"The Fruit of the Righteous is the Tree of Life."
Sacred
history presents many illustrations of the results of true education. It
presents many noble examples of men whose characters were formed under divine
direction, men whose lives were a blessing to their fellow men and who stood in
the world as representatives of God. Among these are Joseph and Daniel, Moses,
Elisha, and Paul--the greatest statesmen, the wisest legislator, one of the
most faithful of reformers, and, except Him who spoke as never man spake, the
most illustrious teacher that this world has known.
In early life, just
as they were passing from youth to manhood, Joseph and Daniel were separated
from their homes and carried as captives to heathen lands. Especially was
Joseph subject to the temptations that attend great changes of fortune. In his
father's home a tenderly cherished child; in the house of Potiphar a slave,
then a confidant and companion; a man of affairs, educated by study,
observation, contact with men; in Pharaoh's dungeon a prisoner of state,
condemned unjustly, without hope of vindication or prospect of release; called
at a great crisis to the leadership of the nation--what enabled him to preserve
his integrity?
No one can stand
upon a lofty height without danger. As the tempest that leaves unharmed the
flower of the
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valley uproots the
tree upon the mountaintop, so do fierce temptations that leave untouched the
lowly in life assail those who stand in the world's high places of success and
honor. But Joseph bore alike the test of adversity and of prosperity. The same
fidelity was manifest in the palace of the Pharaohs as in the prisoner's cell.
In his childhood,
Joseph had been taught the love and fear of God. Often in his father's tent,
under the Syrian stars, he had been told the story of the night vision at
Bethel, of the ladder from heaven to earth, and the descending and ascending
angels, and of Him who from the throne above revealed Himself to Jacob. He had
been told the story of the conflict beside the Jabbok, when, renouncing
cherished sins, Jacob stood conqueror, and received the title of a prince with
God.
A shepherd boy,
tending his father's flocks, Joseph's pure and simple life had favored the
development of both physical and mental power. By communion with God through
nature and the study of the great truths handed down as a sacred trust from
father to son, he had gained strength of mind and firmness of principle.
In the crisis of
his life, when making that terrible journey from his childhood home in Canaan
to the bondage which awaited him in Egypt, looking for the last time on the
hills that hid the tents of his kindred, Joseph remembered his father's God. He
remembered the lessons of his childhood, and his soul thrilled with the resolve
to prove himself true--ever to act as became a subject of the King of heaven.
In the bitter life
of a stranger and a slave, amidst the sights and sounds of vice and the
allurements of heathen worship, a worship surrounded with all the attractions
of
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wealth and culture
and the pomp of royalty, Joseph was steadfast. He had learned the lesson of
obedience to duty. Faithfulness in every station, from the most lowly to the
most exalted, trained every power for highest service.
At the time when he
was called to the court of Pharaoh, Egypt was the greatest of nations. In
civilization, art, learning, she was unequaled. Through a period of utmost
difficulty and danger, Joseph administered the affairs of the kingdom; and this
he did in a manner that won the confidence of the king and the people. Pharaoh
"made him lord of his house, and ruler of all his substance: to bind his
princes at his pleasure; and teach his senators wisdom." Psalm 105:21, 22.
The secret of
Joseph's life Inspiration has set before us. In words of divine power and
beauty, Jacob, in the blessing pronounced upon his children, spoke thus of his
best-loved son:
"Joseph is a
fruitful bough,
Even a fruitful
bough by a well;
Whose branches run
over the wall:
The archers have
sorely grieved him,
And shot at him,
and hated him:
But his bow abode
in strength,
And the arms of his
hands were made strong
By the hands of the
mighty God of Jacob; . . .
Even by the God of
thy father, who shall help thee;
And by the
Almighty, who shall bless thee
With blessings of
heaven above,
Blessings of the
deep that lieth under: . . .
The blessings of
thy father have prevailed
Above the blessings
of my progenitors
Unto the utmost
bound of the everlasting hills:
They shall be on
the head of Joseph,
And on the crown of
the head of him that was separate
from his brethren."
Genesis 49:22-26.
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Loyalty to God,
faith in the Unseen, was Joseph's anchor. In this lay the hiding of his power.
"The arms of his
hands were made strong
By the hands of the
mighty God of Jacob."
