My mind goes back to faithful Abraham,
who, in obedience to the divine command given him in a night
vision at Beersheba, pursues his journey with Isaac by his side.
He sees before him the mountain which God had told him He would
signalize as the one upon which he was to sacrifice. He removes
the wood from the shoulder of his servant and lays it upon Isaac,
the one to be offered. He girds up his soul with firmness and
agonizing sternness, ready for the work which God requires him
to do. With a breaking heart and unnerved hand, he takes the
fire, while Isaac inquires: Father, here is the fire and the
wood; but where is the offering? But, oh, Abraham cannot tell
him now! Father and son build the altar, and the terrible moment
comes for Abraham to make known to Isaac that which has agonized
his soul all that long journey, that Isaac himself is the victim.
Isaac is not a lad; he is a full-grown young man. He could have
refused to submit to his father's design had he chosen to do
so. He does not accuse his father of insanity, nor does he even
seek to change his purpose. He submits. He believes in the love
of his father and that he would not make this terrible sacrifice
of his only son if God had not bidden him do so. Isaac is bound
by the trembling, loving hands of his pitying father because
God has said it. The son submits to the sacrifice because he
believes in the integrity of his father. But when everything
is ready, when the faith of the father and the submission of
the son are fully tested, the angel of God stays the uplifted
hand of Abraham that is about to slay his son and tells him that
it is enough. "Now I know that thou fearest God, seeing
thou hast not withheld thy son, thine only son from Me."
This act of faith in Abraham is recorded
for our benefit. It teaches us the great lesson of confidence
in the requirements of God, however close and cutting they may
be; and it teaches children perfect submission to their parents
and to God. By Abraham's obedience we are taught that nothing
is too precious for us to give to God.
Isaac was a figure of the Son of God, who
was offered a sacrifice for the sins of the world. God would
impress upon Abraham the gospel of salvation to man. In order
to do this, and make the truth a reality to him as well as to
test his faith, He required him to slay his darling Isaac. All
the sorrow and agony that Abraham endured through that dark and
fearful trial were for the purpose of deeply impressing upon
his understanding the plan of redemption for fallen man. He was
made to understand in his own experience how unutterable was
the self-denial of the infinite God in giving His own Son to
die to rescue man from utter ruin. To Abraham no mental torture
could be equal to that which he endured in obeying the divine
command to sacrifice his son.
God gave His Son to a life of humiliation,
self-denial, poverty, toil, reproach, and to the agonizing death
of crucifixion. But there was no angel to bear the joyful message:
"It is enough; You need not die, My well-beloved Son."
Legions of angels were sorrowfully waiting, hoping that, as in
the case of Isaac, God would at the last moment prevent His shameful
death. But angels were not permitted to bear any such message
to God's dear Son. The humiliation in the judgment hall and on
the way to Calvary went on. He was mocked, derided, and spit
upon. He endured the jeers, taunts, and revilings of those who
hated Him, until upon the cross He bowed His head and died.
Could God give us any greater proof of
His love than in thus giving His Son to pass through this scene
of suffering? And as the gift of God to man was a free gift,
His love infinite, so His claims upon our confidence, our obedience,
our whole heart, and the wealth of our affections are correspondingly
infinite. He requires all that it is possible for man to give.
The submission on our part must be proportionate to the gift
of God; it must be complete and wanting in nothing. We are all
debtors to God. He has claims upon us that we cannot meet without
giving ourselves a full and willing sacrifice. He claims prompt
and willing obedience, and nothing short of this will He accept.
We have opportunity now to secure
the love and favor of God. This year may be the last year in
the lives of some who read this. Are there any among the youth
who read this appeal who would choose the pleasures of the world
before that peace which Christ gives the earnest seeker and the
cheerful doer of His will?
God is weighing our characters, our conduct,
and our motives in the balances of the sanctuary. It will be
a fearful thing to be pronounced wanting in love and obedience
by our Redeemer, who died upon the cross to draw our hearts unto
Him. God has bestowed upon us great and precious gifts. He has
given us light and a knowledge of His will, so that we need not
err or walk in darkness. To be weighed in the balance and found
wanting in the day of final settlement and rewards will be a
fearful thing, a terrible mistake which can never be corrected.
Young friends, shall the book of God be searched in vain for
your names?
God has appointed you a work to do for
Him which will make you colaborers with Him. All around you there
are souls to save. There are those whom you can encourage and
bless by your earnest efforts. You may turn souls from sin to
righteousness. When you have a sense of your accountability to
God you will feel the need of faithfulness in prayer and faithfulness
in watching against the temptations of Satan. You will, if you
are indeed Christians, feel more like mourning over the moral
darkness in the world than indulging in levity and pride of dress.
You will be among those who are sighing and crying for the abominations
that are done in the land. You will resist the temptations of
Satan to indulge in vanity and in trimmings and ornaments for
display. The mind is narrowed and the intellect dwarfed that
can be gratified with these frivolous things to the neglect of
high responsibilities.
The youth in our day may be workers with
Christ if they will; and in working, their faith will strengthen
and their knowledge of the divine will will increase. Every true
purpose and every act of right doing will be recorded in the
book of life. I wish I could arouse the youth to see and feel
the sinfulness of living for their
own gratification and dwarfing their intellects to the cheap,
vain things of this life. If they would elevate their thoughts
and words above the frivolous attractions of this world and make
it their aim to glorify God, His peace, which passeth all understanding,
would be theirs.