you, Arise, and walk.

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