A Woman’s
Love.
"Why
weepest thou?" The words were addressed to a woman stricken with deepest
grief.
With her
companions she was early at the tomb. Close to her breast she had borne the
spices prepared for the embalming. This was to be the last act of tenderest
love.
So earnest in
their purpose, the women were, at first, oblivious to that great obstacle to
their mission. Then the thought occurred.. "The stone!" that great
slab that sealed the tomb, "Who would roll it away?" Sickened by the
frustrating prospect, they nevertheless proceeded, when suddenly the ground
shook beneath their feet. Fear now spurred them on.. but their arrival at the
place was to add the more to their confusion. As if by some mighty force that
stone was heaved aside.. the tomb exposed! They peered within, but in the gloom
could not perceive the body they sought. Then at the tomb, strange figures
appeared in apparel that seemed to shine in the shadowy first light of dawn.
They heard, as in a dream.. the words.. "You are looking for the Jesus of
Nazareth Who was Crucified.."he is not here, for He is risen as He said..
"On the third day He would rise..!"
They hastened
away to tell the disciples, and soon Peter and John were running to view the
empty tomb. At last they depart, but Mary lingers at the tomb, weeping. To her
the whole situation conveyed only confusion of mind. She was bewildered, and
broken hearted.
Stooping, she
looked yet again into the tomb. Now she was startled by the appearance of
figures sitting there within, even where the body of Jesus had lain. "Why
are you crying?" they ask, to which Mary pours out her grief. Her words
reveal the state of her mind, and lack of comprehension. "They have taken
away my Lord, and I know not where they have laid Him..."
Then she heard
that voice.. the same question echoed, this time from the lips of a stranger
standing there behind her. "Why are you crying? Who are you seeking?"
It has to be one of the most poignant moments in sacred history.
She turns to
see, her first thought that this may be the keeper of the garden.. He may have
the answer to her distress. Was it you? Did you move the body? Tell me where,
that I might bear it away. She was standing, looking at, but not recognising,
the answer to all her fears and all her grief. It required one familiar sound
for the scales to fall from her eyes. The sound of her name, spoken in the way
that only her Lord used.. "Mary!"
II. The
Master’s Joy.
Can we just
pause for a moment to think of the Master’s deep feelings at this hour. For Him
the agony of the cross was now dispelled by every blessed sense of that
fullness of life that burst forth within Him.
The deep
awareness of victory over death. Sown in weakness... raised in triumphant
power! Here was the beginning of that joy that had enabled Him to endure so
much. Joy of knowing He had finished in unswerving faithfulness that which had
been entrusted to Him by His Father. Confirmation that the sacrifice was
totally acceptable unto God. Realisation of the blessed implications for every
member of the human race.
Oh what joy
unspeakable.. a joy shared that same hour with that One He loved so much.. His
Father above. Can we, mere mortals, comprehend the great joy in heaven that
attended this most blessed hour? We only know that never could it have been
equalled throughout the ages of eternity past. And Jesus was the centre of that
great joy. Those first conscious moments of that resurrected Mind of Christ..
What a flood of holy thoughts, what sense of delight and satisfaction!
And now He
turns to one of his first joyful acts.. to show Himself alive to His dearest
earthly friends. And who does He choose for that first moment of revealing? A
woman. Mary Magdalene, of whom we read in two gospel accounts.. "Out of
whom were cast seven devils." What sacred bond lies here between the
Saviour and one whose life was once so destitute of hope.
Here see we the
church, in a woman so deeply appreciative of the Master’s saving power. Did He
not deliver us from the power of darkness, the seven-fold dominion of the
Adversary, prince of all the kingdoms of this world. Why were we so favoured?
From so great a death, why did He choose to deliver you and me? The result is a
bond that no human relationship can fully express. He has given for us the
Bride price.. but that price exceeded far all the riches of this earth. With
His own blood He bought us.. What a price indeed! We are not our own.. From
henceforth we belong to Him. That moment of meeting.. the woman, and her risen
Lord.. So much could be said of the Master’s enquiry.. "Why are you
crying?" "Who are you seeking?" The presence of that One Who is
the very centre of all our joys, Oh that we could sense the blessed fullness of
that satisfaction and delight that resides in Him alone. Could we but for one
moment see Him as He is.. that glorious Being, vibrant with life and love..
