Part 48 (1/2)

_CREATOR AND CREATURE_

ISAIAH xl. 9-28.

Let me mark the range of this teaching. ”Who hath measured the waters in the hollow of His hand.... He shall feed His flock like a shepherd.” And let me mark it again. ”The Creator of the ends of the earth ... giveth power unto the faint.” Almightiness offers itself to carry my burden! The Creator offers Himself to re-create me! I can engage the forces of the universe to help me on my journey. Emerson counselled us to hitch our wagon to a star. We can do better than that. We can hitch it to the Maker of the star! We have something better than an ideal; we have the Light of the world. We are not left to a radiant abstraction; we have a gracious G.o.d.

The water flows from the Welsh hills to every house in Birmingham. Rich and poor alike share the bounty of the mountains. The wealth of the mountains comes to the common thirst. And everybody, too, may have the water from the everlasting hills. ”The water that I shall give him shall be in him.” The river of life will flow to every soul of man.

OCTOBER The Fifth

_THE SOUL AND NATURE_

PSALM cxlviii.

”Praise ye the Lord.” And the Psalmist calls upon the creation to join in the anthem. And that is the gracious purpose of our G.o.d, that the world should be filled with harmonious praise. It is His will that the character of man should harmonize with the flowers of the field, that the beauty of his habits should blend with the glories of the sunrise, and that his speech and laughter should mingle with the songs of birds and with the melody of flowing streams. But man is too often a discord in creation. The flowers put him to shame. The birds make him sound harsh and jarring. He is ”out of tune.”

What then? ”Tune my heart to sing Thy praise.” We must bring the broken strings, the rusted strings, the jarring strings to the Repairer and Tuner of the soul. It is the glad ministry of His grace to re-awaken silent chords, to restore broken harps, to ”put new songs” in our mouths. He will make us the kinsfolk of all things bright and beautiful. We shall ”go forth with joy,” and ”all the trees of the field shall clap their hands.”

OCTOBER The Sixth

_HE KNOWETH OUR FRAME_

PSALM ciii. 13-22.

”He knoweth our frame.” The Bible abounds in such gracious and tender words. ”He remembereth us in our low estate.” ”I have many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now.” ”He will not permit you to be tempted above that ye are able.” The burden is suited to our strength. The revelation is determined by our experience. The pace is regulated by our years. ”He carrieth the lambs in His arms.” He ”leads on softly.” Nothing is done in ignorance. ”The Lord is mindful of His own. He remembereth His children.”

And so I must practise the belief in G.o.d's compa.s.sionate nearness. In my childhood I used to sing ”There's a Friend for little children, Above the bright blue sky.” I know better now. He is nearer to me than I can dream.

I used to sing ”There is a happy land, Far, far away.” Now I sing, ”There is a happy land, _Not_ far away.” The good Father and His home are not in some remote realm. They are very, very near to me, and He knows all about me. ”He knoweth our frame.”

OCTOBER The Seventh

_NEEDING AND WANTING_

ACTS xvii. 22-31.

”As though He needed anything.” ”He may not need us; but does He want us?”

Such is the question I heard Dr. Parker ask as he preached upon these words. And he took up a handful of flowers which he had upon the pulpit, and said: ”These flowers were gathered for me by little hands in a Devons.h.i.+re lane. Did I need them? No. Did I want them?... Your little girl kissed you before you left for business this morning. Did you need it?...

Did you want it?”

And so Almightiness may not need our weakness, but the loving Father wants His children. ”We are His offspring.” Our Father delights in the love of His children. The Saviour said to a Samaritan woman, ”Give Me to drink.”