Daniel, an Ambassador of Heaven
Daniel and his
companions in Babylon were, in their youth, apparently more favored of fortune
than was Joseph in the earlier years of his life in Egypt; yet they were
subjected to tests of character scarcely less severe. From the comparative
simplicity of their Judean home these youth of royal line were transported to
the most magnificent of cities, to the court of its greatest monarch, and were
singled out to be trained for the king's special service. Strong were the
temptations surrounding them in that corrupt and luxurious court. The fact that
they, the worshipers of Jehovah, were captives to Babylon; that the vessels of
God's house had been placed in the temple of the gods of Babylon; that the king
of Israel was himself a prisoner in the hands of the Babylonians, was
boastfully cited by the victors as evidence that their religion and customs
were superior to the religion and customs of the Hebrews. Under such
circumstances, through the very humiliations that Israel's departure from His
commandments had invited, God gave to Babylon evidence of His supremacy, of the
holiness of His requirements, and of the sure result of obedience. And this
testimony He gave, as alone it could be given, through those who still held
fast their loyalty.
To Daniel and his
companions, at the very outset of their career, there came a decisive test. The
direction that their food should be supplied from the royal table was an
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expression both of
the king's favor and of his solicitude for their welfare. But a portion having
been offered to idols, the food from the king's table was consecrated to
idolatry; and in partaking of the king's bounty these youth would be regarded
as uniting in his homage to false gods. In such homage loyalty to Jehovah
forbade them to participate. Nor dared they risk the enervating effect of
luxury and dissipation on physical, mental, and spiritual development.
Daniel and his
companions had been faithfully instructed in the principles of the word of God.
They had learned to sacrifice the earthly to the spiritual, to seek the highest
good. And they reaped the reward. Their habits of temperance and their sense of
responsibility as representatives of God called to noblest development the
powers of body, mind, and soul. At the end of their training, in their
examination with other candidates for the honors of the kingdom, there was
"found none like Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah." Daniel 1:19.
At the court of
Babylon were gathered representatives from all lands, men of the choicest
talents, men the most richly endowed with natural gifts, and possessed of the
highest culture this world could bestow; yet amidst them all, the Hebrew
captives were without a peer. In physical strength and beauty, in mental vigor
and literary attainment, they stood unrivaled. "In all matters of wisdom and
understanding, that the king inquired of them, he found them ten times better
than all the magicians and astrologers that were in all his realm." Daniel
1:20.
Unwavering in
allegiance to God, unyielding in the mastery of himself, Daniel's noble dignity
and courteous
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deference won for
him in his youth the "favor and tender love" of the heathen officer in whose
charge he was. The same characteristics marked his life. Speedily he rose to
the position of prime minister of the kingdom. Throughout the reign of
successive monarchs, the downfall of the nation, and the establishment of a
rival kingdom, such were his wisdom and statesmanship, so perfect his tact, his
courtesy, and his genuine goodness of heart, combined with fidelity to
principle, that even his enemies were forced to the confession that "they could
find none occasion nor fault; forasmuch as he was faithful." Daniel 6:4. {Ed
5.3}
While Daniel clung
to God with unwavering trust, the spirit of prophetic power came upon him.
While honored by men with the responsibilities of the court and the secrets of
the kingdom, he was honored by God as His ambassador, and taught to read the
mysteries of ages to come. Heathen monarchs, through association with Heaven's
representative, were constrained to acknowledge the God of Daniel. "Of a truth
it is," declared Nebuchadnezzar, "that your God is a God of gods, and a Lord of
kings, and a revealer of secrets." And Darius, in his proclamation "unto all
people, nations, and languages, that dwell in all the earth," exalted the "God
of Daniel" as "the living God, and steadfast forever, and His kingdom that
which shall not be destroyed;" who "delivereth and rescueth, and . . . worketh
signs and wonders in heaven and in earth." Daniel 2:47; 6:25-27.
True and Honest Men
By their wisdom and
justice, by the purity and benevolence of their daily life, by their devotion
to the interests of the people,--and they, idolaters,--Joseph and Daniel proved
themselves true to the principles of their early
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training, true to
Him whose representatives they were. These men, both in Egypt and in Babylon,
the whole nation honored; and in them a heathen people, and all the nations
with which they were connected, beheld an illustration of the goodness and
beneficence of God, an illustration of the love of Christ.