Could we but hear His voice at those moments of deepest grief.. "Why do
you cry?"
Let us think
too of the holy emotion of that Master, Who knows all that is in the heart, in
that moment of great closeness, in which He awaits recognition.
III. The
Emmaus Road
The angels had
reminded the women of the Master’s promise concerning the third day. Before the
happy confirmation of sight, their hearts were being urged to release within
them the full blessedness of the power of faith. Why did the Lord do it that
way? Blessed are those who have not seen, and yet have believed.
Our next
reference to the third day brings us to the familiar scene of the Emmaus road.
Again, the account is in emotive language that touches the heart each time the
story is told. Years ago, many of the brethren had in their homes the picture
of those two on the way from Jerusalem to Emmaus, so deeply engaged in
discussion together, not noticing that third figure drawing near. It is all so
beautiful. We who read the account are in the secret. We know what awaits them,
know Who it is that seems such a stranger unto them. How many talks have been
based on this narration of Lu 24!..How many
lessons drawn from every aspect of that picture presented to our minds! Is
there anything left that has not been said... many times?
Their eyes were
holden that they could not perceive. How aptly do these words alike convey that
sense of great drama as Israel, at this very moment, look upon their Messiah.
They view Him now in the very things taking place.. Those Jews who treasure the
Word of Scripture, know these are works of their Messiah. They know that what
is happening, from that very first act of the bringing together of the bones,
is the work of that Deliverer for Whom they have waited long.
For many
centuries, even millenia, they have known that their restoration would be the
work of their Messiah, the signs that would accompany His presence.. His
standing up for His people, Israel. When, earlier in the age, move was made to
return to their land, this was at once denounced as blasphemous. It can not be
until Messiah comes. Today, they are in their land.. Yet their eyes are holden.
The moment of truth, the moment of awakening of the senses, the moment of
recognition, still awaits them.
That this is
the third day is fact beyond dispute. Two and a half thousand-year-days of
Israel’s tomb-like experiences have passed, and the promise of Hosea is upon
us.
Ho 6:1-3 1 Come, and let us return unto the
LORD: for he hath torn, and he will heal us; he hath smitten, and he will bind
us up. 2 After two days will he revive us: in the third day he will raise us
up, and we shall live in his sight. 3 Then shall we know, if we follow on to know
the LORD: his going forth is prepared as the morning; and he shall come unto us
as the rain, as the latter and former rain unto the earth.
IV. Israel’s
awakening.
Oh what an
awakening! What flood of recognition! Like that light of glory that shone upon
the Damascus road, that moment of truth will dawn, and turn fierce antagonist
to bond servant of the Lord.
But for the
moment, their eyes are holden. They see the signs, visible signs, indeed, many
infallible proofs. They are puzzled, confused, but unable to perceive the full
implications of what they see and hear.
Such was the
state of heart of those two on the Emmaus road. Strange stories circulated
around the empty tomb, and claims were made of angelic messages. "Besides
all this," they said to the Stranger, "it is now the third
day..." At least that fact had been revived in their minds while their
faith still fell short of fuller realisation.
"Today, is
the third day!" This time prophecy of Jesus He had spoken on more than one
occasion, yet its sense had escaped their minds. Now those words of Jesus had
been brought to their remembrance. The time had run out.. THIS was the third
day!
One later day,
as good Bible students, these two may well ask.. "Why.. the third
day?" "Why not the second day, or the fourth, or any other
period?" At that moment such questions would be merely academic. They were
on the verge of that great truth that eclipsed all else... "Jesus
lives!" The details and explanations could wait. But today, at greater
distance time-wise, the present perspective allows such a question to be
considered
V. The third
day.
