And what is the joy of our Lord? What is the
joy of Christ? The joy and delight which springs
for ever in his great heart, from feeling that he
is for ever doing good; from loving all, and living
for all; from knowing that if not all, yet millions
on millions are grateful to him, and will be for ever.
My friends, if you have ever done a kind action; if
you have ever helped any one in distress, or given
up a pleasure for the sake of others—do
you not know that that deed gave you a peace, a self-content,
a joy for the moment at least, which nothing in this
world could give, or take away? And if the person
whom you helped thanked you; if you felt that you
had made that man your friend; that he trusted you
now, looked on you now as a brother—did
not that double the pleasure? I ask you, is
there any pleasure in the world like that of doing
good, and being thanked for it? Then that is
the joy of your Lord. That is the joy of Christ
rising up in you, as often as you do good; the love
which is in you rejoicing in itself, because it has
found a loving thing to do, and has called out the
love of a human being in return.
Yes, if you will receive it, that is the joy of Christ—the
glorious knowledge that he is doing endless good,
and calling out endless love to himself and to the
Father, till the day when he shall give up to his
Father the kingdom which he has won back from sin and
death, and God shall be all in all.
That is the joy of your Lord. If you wish for
any different sort of joy after you die, you must
not ask me to tell you of it; for I know nothing about
the matter save what I find written in the Holy Scripture.
SERMON VI. WORSHIP
Isaiah i. 12, 13.
When ye come to appear before me, who hath required
this at your hand, to tread my courts? Bring
no more vain oblations; incense is an abomination
unto me; the new moons and sabbaths, the calling of
assemblies, I cannot away with; it is iniquity, even
the solemn meeting.
This is a very awful text; one of those which terrify
us—or at least ought to terrify us—and
set us on asking ourselves seriously and honestly—’What
do I believe after all? What manner of man am
I after all? What sort of show should I make
after all, if the people round me knew my heart and
all my secret thoughts? What sort of show, then,
do I already make, in the sight of Almighty God, who
sees every man exactly as he is?’
I say, such texts as this ought to terrify us.
It is good to be terrified now and then; to be startled,
and called to account, and set thinking, and sobered,
as it were, now and then, that we may look at ourselves
honestly anti bravely, and see, if we can, what sort
of men we are.
And therefore, perhaps, it is that this chapter is
chosen for the first Advent Lesson; to prepare us
for Christmas; to frighten us somewhat; at least to
set us thinking seriously, and to make us fit to keep
Christmas in spirit and in truth.
Copyrights
The Good News of God from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.