What a lifework was
that of these noble Hebrews! As they bade farewell to their childhood home, how
little did they dream of their high destiny! Faithful and steadfast, they
yielded themselves to the divine guiding, so that through them God could
fulfill His purpose.
The same mighty
truths that were revealed through these men, God desires to reveal through the
youth and the children of today. The history of Joseph and Daniel is an
illustration of what He will do for those who yield themselves to Him and with
the whole heart seek to accomplish His purpose.
The greatest want
of the world is the want of men-- men who will not be bought or sold, men who
in their inmost souls are true and honest, men who do not fear to call sin by
its right name, men whose conscience is as true to duty as the needle to the
pole, men who will stand for the right though the heavens fall.
But such a
character is not the result of accident; it is not due to special favors or
endowments of Providence. A noble character is the result of self-discipline,
of the subjection of the lower to the higher nature--the surrender of self for
the service of love to God and man.
The youth need to
be impressed with the truth that their endowments are not their own. Strength,
time, intellect, are but lent treasures. They belong to God, and it should be
the resolve of every youth to put them to the highest use. He is a branch, from
which God expects
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fruit; a steward,
whose capital must yield increase; a light, to illuminate the world's darkness.
Every youth, every
child, has a work to do for the honor of God and the uplifting of humanity.
Elisha, Faithful in Little Things
The early years of
the prophet Elisha were passed in the quietude of country life, under the
teaching of God and nature and the discipline of useful work. In a time of
almost universal apostasy his father's household were among the number who had
not bowed the knee to Baal. Theirs was a home where God was honored and where
faithfulness to duty was the rule of daily life.
The son of a
wealthy farmer, Elisha had taken up the work that lay nearest. While possessing
the capabilities of a leader among men, he received a training in life's common
duties. In order to direct wisely, he must learn to obey. By faithfulness in
little things, he was prepared for weightier trusts.
Of a meek and
gentle spirit, Elisha possessed also energy and steadfastness. He cherished the
love and fear of God, and in the humble round of daily toil he gained strength
of purpose and nobleness of character, growing in divine grace and knowledge.
While co-operating with his father in the home duties, he was learning to
co-operate with God.
The prophetic call
came to Elisha while with his father's servants he was plowing in the field. As
Elijah, divinely directed in seeking a successor, cast his mantle upon the
young man's shoulders, Elisha recognized and obeyed the summons. He "went after
Elijah, and ministered unto him." 1 Kings 19:21. It was no great work
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that was at first
required of Elisha; commonplace duties still constituted his discipline. He is
spoken of as pouring water on the hands of Elijah, his master. As the prophet's
personal attendant, he continued to prove faithful in little things, while with
daily strengthening purpose he devoted himself to the mission appointed him by
God.
When he was first
summoned, his resolution had been tested. As he turned to follow Elijah he was
bidden by the prophet to return home. He must count the cost-- decide for
himself to accept or reject the call. But Elisha understood the value of his
opportunity. Not for any worldly advantage would he forgo the possibility of
becoming God's messenger, or sacrifice the privilege of association with His
servant.
As time passed, and
Elijah was prepared for translation, so Elisha was prepared to become his
successor. And again his faith and resolution were tested. Accompanying Elijah
in his round of service, knowing the change soon to come, he was at each place
invited by the prophet to turn back. "Tarry here, I pray thee," Elijah said;
"for the Lord hath sent me to Bethel." But in his early labor of guiding the
plow, Elisha had learned not to fail or to become discouraged; and now that he
had set his hand to the plow in another line of duty, he would not be diverted
from his purpose. As often as the invitation to turn back was given, his answer
was, "As the Lord liveth, and as thy soul liveth, I will not leave thee." 2
Kings 2:2.
"And they two went
on. . . . And they two stood by Jordan. And Elijah took his mantle, and wrapped
it together, and smote the waters, and they were divided hither and thither, so
that they two went over on dry ground. And it came to pass, when they were gone
over,
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that Elijah said
unto Elisha, Ask what I shall do for thee, before I be taken away from thee.
And Elisha said, I pray thee, let a double portion of thy spirit be upon me.