In Joh 20:9, John recalls the scene as he and
Peter first viewed the empty tomb, and he confesses "For as yet they knew
not the scripture, that He must rise from the dead." "The
scripture.." What scripture might that be? Ps 16:10, was to become a key scripture after the event, and was
often quoted by the early church.. "For Thou wilt not abandon my life to
the grave, nor suffer Thy Holy One to see corruption."
By the fourth
day corruption would have set in, however perfect the human flesh, for once
dead it would become subject to the natural process of decay. We recall how, at
the tomb of Lazarus, the request by Jesus to view the corpse was met by the
reminder of the ever practical Martha.. "Lord, by this time he stinketh,
for he hath been dead four days."
Later, in his
letter to the Corinthian brethren ( 1Co 15:3, & 4,) Paul himself alludes to
the prophetic forecast of scripture concerning the resurrection of Jesus.
"For I delivered unto you first of all that which I also received, that
Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures; and that He was buried,
and that He rose again the third day according to the scriptures.
VI. Type and
shadow.
Was this a
deduction made by Paul, similar to the one we have just made, based on Ps 16, that the third day would be the
latest time to demonstrate that death had truly taken place, yet short of the
decomposition of the corpse? Or was Paul speaking of the language of type and
shadow in the sacred Word foretelling, for example, in the three days of
Isaac’s journey with Abraham to Mt Moriah where he would be received from the
dead as in a figure? Did Paul refer to the language of the prophet Ho 6:2, already mentioned, "After two
days He will revive us; in the third day he will raise us up, and we shall live
in His sight.." The subjects of this statement are the people of Israel,
but this promise has been related by Christians to the experience of Jesus, in
Whose resurrection we too are raised to newness of life. Some early Jewish
commentators were ingenious on that text. The first day, they said, deliverance
from Egypt, the second day, deliverance from Babylon, and the third, yet to
come, the final deliverance under the lead of their Messiah. With similar logic
we might well relate these three days in wider sphere to the whole human race,
typified as they are so often by Israel.. The first day being Adam’s day, a
thousand years of dying.. The second being the typical shadowy kingdom age from
Moses to the captivity.. also a thousand years.. The final thousand years of
true kingdom development would be the third day. The reign of sin and death
from Adam to Moses, was a curse not lifted by the typical kingdom period under
the Law. Full deliverance is reserved for the third thousand year day of
Christ.
Students of the
Word today would have good reason, however, to recognise in these words of Ho 6:2, an allusion to the great time
periods of the plan of God which particularly pertain to the people of Israel.
These would be much in line, for example, with the comment of Merril Unger,
born 1909 and published 1981 by Moody Press. Here he refers to the two days as
".. evidently prophetic days of a thousand years each; Compare Ps 90:4 & 2Pe 3:8" where a thousand year day is referred to. Unger
then relates the "third day" to the restoration of Israel now in
process during the third thousand year day from the time of the prophecy and
including the subsequent period of Israel’s captivity. The commentator goes on
to suggest that the language can be viewed as referring also to Messiah Himself
as embodying the ideal Israel of God, { Isa 49:3} that Son called "out of
Egypt", as Israel was, yet these words are alike applied to Jesus.. Who
also was raised from the dead on the third day.
Our Lord’s own
words direct our attention to the entombment of Jonah in the great fish. We
shall look at that in a moment, but first perhaps we might gain some general
feeling about the use of "three," and "third day," in the
Scriptures. The very first use of the number is in Ge 1:13.. The "third day" was the day on which the
earth was caused to rise up out of the water. Life begins, as various forms of
vegetation spread over the earth. In the great dramatic language of creation’s
history is thus expressed the rise out of the lifeless waters of the great deep
of that new condition of life in all possible variety upon this earth.
VII. Third
day in the O.T.
The addition of
the third dimension turns a plane into a solid, a square into a cube. The
essence of solidity, of reality, of completeness, is thus introduced in the
number three. The deliberate use of "three" in the Scriptures would
take too long to demonstrate if every example was referred to. Likewise the
references to the "third day" are numerous. The three days journey
into the wilderness requested for the Israelites by Moses, { Ex 5:3}
represented the completeness of separation whereby the Lord would separate His
people from Egypt, illustrating also our complete separateness from the world
even now.
