A PAPER CONTRIBUTED TO "THE GUIDE," THE JOURNAL OF THE SCOTTISH
Y.M.C.A., IN DECEMBER, 1909.
A young gentleman once visited Jesus, and put to Him an important
question. The question was—" What shall I do to inherit eternal life? " He
possessed everything usually regarded as going to make life worth living.
He was rich, at least according to the standards of his time. He had a
good position in society, being a ruler of the synagogue, and thus a
magistrate in the community. He was exemplary in his conduct, for when the
principal commandments were enunciated in his hearing he was able to look
calmly into the face of Him who was the embodiment of Eternal Goodness and
to assert that he had kept these from his earliest days. He was religious,
too, and we cannot affirm that his religiousness was a mere pretence, for
according to the narrative which describes his interview with the Saviour,
it was reverent, orthodox, and earnest. Withal he was so amiable in
disposition and so attractive in demeanour that the heart of the Lord
warmed towards him in the very conversation which they carried on with
each other.
And yet there was a deficiency in his life which required to be dealt
with, as Christ was compelled to point out to him. Indeed, he himself was
conscious of a lack. He felt that there was something present in the life
of Jesus which was absent from his, and which it would make all things new
for him to obtain. That is why he came to the Lord presenting the problem
which has just been referred to, and it was because of his conviction that
"this Man" with whom he conferred was able to enlighten him with regard
to what was wanting that he sought a conference with Him at all.
There is one point which may be remarked upon in
passing, because it is so positively settled by the case of this young
man. We live in a time when the acquisition of material substance and the
improvement of one's social circumstances are looked upon as the things to
be coveted above all else. The millennium will be ushered in, we are told,
when all men become well to do. Righteousness and purity, peace and
brotherhood and joy will become the common heritage of the race when its
members generally become each the owner of a goodly share of this world's
goods. But here was a man and there have been and are many like him, whom
worldly circumstances highly favoured, and upon whom fortune had always
smiled, and he is farther from happiness than many who had not a single
shekel to call their own. If circumstances could make a man content, then
indeed he ought to have been content. But he was not content. On the
contrary, discontent was consuming his soul ; and his experience knocks
the bottom out of every theory of living which makes contentment
contingent upon the things which this world can supply. We grudge no man
his heritage in the earth and all that it contains, but we contend that
joy —abiding joy—must come from a quarter which is supra- mundane, and we
base our contention upon a consideration of this youth's spiritual
condition, and of the spiritual condition of thousands besides.
It was eternal life he was after—life on the plane of
the infinite. Life on the plane of the finite was already his in all
fullness. But he had come to the conclusion—was forced to the
conclusion—that this was not life in its widest range and highest
possibility, and hence his anxiety to come by that life which a great
apostle has accurately termed "the life which is life indeed."
Herbert Spencer has defined life for us. He calls it
the "correspondence of an organism with its environment," and, as Henry
Drummond has observed, eternal life in that case would be the perfect
correspondence of an organism with its environment. If we regard man as
the organism and God as the environment, as in this connection we are
bound to do, then a perfect correspondence on the part of man with God
constitutes eternal life, or at least the condition on which eternal life
may be obtained. Our Lord Himself in the great intercessory prayer of the
17th of John expresses the same truth, although not in terms of science—
"This is eternal life, that they might know Thee the only true God and
Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent." It is interesting that the Greek
construction in this verse in the original version of the New Testament
indicates that the latter clause states the condition upon which the
contents of the first clause become real in experience. "That they might
know Thee, etc.," is that condition. To know God—that is to say, to be on
terms of acquaintance, friendship, intimacy, with God—is to correspond
with God, and this knowledge is the necessary condition of eternal life
according to Jesus ; so that there is here a coincidence between
evangelical doctrine and scientific statement which is very helpful to us
in our consideration of this subject. What the young man of whom we are
speaking stood in need of accordingly was the establishment between him
and God of a perfect correspondence, heart to heart and will to will.
Proper adjustment to the ultimate Reality of existence was what his spirit
yearned for, and neither his wealth nor his position, neither his morality
nor his religiousness was capable of effecting this.
