you may all find out) that all goodness of which we
can conceive, and far, far more, is gathered together
in God, and flows out from him eternally over his whole
creation, by that Holy Spirit who proceeds from the
Father and the Son, and is the Lord and Giver of life,
and therefore of goodness. For goodness is nothing
else, if you will receive it, but the eternal life
of God, which he has lived, and lives now, and will
live for evermore, God blessed for ever. Amen.
So, my dear friends, it will not be so difficult for
you to love God, if you will only begin by loving
goodness, which is God’s likeness, and the inspiration
of God’s Holy Spirit. For you will be like
a man who has long admired a beautiful picture of
some one whom he does not know, and at last meets
the person for whom the picture was meant—
and behold the living face is a thousand times more
fair and noble than the painted one. You will
be like a child which has been brought up from its
birth in a room into which the sun never shone; and
then goes out for the first time, and sees the sun
in all his splendour bathing the earth with glory.
If that child had loved to watch the dim narrow rays
of light which shone into his dark room, what will
he not feel at the sight of that sun from which all
those rays had come Just so will they feel who, having
loved goodness for its own sake, and loved their neighbours
for the sake of what little goodness is in them, have
their eyes opened at last to see all goodness, without
flaw or failing, bound or end, in the character of
God, which he has shown forth in Jesus Christ our Lord,
who is the likeness of his Father’s glory, and
the express image of his person; to whom be glory
and honour for ever. Amen.
SERMON II. THE GLORY OF THE CROSS
John xvii. 1.
Father, the hour is come. Glorify thy Son, that
thy Son also may glorify thee. I spoke to you
lately of the beatific vision of God. I will
speak of it again to-day; and say this.
If any man wishes to see God, truly and fully, with
the eyes of his soul: if any man wishes for
that beatific vision of God; that perfect sight of
God’s perfect goodness; then must that man go,
and sit down at the foot of Christ’s cross,
and look steadfastly upon him who hangs thereon.
And there he will see, what the wisest and best among
the heathen, among the Mussulmans, among all who are
not Christian men, never have seen, and cannot see
unto this day, however much they may feel (and some
of them, thank God, do feel) that God is the Eternal
Goodness, and must be loved accordingly.
And what shall we see upon the cross?
Many things, friends, and more than I, or all the
preachers in the world, will be able to explain to
you, though we preached till the end of the world.
But one thing we shall see, if we will, which we
have forgotten sadly, Christians though we be, in these
very days; forgotten it, most of us, so utterly, that
in order to bring you back to it, I must take a seemingly
roundabout road.
Copyrights
The Good News of God from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.