Likewise it was
a three day march that Jacob stole on Laban in fleeing from his domain,
illustrating that flight from servitude of the Gentile powers by the Jew at
this end of the age. A complete separation, sovereign independence, not Gentile
mandate, was required of God. Completion, certainty, solidity.
The completion
of the divine requirements is demonstrated again by Jesus Lu 13:31-33 Satan, through Herod and the
Pharisees, sought to scare the Master into some deviation from His course by
the threat of an early death. To this threat Our Lord replied.. "Go tell
that fox, Behold I cast out demons, and do cures today and tomorrow, and the
third day I shall have finished." Undoubtedly Jesus was giving answer in
language which Satan, at least, would understand. Like Abraham, the Master was,
as He spoke, three days journey from the place of sacrifice. Nothing could
intervene.... All must be fulfilled. Jerusalem, three days journey away, was the
place for His death, not Galilee.
His followers
too must complete their course. All that the course was designed of God to
accomplish must be achieved. There can be no short cuts, nor can premature
disaster overtake the Lord by surprise. His work in each one must be as
thorough, as complete, as finished, as with their Master.
Ge 42:18, takes us back to Israel again.
Joseph’s brethren stand before him. They are in the very presence of that one
they so roughly handled, even the one whose death they had sought. But their
eyes are holden that they fail to recognise the identity of him who is now
their saviour.
"Three
days" are they to spend in prison, all of them. (verse 17.) Then, in verse
18, "Joseph said unto them the third day, ‘This do, and live; for I fear
God.’" He directs them to follow a course that he knows will bring home to
them a deep sense of guilt, mourning, and repentance, before He is to reveal
himself unto them in that scene of deepest emotion and tears. They had been so
ready to take that one loved of his father, and vent their evil upon him. Now
through harsh and searching ordeal, would they experience a remarkable reversal
of spirit and attitude. Self-sacrifice, and brotherly love, was to drive out
evil from their hearts.
VIII. Moment
of Truth.
How far off
seem the people of Israel even now from that change of heart, yet things are
happening, the process is underway even as we speak. The Lord knows just what
He is about with Israel. "I will even betroth thee unto me in
faithfulness..." Through many tears will that change be achieved, and then
will the time have come for that moment of truth. No longer will their eyes be
holden. They will gaze upon the One pierced by their hands, gaze first, no
doubt with fear at the realisation of what they have done.. Then overwhelmed by
the realisation of what God has achieved through their guilt. "Come
near", said Joseph.. and they came near.
There is a
moment of truth reserved for each member of the race. -The poor groaning
creation.. awaking from death will gaze with wonder at the feast prepared. -The
people of Israel.. scales falling from their eyes, will behold the glory of God
in the face of Jesus Christ.. a glory fulfilling and excelling by far that of
the Mosaic ministry. -The woman, representing each member of the church..
beholding in resurrection grace and blessedness the beauty of their Lord, as He
confesses them each by name before His Father. -These are wonderful moments of
truth, reserved for the "third day" in the great purpose of God.
IX. Jonah
and the Jew.
Let us turn now
to Jonah. [The book of Jonah comes after Hosea, Joel, Amos, and Obadiah. If you
are now in Micah go back!] I will read the Master’s words in Mt 12:38 to 40 while you keep your place in
Jonah.
The Pharisees
were seeking a sign of the Lord’s Messiahship. They has been inundated with
signs.. the words He spoke, .. the works He did, .. miraculous works, wonderful
works. But their eyes were holden. One day they were to angrily exclaim to
Jesus.. "Are we blind also..?" We know the Master’s reply to that
one! Blinded by prejudice, pre-judgement. They had their own photo-kit image of
what the Messiah would be like when He came.. even such an one as themselves.
He would be a glowing example of Pharisaical external holiness. This man of
Galilee, of Nazareth, greatly offended all their dignified concepts. Their
demand for a sign was like a blind man standing at the traffic lights waiting
for the little green man to appear. There was no sign that would satisfy such
minds, and thus they fulfilled the words of God { Isa 6} "See ye indeed,
but perceive not.."