How, then, was this correspondence, this adjustment, to
be brought about? Our Lord explains, "Sell all that thou hast, and
distribute unto the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven; and
come, follow Me." Did Christ mean him to understand the former part of
this exhortation in a literal sense, and did He expect him to act upon
such an understanding? Most undoubtedly He did. What was wrong with this
good young fellow was that his wealth had so entwined itself about his
heart that with all his morality and all his piety he was not right with
God, and could not be right until the stumbling- block of his riches was
taken out of the way entirely. An act of renunciation was one part—the
negative, but not the less necessary part of the condition which Jesus
imposes. He must surrender that which he treasured most fondly if he was
ever to breathe the exhilarating air for which, it is no exaggeration to
say, his soul was panting.
There was, however, a positive side as well, for our Lord adds, " Come,
follow Me." It was a significant command viewed with other commands which
our Lord gave in the course of His ministry, and it casts a flood of light
for unprejudiced minds upon the consciousness and personality of Jesus. It
was a command which distinctly implied that in this matter of eternal life
Christ was the Mediator, the only Mediator between God and man. In short,
to follow Him was to be reconciled to God. Only in Jesus Christ, but in
Jesus Christ very really, God and man can meet on terms of correspondence
and friendship. He is the Daysman between the Divine and the human, who
can put His hand upon both. The practical import of the command as far as
this young ruler was concerned was that he must submit to a control to be
exercised by Jesus—a control which, despite all his goods and goodness, he
had not yet acknowledged in any practical way.
Did he sell and did he follow? We are left in the dark as to this, but the
importance of our Lord's words is not touched by our ignorance on this
point ; for these words were not only pertinent to the spiritual condition
and needs of the youth whose photograph the Gospels so effectively set
before us, but are also pertinent to the spiritual condition and needs of
every man, young or old, who ever desired to inherit "the life of the
ages." Let me go over the matter briefly in its bearing upon all who may
read the article that I am now writing. How can you and I inherit eternal
life ? Only by the ready fulfilment of the two-sided condition which we
have just been considering. There must take place on our part a great and
definite renunciation. It may not be material substance that has
captivated our minds and gained possession of the citadel of our souls;
but something else has done it— perhaps our cleverness, perhaps our
pedigree, perhaps fashion, or dress, or pleasure, or popularity. What is
that upon which we most often congratulate ourselves, upon which our minds
chiefly dote? That thing we must cease to take pride and put our
confidence in. We must pluck out the right eye if need be, or cut off the
right arm, for "he that will save his life shall lose it; and
he that will lose his life shall find it." Do
you consider this hard? Do not overlook the compensation, "Thou shalt have
treasure in heaven " ; nor yet the words of Jesus to Peter and the
disciples immediately after the young man had taken his departure, "
Verily I say unto you, there is no man that hath left house or parents or
brethren or wife or children for the Kingdom of God's sake, who shall not
receive manifold more in this present time, and in the world to come life
everlasting." The principle here set forth is that whatever loss we suffer
for the sake of the Kingdom of Heaven and eternal life will be more than
made up for even here and rewarded a thousandfold in the great hereafter.
And we must submit to control. What we need above
anything at the centre of our souls is to take upon ourselves the yoke of
Jesus Christ—to accept from Him a control which will so co-ordinate and
unify the disordered elements of our spiritual nature that these
co-operate one with another and each with all towards the destiny which in
His ineffable goodness He has set before us. This control, be it noticed,
brings into prominence the kingship of our Lord ; and that is as it should
be, for His kingship is in danger of dropping nowadays out of the sight of
even His own people. It is interesting to recall that in His birth and in
His death His kingship was held aloft. "Where is He that is born King? " "
This is Jesus the King of the Jews." He is a King without question, and
our salvation and all the blessings which salvation brings depend in the
last resort upon our standing in a right relationship to His kingship. His
kingship includes everything—Saviourhood and all. The way of salvation is
still the way set by St. Paul before the jailer at Philippi, to whom he
said, "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved." The man
who forsakes all to choose Him for his master has by that forsaking and
choice become adjusted to the Infinite Environment, fellowship with which
causes eternal life to permeate the soul. We need some king—our nature is
so constituted as to demand direction and control. Whom shall we make our
king if not Jesus Christ ? Do the annals of the world speak of any other
entitled to take His place? Is there any other name than His at which we
feel that we can bow? If not, let us place that name above every name in
our thinking and acting. Let us each say with intention, as William Law
would say, "Thou art the King of Glory, O Christ. I accept Thee as my
King. I give up everything for Thy sake. In my life Thou wilt ever have
the pre-eminence." If we say this we already feel in our hearts the
pulsations of eternal life, and our souls have been linked to the powers
of the world to come.
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