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Chosen no: R-4658 a, from: 1910 Year. |
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The Camel And The Needle's Eye
--AUG. 7—MATT. 19:13-26
Golden
Text:--"Jesus said, Suffer little
children to come unto me
and forbid them not, for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven."
EN
ROUTE toward Jerusalem
the Master was met by mothers desiring to have his blessing upon their
children. The Apostles, realizing the greatness of their Master and the
importance of his time, forbade this and rebuked the mothers. When Jesus heard,
he called them and said: "Suffer little children, and forbid them not, to
come unto me; for such is the kingdom of heaven," and he put his hands in
blessing upon their heads.
From
this we are not to understand that the Kingdom of Heaven
will be composed of little children. This erroneous idea has gone broadcast,
and such an impression respecting the Kingdom has thus resulted. On the
contrary, no little children can get into the Kingdom. Only those who have the
hearing of faith are even "called" to the Kingdom and its glories. Our
Lord's blessing upon little children merely signified his sympathy and love and
his appreciation of the purity and innocence of childhood. Those who will be of
the Kingdom of God must be like little children in the
sense of being simple hearted, true, honest and trustful of their heavenly
Father--of such-like will be the inheritors of the Kingdom.
Another
account tells us of Jesus' further words to the effect that all who would be
his disciples must become as little children--must be like little
children in guilelessness, faith, etc. But those who will be heirs of the
Kingdom will all be "overcomers." Such take up their cross and follow
the Lord whithersoever he leadeth. As our Lord could not have taken up his
cross when he was a boy of nine, so likewise children cannot become the
followers of Christ in the Scriptural sense until they have reached the age of
discretion, which with some may occur much earlier than with others. We have
known children of twelve years or thereabouts to give excellent evidence of
faith, obedience and consecration to the Lord's will and evidence of being
begotten of the holy Spirit. These, of course, but no other children, could
have hope of sharing with Christ in his Millennial Kingdom.
THE
YOUNG NOBLEMAN'S TEST
On
his journey our Lord was accosted by one who said, "Good Master, what good
things shall I do that I may have eternal life?" He had the right idea,
namely, that eternal life is the grand desideratum, the grand hope of all hopes
before the human family. We are glad of the question, for it brought forth the
inspired answer, in which everybody is interested. What is the value of the
present life, except as it leads us up the passageway to eternal life? How
utterly lost we should feel if assured that at death we would be blotted out
forever! How little in this life would be worth consideration-- how little it
could do toward filling the longing of our hearts, which yearn for eternal
life!
Our
Lord parried the question, in order to draw out the young man and make him
commit himself. "Why [R4658
: page 250] do you call me
good?" Why do you acknowledge me as a good teacher? I am either the
Messiah, as I claim, or else an impostor and far from good. Do you accept my
Messiahship? If you do not, how can you call me good or acknowledge that
anything could be good that does not proceed from God, the Fountain of all
goodness? But answering your question; if you would enter into eternal life,
keep the commandments. The young man replied, Which? The Master answered,
"Thou shalt do no murder, nor commit adultery, nor steal, nor bear false
witness, but honor thy father and thy mother and love thy neighbor as
thyself." The young man replied, "All these things have I observed
from my youth. What lack I yet?"
He
was a model young man and Jesus loved him. Evidently he was keeping the Jewish
Law to the extent of his knowledge and ability. He thought that he was loving
his neighbor as himself; but this was a mistake which the Lord disclosed to him
by the following suggestion: "If thou wouldest be perfect, go sell all
that thou hast and give to the poor and thou shalt have treasure in
heaven" instead of on earth; sacrifice also your earthly reputation and
become my follower.
Ah,
how the Lord knew to put his finger on the sore spot! The young man had come to
him very boastful, very sure that if any one in the world was seeking to be in
harmony with the Divine arrangement he was that one. He came for the Master's
approval, that he might hear him say, "You are the one exception to the
rule." The Lord did not say, "If you love your neighbor as you love
yourself you will at least put forth an effort to make that neighbor as
comfortable as you desire to be comfortable." He was content to be very
rich, while some of his neighbors whom he thought he loved as he loved himself
were very poor--abjectly, sorrowfully so. When Jesus discovered to him the
difficulty of his situation, he grasped it at once. He saw himself as never
before. It became a new test with him. Thus it is with all. A previous lesson
showed us the Kingdom as a great prize, a pearl of great value, a treasure,
which to possess, will cost all that we have; and this lesson points out the
same fact.
Let
us not make the mistake made by some, and suppose that the young man who lived
so honorable a life and failed to gain heaven, would be thrust down into
eternal torment because he did not sacrifice his all to become the
Lord's disciple. His loss of the Kingdom was a sufficient penalty without
suffering eternal torment in the future. Such members of the human family,
under the blessed conditions of the Millennial Kingdom, will doubtless make
very rapid progress and will obtain eternal life on the plane of human
perfection, though not worthy of the Kingdom honors which belong only to the
elect. And the elect are those only who are gladly sacrificing their lives and
their all to gain the great prize.
PASSING
THROUGH THE NEEDLE'S EYE
Our
Lord commented upon the matter to his disciples and added that the rich must
have great difficulty in connection with their endeavor to enter the Kingdom. He
said, sympathetically, rather than in a denunciatory manner, "It is easier
for a camel to go through the needle's eye than for the rich to enter the kingdom of God." This astonished the disciples
very greatly, for they knew that the majority of the religionists of their day
belonged to the wealthy class, the Scribes and the Pharisees. They replied,
"Who, then, can get into the Kingdom, if these cannot?" Our Lord's
reply was, "With men this is impossible, but not with God." Men would
be inclined to say that God would find no one for the Kingdom at all if he
rejected the rich.
In
a word, no rich man can get into the Kingdom. He must give up everything
to the Lord or else be barred from a place in the Kingdom. The terms of
acceptance are the same to the rich as to the poor. He who would have the
"pearl of great price" must sell all that he has in order that he may
obtain it. The rich must give up all to the Lord, and then as stewards of their
riches will be held responsible for their stewardship.
The
following little poem describes the needle's eye, or small gate beside the
larger gate, through which the camels might pass into the walled city after
sundown and without any of their burden. So the rich by unloading and becoming
poor may get into the Kingdom:--
THROUGH
THE NEEDLE'S EYE
"Tall
was my camel and laden high,
And small the gate as a needle's eye.
"The
city within was very fair,
And I and my camel would enter there.
"'You
must lower your load,' the porter cried,
'You must throw away that bundle of pride.'
"This
I did, but the load was great,
Far too wide for the narrow gate.
"'Now,'
said the porter, 'to make it less,
Discard that hamper of selfishness.'
"I
obeyed, though with much ado,
Yet still nor camel nor I got through.
"'Ah,'
said the porter, 'your load must hold
Some little package of trust-in-gold.'
"The
merest handful was all I had,
Yet 'Throw it away,' the porter bade.
"Then
lo, a marvel! the camel tall
Shrank to the size of the portal small,
"And
all my riches, a vast estate,
Easily passed through the narrow gate!"
W.T. R-4658 a : page 249 – 1910 r.