Mt 12:39 But he answered and said unto them,
An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign; and there shall no sign
be given to it, but the sign of the prophet Jonas:
X. The Sign.
Mt 12:40 For as Jonas was three days and
three nights in the whale’s belly; so shall the Son of man be three days and
three nights in the heart of the earth.
The Greek word
translated "seeketh" in vse 39, "seeketh a sign", is an
intensive compound and to convey it fully we need use such a word as
"crave," or "persistently seek".. "keep on
seeking." It reminds us of the phrase used by one Pharisee later in 2Ti 3:7. "ever learning, and never able
to come to a knowledge of the truth." Few could have had greater Scripture
knowledge than Saul of Tarsus, yet the truth evaded him, until the light
engulfed him on the shining road.
Jesus then went
on to speak of a further comparison with Jonah, this time pointing to the effect
of Jonah’s ultimate ministry at Ninevah, the great heathen centre of paganism.
vse 41 The men of Nineveh shall rise in judgment with this generation, and
shall condemn it: because they repented at the preaching of Jonas; and, behold,
a greater than Jonas [is] here. On two counts Jesus draws attention to
comparisons and contrasts with the experiences of Jonah. The Master undoubtedly
saw a relevance in the account of Jonah’s experiences to the people and
situation He now addressed. Is there more?
What is the
book of Jonah all about? It seems a rather remarkable portion to include in the
Holy Scriptures. Jesus called him a "prophet", and, true enough, 2Ki 14:25 mentions this. He restored the
coast of Israel from the entering of Hamath unto the sea of the plain,
according to the word of the LORD God of Israel, which he spake by the hand of
his servant Jonah, the son of Amittai, the prophet, which [was] of Gathhepher.
However, the
Book of Jonah seems to be an account of the deviation of a man called to be the
Lord’s servant. God chose one path, but Jonah decided on another. The Lord said
"Go east.. to Ninevah.." Jonah immediately went west, with a view of
going as far as possible in the opposite direction.
Whatever was
Jonah up to? -And why is all this recorded for us? -And why does Jesus draw
attention to such a devious and unwilling servant, and make any such
comparisons whatever with Himself?
Undoubtedly
there is an important message here, and more than one lesson. We cannot study
the account long before we realise that we are not merely looking at one man,
called to be the Lord’s servant, but that we are seeing depicted there the
whole nation of Israel. In fact the whole story of Jonah is seen to be a sign,
something relevant and significant, concerning that covenant people of God.
Jonah knew that
if the Lord was sending him to preach repentance to Ninevah He would be
planning something, .. something full of mercy and kindness towards a nation
that Jonah, like all Jews, had come to loathe.
XI. Mercy to
Ninevah.
The Jews felt
they had every reason to hate the unclean, uncovenanted people of this pagan
realm, their sworn enemies. Jonah’s instincts told him what the Lord might have
in mind, and Jonah did not like it! Jon
1:3.. "He rose up.." not to obey, but to disobey. This was a
"hard saying" of the Lord, and Jonah was offended by it. If the Lord
was planning the kind of generous and merciful exhibition of kindness towards
these Gentile dogs that Jonah suspected, he wanted nothing of it.
Now Jonah’s
father was called Ammitai, which means, "the truth of God." His own
name, Jonah, meant "a dove". Jonah had been brought up, at least
representatively, in the truth of God, and as a dove flying to the shelter of a
great Rock, he had learnt to accept the Lord’s protecting care over His people.
But this was something else! Here was the Lord about to show the same loving
care towards those who were not His people.
We get a
reflection of the senses of pride and selfish egoism of the people of Israel.
True their earliest promises through Abraham mentioned something about being a
blessing to all families of the earth. On the whole, however, they had come to
so despise the other heathen peoples, their enemies, that the greatest blessing
they could conceive for them was extinction. Furthermore, Jonah was well aware
that Israel at that time were far from walking with their God.
The reign of
the second Jeroboam, king of Israel, may have done something towards the
cleansing of the land, but its effects did little to change the ways of a
rebellious people. Conscious of the waywardness of the covenant people of God,
it was hard to stomach the possibility of any act of repentance on the part of
Ninevah that might bring them into favour with God.
