F. B. Meyer
Life Without Miracles
by F.B. Meyer
“John did no miracle: but all things that John
spake of this man were true.” John 10:41
Beyond
the Jordan! To the Jew living in Jerusalem that meant banishment indeed.
The district there was called Perea, and it was comparatively desert.
There were a few mountain torrents which made their impetuous way down
to the Jordan, patches of fruitful soil, and a few scattered villages;
but for the most part the population was poor and sparse, and destitute
of the culture which reigned in Jerusalem.
Why then did our Lord
come hither to spend the last hours of His life? Would not Nazareth
welcome Him to His early home, or Capernaum provide Him a resting place
in a marble palace washed by the caressing waters of the lake He loved
so well? Would He not be better lodged at Jerusalem in the palace of
Caiaphas, the pretorium of Herod, or even the temple itself ?
Alas! All these were shut
against Him by the relentless hate of His enemies. Perea alone could
offer Him a resting place.
There was a peculiar
fascination attached to Perea. It was the place where John had first
baptized. Those desolate hills had been black with crowds gathered from
all the land to hear the crying of that trumpet voice; those waters had
been the scene of countless baptisms; the people around had many a story
to tell of the appearance and life of the grand young prophet who had
met his tragic end in the dungeons of Herod's castle.
And as the disciples
wandered over the ground in company with Christ, memory recalled the
spot where some of them had been baptized, or others had seen him
designate Jesus as the Lamb of God. Christ's own mind must have been
strangely moved by conflicting thoughts as He contrasted the radiant
dawn of His ministry in this spot with the overcast skies that had since
darkened above Him.
No sooner did our Lord
find Himself in comparative safety than He threw Himself into His
much-loved work of preaching the gospel, working miracles, and healing
all who were diseased. Crowds gathered around Him - many from the
immediate neighbourhood, some from a greater distance; but as they stood
on that memorable spot, old memories were stirred; the place, with its
surroundings, even to the stones that lay in the riverbed, forcefully
reminded them of the great life set as a jewel in these rugged scenes.
They confessed the mighty
gulf which severed him from Christ - "John did no miracle;"
but they gladly emphasized the fact that all things which he had spoken
of Christ were true.
I. GOD'S VINDICATION OF
APPARENT FAILURE
To the eye of the casual
observer the Baptist seemed to have failed. The morning star had paled
before the sunrise; the crowds who had gathered round the Bridegroom's
friend ebbed slowly and steadily away to follow the Bridegroom Himself.
His disciples half reproachfully said, "Master, He to whom thou
barest witness beyond Jordan, the same has commenced to baptize, and all
men come to Him."
The faithful few that
gathered around him must have deeply felt that they were the adherents
of a dwindling cause, which was destined gradually to come to an end.
And this was only a prelude to the immuring of this brave soul within
the dark walls of Herod's dungeons.
Like an eagle with broken
wing, the Baptist lay spent and powerless. And there, the captivity, the
lack of the ministry of nature, the inability to understand why Christ
did not deliver him - if He were indeed the Messiah - led to a still
greater lapse, and he sent to ask whether Jesus of Nazareth were after
all what he had announced Him to be.
"Art Thou He that
should come, or look we for another?"
Finally down the long
corridor, the executioner came to his cell, the sword gleamed, the
severed head fell from the body, and from that subterranean prison his
spirit returned to God.
How sad and disastrous
seemed such a termination to a life which had once been the centre of
the national thought and movement!
Was it not all a failure?
Had not John made a profound mistake in following his lofty ideals? Had
not God Himself deserted His faithful servant? Was it after all a real
voice that spoke from the opened heaven?
Then God took up the
cause of His faithful martyr, and vindicated him through the tribute
which the crowds paid his memory as they gathered in Perea. "John
was true," the people said. "What he said has been verified by
the event."
He had said that Christ
was from heaven, and above all, and it was true.
He had said that Christ
was the true Bridegroom of faithful souls, and it was true. He had said
that the Father did not give Him the Holy Spirit by measure and it was
true.
He had said that He was
the Lamb of God taking away the sins of the world, and it was true.
John had said many other
things about Christ, which they had treasured and now recalled. But
among them all there was no statement made about Christ which was not
true. This strengthened their faith in the Lord Jesus, but it also
vindicated the Baptist as the true prophet of the Most High.
Thus it has often been
since, and may be for you and me:
Around that mother's
grave you may gather and say, "She was not brilliant or greatly
remarkable, but she spoke true words of Jesus Christ which will never
die." Of some Sunday-school teacher, or minister, who seems to have
been a voice crying in the wilderness, and to have passed away before
accomplishing any lasting monument: " He did no miracle, but he
spoke true words for Christ."
Do not look for success
or dread failure. Go on day by day fulfilling the task of the day, and
leaving the results with God. You know not what you are doing; you are
scattering seeds which will yield harvests when you lie beneath the sod
of the valley.
God will vindicate you,
and some day, as men recall your memory, if they say that you wrought no
miracle, they will also say that whatever you spoke of this Man was
true.
II. THE TEST OF EXPERIENCE
These are days in which
the Bible is greatly discredited. There are those who appear to delight
in hunting out discrepancies in the venerable record of God's dealings
with men. The higher critics in many cases appear to me to be devoid of
that reverence for the Spirit of God and the religious life of men which
should make one inclined to trust them. In many points they contradict
each other, and few of their decisions are likely to remain unchallenged
when a few more years have passed over.
