|
||
|
/..
We cannot wonder at the scribes and Pharisees asking this question. I think that we should most of us ask the same question now, if we saw the Lord Jesus, or even if we saw any very good or venerable man, going out of his way to eat and drink with publicans and sinners. We should be inclined to say, as the scribes and Pharisees no doubt said, Why go out of his way to make fellowship with them? to eat and drink with them? He might have taught them, preached to them, warned them of God's wrath against their sins when he could find them out in the street. Or, even if he could not do that, if he could not find them all together without going into their house, why sit down and eat and drink? Why not say, No I am not going to join with you in that? I am come on a much more solemn and important errand than eating. I have no time to eat. I must preach to you, ere it be too late. And you would have no appetite to eat, if you knew the terrible danger in which your souls are. Besides, however anxious for your souls I am, you cannot expect me to treat you as friends, to make companions of you, and accept your hospitality, while you are living these bad lives. I shall always feel pity and sorrow for you: but I cannot be a table companion with you, till you begin to lead very different lives. Now if the scribes and Pharisees
had said that, should we have thought them very unreasonable? For whatsoever
kinds of sinners the sinners were, these publicans were the very worst
and lowest of company. They were not innkeepers, as the word means now;
they were a kind of tax-gatherers: but not like ours in England. For first,
these taxes were not taken by the Jewish government, but by the Romans
heathen foreigners who had conquered them, and kept them down by soldiery
quartered in their country. So that these publicans, who gathered taxes
and tribute for the heathen Csesar of Rome from their own countrymen, were
traitors to their country, in league with their foreign tyrants, as it
were devouring their own flesh and blood ; and all the Jews looked on them
(and really no wonder) with hatred and contempt. Beside, these publicans
did not merely "gather the taxes, as they do in free England; they farmed
them, compounded for them with the Roman emperor; that is, they had each
to bring in to the Romans a stated sum of money, each out of his own district,
and to make their own profit out of the bargain by grinding out of the
poor Jews all they could over and
And God did help them. The Son of God came and ate and drank with them. No doubt, he heard many words among them which pained his ears, saw many faces which shocked his eyes; faces of women who had lost all shame---faces of men hardened by cruelty, and greediness, and cunning, till God's image had been changed into the likeness of the fox and the serpent; and, worst of all, the greatest pain to him of all, he could see into their hearts, their immortal souls, and see all the foulness within them, all the meanness, all the hardness, all the unbelief in anything good or true. And yet he ate and drank with them. Make merry with them he could not: who could be merry in such company? but he certainly so behaved to them that they were glad to have him among them, though he was so unlike them in thought, and word, and look, and action. And why? Because, though he was so unlike them in many things, he was like them at least in one thing. If he could do nothing else in common with them, he could at least eat and drink as they did, and eat and drink with them too. Yes. He was the Son of man, the man of all men, and what he wanted to make them understand was, that, fallen as low as they were, they were men and women still, who were made at first in God's likeness, and who could be redeemed back into God's likeness again. The only way to do that was to begin with them in the very simplest way; to meet them on common human ground; to make them feel that, simply because they were men and women, he felt for them; that, simply because they were men and women, he loved them; that, simply because they were men and women, he could not turn his back upon them, for the sake of his Father and their Father in heaven. If he had left those poor wretches to themselves; if he had even merely kept apart from their common every-day life, and preached to them, they would never have felt that there was still hope for them, simply because they were men and women. They would have said in their hearts, 'See; he will talk to us : but he looks down on us all the time. We are fallen so low, we cannot rise; we cannot mend. What is there in us that can mend? We are nothing but brutes, perhaps; then brutes we must remain. Heaven is for people like him, perhaps; but not for such as us. We are cut off from men. We have no brothers upon earth, no Father in heaven.' ' Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die.' Yes ; they would have said this ; for people like them will say it too often now, here in Christian England. But when our Lord came to
them, ate and drank with them, talked with them in a homely and simple
way (for our Lord's words are always simple and homely, grand and deep
and wonderful as they are), then do you not see how self-respect would
begin to rise in those poor sinners' hearts? Not that they would say, 'We
are better men than we thought we were.' No; perhaps his kindness would
make them all the more ashamed of themselves, and convince them of sin
all the more deeply; for nothing, nothing melts the sinner's hard, proud
heart, like a few unexpected words of kindness ay, even a cordial shake
of the hand from any one who he fancies looks down on him. To find a loving
brother,
Oh, that we could be different! Oh,, that we could be even like what we were when we were little children! Perhaps we may be yet. For he treats us as if we were men and women still, his brothers and sisters still. He thinks that we are not quite brute animals yet, it seems. Perhaps we are not; perhaps there is life in us yet, which may grow up to a new and better way of living. What shall we do to be saved ? blessed charity, bond of peace and of all virtues; of brotherhood and fellow-feeling between man and man, as children of one common Father. Ay, bond of all virtues of generosity and of justice, of counsel and of understanding. Charity, unknown on earth before the coming of the Son of man, who was content to be called gluttonous and a wine-bibber, because he was the friend of publicans and sinners! My friends, let us try to
follow his steps ; let us remember all day long what it is to be men; that
it is to have every one whom we meet for our brother in the sight of God;
that it is this, never to meet any one, however bad he may be, for whom
we cannot say, 'Christ died, for that man, and Christ cares for him still.
He is precious in God's eyes; he shall be precious in mine also.' Let us
take the counsel of the Gospel for this day, and love one another, not
in word merely in
And if any of you have a
neighbour, or a relation fallen into sin, even into utter shame ; oh, for
the sake of Him who ate and drank with publicans and sinners, never cast
them off, never trample on them, never turn your back upon them. They are
miserable enough already, doubt it not. Do not add one drop to their cup
of bitterness. They are ashamed of themselves already, doubt it not. Do
not you destroy in them what small grain of self-respect still remains.
You fancy
Therefore, I say, never hurt
any one's self-respect. Never trample on any soul, though it may be lying
in the veriest mire; for that last spark of self-respect is as its only
hope, its only chance ; the last seed of a new and better life; the voice
of God which still whispers to it, 'You are not what you ought to be, and
you are not what you can be. You are still God's child, still an immortal
soul: you may rise yet, and fight a good fight yet, and conquer yet, and
be a man once more, after the likeness of God who made you, and Christ
who died for you!' Oh, why crush that voice in any heart? If you
do, the poor creature is lost, and lies where he or she falls, and never
tries to rise again. Rather bear and forbear; hope all things, believe
all things, endure all things; so you will, as St. John tells you in the
Epistle, know that you are of the truth, in the true and right road, and
will assure your hearts before God. For this is his commandment, that we
should believe in the name of his Son Jesus Christ, and believe really
that he is now what he always was, the friend of publicans and sinners,
and love one another as he gave us commandment. That was Christ's spirit;
the fairest, the noblest spirit upon earth; the spirit of God whose mercy
is over all his works; and hereby shall we know that Christ abideth in
us, by his having given us the same spirit of pity, charity, fellow-feeling
and love for every human being
And now, I will also give
you one lesson to carry home with you a lesson which if we all could really
believe and obey, the world would begin to mend from tomorrow, and every
other good work on earth would prosper and multiply tenfold, a hundredfold
ay, beyond all our fairest dreams. And my lesson is this. When you go out
from this church into those crowded streets, remember that there is not
a soul in them who is not as precious in God's eyes as you are; not a little
dirty ragged child whom Jesus, were he again on earth, would not take up
in his arms and bless ; not a publican or a
|
||
|
-Administrator, News For Christians Dot Com |
||
|
Back
to Index Page
|