What a host of
points we have here. A nation, depicted in Jonah, called to be the Lord’s
servant in blessing the families of earth, brought up in truth, taught to look
to the protective wings of the God of Jacob, yet we find them flagrantly
pursuing a course in direct opposition, because the ways of God are not in
their heart.
Jonah knew that
he could not fly from the Lord’s presence.. "Whither shall I flee from Thy
presence?" Ps 139:7. He was
fleeing from the face of the Lord, that means from His favour in the role of an
obedient servant. Israel, no longer the Lord’s active servant, are thus shown
driven from their land by what?.. By their lack of love for the ways of the
Lord. For a while the Lord has to turn His face from them.. He has to withdraw
His favour. Yet the Lord knew exactly what His chosen servant would do, and
what He, the Lord would also do to yet achieve in them His wondrous purpose.
"Ye shall show forth My praise." His people, represented in Jonah,
were now in a perilous condition, adrift in a vulnerable little ship, their lot
cast in with that of the world, their fellow passengers.
XII.
Entombment of Israel.
Every hour took
them further away, so it seemed, from the Lord’s design for them. Yet would
their conscience be stirred. Again and again they would be counted as
scapegoats for the misfortunes of mankind. Yet
Jon 1 12 reveals a change of feeling towards the very heathen once
despised, a willingness for self sacrifice to the blessing of others.
Nevertheless, they would be entombed, as was Jonah, in the great fish the Lord
had prepared. By all natural laws the digestive juices of that great fish
should drain the life from Jonah, yet the Lord preserves him three days and
nights.... entombed as a nation as good as dead. Only then would Jonah, and
only then would Israel, experience deliverance as a people, when the great fish
would be made to give up its captive prey.
Jer 51:34, fills in some of the detail. Jer 51:34 Nebuchadrezzar the king of Babylon
hath devoured me, he hath crushed me, he hath made me an empty vessel, he hath
swallowed me up like a dragon, he hath filled his belly with my delicates, he
hath cast me out. The prophet Jeremiah then goes on to speak of the Lord’s
deliverance of Israel from that entombment by the overthrow of Babylon. The
Lord, said Jeremiah, would dry up Babylon’s sea.. Or, as the account in Jon 2:10, And the LORD spake unto the fish,
and it vomited out Jonah upon the dry [land].
Brethren. This
is that third day. The waters, the many peoples, supporting Babylon recede. It
is in the shallows. And coincident with Babylon’s going down we see Israel
rising up. Her three days of entombment are ended, and before the eyes of the
whole world, the Lord has caused her to be brought forth on dry land... the
promised land.
From the very
depths could Jonah pray to God.. "Yet hast Thou brought up my life from
corruption." Jon 2:1. Three days,
the third thousand year day, yet preserved of God, for what? For the fulfilment
of His purpose in them.. to be the blessers of mankind. A change of heart is
produced in Jonah, and, at the end, he fulfils the divine purpose, and Ninevah
repents and is saved.. True, her salvation is only for a time.. It is all
typical and shadowy.. nevertheless, the whole plan of God for his servant
Israel is there depicted, though we have not time to stress every detail.
Those three
days in the tomb for Our Blessed Lord have their counterpart in the experience
of the people of Israel. Only at the end of Israel’s entombment would the veil
be lifted, their eyes holden no more, .. the sign given by Jesus, the sign of
Jonah the prophet, would be understood. Then would that change of heart result
in the completion of the divine purpose. In the words of Paul.. Ro 11:15 For if the casting away of them
[be] the reconciling of the world, what [shall] the receiving [of them be], but
life from the dead?
Exactly on time
in the great drama of the ages the resurrection of the nation of Israel takes
place before our eyes, as described so vividly in Eze 36 and 37. XIII. Rise the third day.
Eze 37:1 The hand of the LORD was upon me,
and carried me out in the spirit of the LORD, and set me down in the midst of
the valley which [was] full of bones, 2 And caused me to pass by them round
about: and, behold, [there were] very many in the open valley; and, lo, [they
were] very dry. 3 And he said unto me, Son of man, can these bones live? And I
answered, O Lord GOD, thou knowest.