In the meanwhile, it is
doubtless a matter of concern to many Christians to know how to hold to
their confidence in that sacred volume which they had been accustomed to
consider the authoritative Word of the Most High. To read the books
which are constantly pouring from the press would take more time than
most of us can afford; to understand and combat their objections would
take greater scholarship than is within our reach.
Even if we were to
canvass the matter to the bottom, it is not probable that our evidence
would be taken, in the court of general opinion, as against scholars and
literalists.
What, then can we do?
May we not adopt the
method suggested by our text, and vindicate the truth of the Bible by
comparing its statements with what we have discovered through personal
association with the Lord Jesus ?
The Bible says that the
peace of God comes to those who trust in Him who died on the cross under
Pontius Pilate, and was raised again according to the Scriptures. We
have come, and trusted, and found peace. All that the Bible said in this
respect is true.
The Bible says that if we
open our hearts to the Spirit of God He will infill them with a holy
hatred of sin, and with the hunger and thirst of a new life. We have
acted upon the suggestion and have been delivered from sins which had
cursed and defiled our whole life. All that the Bible said in this
respect is true.
The Bible says that if we
make our requests known to God through Jesus Christ He will abundantly
answer them; and hundreds of answered prayers, as we review them, attest
that what the Bible said in this respect also is true.
The Bible says that
Christ's gospel is the antidote of death; that for those who believe in
Him death is abolished, and the fear of it at an end. Now, we had been
all our lifetime subject to bondage, but have forgotten to fear since
Christ has shed upon our hearts the rays of immortality and life. In
this also what the Bible said was true.
In these and in many
other particulars we have verified for ourselves the Word of God, and
are able to affirm, from the platform of personal experience, that all
it says of Jesus Christ is true, and therefore it shall still be our
guide through the unknown.
III. THE OPPORTUNITY OF
MODERATE ABILITY
You may be very
discontented with yourself. You are no genius, have no brilliant gifts,
and are inconspicuous for any special faculty.
Mediocrity is the law of
your existence. Your days are remarkable for nothing but sameness and
insipidity, always spent within the same small room, tethered by the
same short string, and surrounded by the same ignorant and uncongenial
people. Yet you may live a great life, and one on which angels on their
way home to God may loiter to look with admiration.
John did no miracle, but
Jesus said among those that were born of women there had not appeared a
greater than he.
Set yourself to say true
things about Jesus Christ. Perhaps you cannot preach the set speech or
studied discourse, but you may always set forth what you have known and
seen of Him who still manifests Himself to loving and believing hearts.
John's main business was to bear witness to the Light, that all men
through Him might believe; and this business may be yours and mine also.
Do it privately
John did not only speak
of Jesus to the throng, but when standing with two of his disciples,
looking upon Jesus as He walked, he said, "Behold the Lamb of
God!" Let us use the opportunities of daily life to speak of our
dearest Lord.
Do it experientially
"I saw, and bare
record" said John. We cannot have the opened heaven and the audible
voice, as he, but these are not the best evidences. For though John had
enjoyed them, he doubted. We have a more sure basis, because we may
daily see and handle the good Word of life.
Do it unostentatiously
John was content to be
only a voice, if men would think of Christ. Be willing to be only a
voice, heard but not seen; a mirror whose surface is lost to view,
because it reflects the dazzling glory of the sun; a breeze that springs
up just before daylight, and says, "The dawn! The dawn!" and
then dies away.
But this can never be
till we are altogether taken up with Christ; and when that happens there
will be no effort to speak of Him, nothing unnatural, forced, or
strained, no breach of the laws of Christian courtesy.
"You should have
told him to mind his own business," said a gentleman to his wife,
when she told him that a man of God had spoken to her about her soul.
"If you had heard
him speak," was the reply, "you would have thought that that
was his business."
Do not long after wealth.
The men who have done most for the world have been those who could truly
say, "Silver and gold have I none."
Do not long after
position. Some of the worst men that ever lived were nobly born, while
the uncrowned kings of the race have sprung from the ranks of poverty.
Do not long for genius.
It is very doubtful whether mere genius has done much for the world. It
is inclined to be spasmodic, fluctuating, unreliable.
Be content if you can do
no miracle; live to give the world a true conception of the unseen Lord.
Put away self-indulgence,
whether of the sense or thought, for this will undermine the better
qualities of the heart. Carefully check impatience, uncharity, and
insincerity of speech or manner.
Embody in heart and life
the meekness and gentleness, the purity and truth of the Lord Jesus.
Do the commonest and
smallest things as beneath His eye
Are you beset with
chafing irritations and annoyances ? Bear them as the martyrs endured
the pillory and the torture chamber.
If you must live with
uncongenial people, set to their conquest by love. If you have made a
great mistake in your life, do not let it becloud all of it, but,
locking the secret in your breast, compel it to yield strength and
sweetness.
You may do all these
things by the peace of God, and without brilliant talent; and acting
thus you will do more real good than:
Rank
- with its aristocratic bearing,
Wealth - with its
golden shower, and
Genius - with its
meteoric flash.
We are doing more good
than we know, sowing seeds, starting streamlets, giving men true
thoughts of Christ, to which men will refer one day as the first things
that started them thinking of Him; and of my part, I shall be satisfied
if no great mausoleum is raised over my grave, but that simple souls
shall gather there when I am gone, and say, "He was a good man; he
wrought no miracles, but he spake words about Christ which led me to
know Him for myself."
John did no miracle: but
all things that John spake of this man were true.