Here, dear
brethren is the great sign for which, unknowingly, the whole world have been
waiting these many centuries. Here is the confirmation that this is the third
day. Pointed out by time prophecy, now confirmed by event, the day of
resurrection is here! The process has begun, and we know it must continue until
every word of that great Ezekiel prophecy is fulfilled.
As the earth
shakes, a nation rises from the tomb, signal for the great work of this new age
to proceed. Before the age is done the whole world will be back from
death. Ex 19,11 & 15..And he said
unto the people, Be ready against the third day: For then would they come into
covenant relationship with God, a relationship which in its full realisation
will mean that they "go on to know the Lord," and "eternal
life."
But before the
sign is recognised by Israel, while their eyes are yet holden, and while the
world goes on oblivious of the great sign of the Lord’s activity and its
wondrous implications for this earth, the Lord first reveals Himself... to a
woman. Between them is a precious bond. Will her faith enable her now to fully
believe the angelic message that speaks of His living vibrant presence? Can
she, from the promise of her Master’s lips, knowing this is the third day, know
too that blessedness where belief anticipates sight? For the Lord first
revealed Himself not be sight, but by a message, a message of angels, that He
was again present. Faith was required to believe that message, and to realise the
joy of believing. Early in the harvest years, a similar message was given that
the One so long unseen by human eyes was here, was present again. That message
was to test the faith of the Lord’s people. Were these but idle tales? Were
they but delusions of the mind prompted by yearning desire? was the wish father
to the thought? There was to be much running to and fro of Peter’s, and Johns,
and others, and varying interpretations placed upon the evidence to hand. And
these same heart-searching questions will continue until our change, that
blessed moment of truth’s full confirmation.. when we see him face to face. But
at last that moment comes, S So 3:4 I
found him whom my soul loveth: I held him, and would not let him go... and
tears of sorrow yielded to tears of joy.
This is the
third day. All the implications of this hour are here for us to feast on. The
visible resurrection process of the nation of Israel is an infallible sign of
that programme commenced which will bring about the wiping away of all tears.
XIV. Our glorious hope.
But it is a
sign too of something happening right now, something almost too wonderful to
envisage..
The
resurrection of our glorious Head, Jesus, thenceforth led to newness of life
for each true follower, a new mind was formed, and each became alive, alive to
God, risen with Christ, and seated in heavenly places in Him.
Each step of
the way, by that life giving Spirit, the saints have tasted that resurrection
power in their lives. The outward man? Yes it has perished and will continue to
do so, but the inward man is renewed day by day. In this new life of the Spirit
each saint has given witness to the resurrection of Jesus.
But now it is
the third day! Now is the hour of resurrection, that deliverance of the Body
members of Christ. Brethren, the day of resurrection is here upon us.. and, if
we can receive it, it is happening now! First, the resurrection of the saints..
First to commence, before even the national resurrection of Israel. First in
honour, first in time.
For we who
wait, that moment-face to face-lies yet before us. The breathing of my name
from the lips of Him Whom my soul loveth. The moment of realisation of hope’s
most blessed dreams. Together then in blessed unity of thought and vision the
saints are gathered at His feet.
The quiet faith
of John enabling him to perceive truth before even Peter, the misgivings of
Thomas, desperate for that total confirmation of sight, all such differences
among the saints will be swallowed up before the glory of that moment of truth.
Brethren, the variations of human logic, the diversity of mental judgment,
those differences among us that may test how genuine our patience and how real
our love, the ‘knowing in part..’ of each one of us, is all temporary, all passing.
These things are needful preparation for a ministry of reconciliation that will
demand deep understanding of the human mind. Before us lies a blessed moment of
truth, when we see Him as He is, and know as we are known of Him.
Yet earnest is
our prayer, that even now we may know the full joy of truth perception, that my
eyes may not be holden, but that I may know with deepest heart appreciation
every blessed revealing of Himself that the Lord is waiting so ready to impart.