And he said, Thou hast asked a hard thing: nevertheless, if thou see me when I
am taken from thee, it shall be so unto thee; but if not, it shall not be so.
And it came to pass, as they still went on, and talked, that, behold, there
appeared a chariot of fire, and horses of fire, and parted them both asunder;
and Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven.
"And Elisha saw it,
and he cried, My father, my father, the chariot of Israel, and the horsemen
thereof. And he saw him no more: and he took hold of his own clothes, and rent
them in two pieces. He took up also the mantle of Elijah that fell from him,
and went back, and stood by the bank of Jordan; and he took the mantle of
Elijah that fell from him, and smote the waters, and said, Where is the Lord
God of Elijah? and when he also had smitten the waters, they parted hither and
thither: and Elisha went over. And when the sons of the prophets which were to
view at Jericho saw him, they said, The spirit of Elijah doth rest on Elisha.
And they came to meet him, and bowed themselves to the ground before him." 2
Kings 2:6-15.
Henceforth Elisha
stood in Elijah's place. And he who had been faithful in that which was least,
proved himself faithful also in much.
Elijah, the man of
power, had been God's instrument for the overthrow of gigantic evils. Idolatry,
which, supported by Ahab and the heathen Jezebel, had seduced the nation, had
been cast down. Baal's prophets had been slain. The whole people of Israel had
been deeply stirred,
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and many were
returning to the worship of God. As successor to Elijah was needed one who by
careful, patient instruction could guide Israel in safe paths. For this work
Elisha's early training under God's direction had prepared him.
The lesson is for
all. None can know what may be God's purpose in His discipline; but all may be
certain that faithfulness in little things is the evidence of fitness for
greater responsibilities. Every act of life is a revelation of character, and
he only who in small duties proves himself "a workman that needeth not to be
ashamed" (2 Timothy 2:15) will be honored by God with weightier trusts.
Moses, Powerful Through Faith
Younger than Joseph
or Daniel was Moses when removed from the sheltering care of his childhood
home; yet already the same agencies that shaped their lives had molded his.
Only twelve years did he spend with his Hebrew kindred; but during these years
was laid the foundation of his greatness; it was laid by the hand of one little
known to fame.
Jochebed was a
woman and a slave. Her lot in life was humble, her burden heavy. But through no
other woman, save Mary of Nazareth, has the world received greater blessing.
Knowing that her child must soon pass beyond her care, to the guardianship of
those who knew not God, she the more earnestly endeavored to link his soul with
heaven. She sought to implant in his heart love and loyalty to God. And
faithfully was the work accomplished. Those principles of truth that were the
burden of his mother's teaching and the lesson of her life, no after influence
could induce Moses to renounce.
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From the humble
home in Goshen the son of Jochebed passed to the palace of the Pharaohs, to the
Egyptian princess, by her to be welcomed as a loved and cherished son. In the
schools of Egypt, Moses received the highest civil and military training. Of
great personal attractions, noble in form and stature, of cultivated mind and
princely bearing, and renowned as a military leader, he became the nation's
pride. The king of Egypt was also a member of the priesthood; and Moses, though
refusing to participate in the heathen worship, was initiated into all the
mysteries of the Egyptian religion. Egypt at this time being still the most
powerful and most highly civilized of nations, Moses, as its prospective
sovereign, was heir to the highest honors this world could bestow. But his was
a nobler choice. For the honor of God and the deliverance of His downtrodden
people, Moses sacrificed the honors of Egypt. Then, in a special sense, God
undertook his training.
Not yet was Moses
prepared for his lifework. He had yet to learn the lesson of dependence upon
divine power. He had mistaken God's purpose. It was his hope to deliver Israel
by force of arms. For this he risked all, and failed. In defeat and
disappointment he became a fugitive and exile in a strange land.
In the wilds of
Midian, Moses spent forty years as a keeper of sheep. Apparently cut off
forever from his life's mission, he was receiving the discipline essential for
its fulfillment. Wisdom to govern an ignorant and undisciplined multitude must
be gained through self-mastery. In the care of the sheep and the tender lambs
he must obtain the experience that would make him a faithful, long-suffering
shepherd to Israel. That he might
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become a
representative of God, he must learn of Him.
The influences that
had surrounded him in Egypt, the affection of his foster mother, his own
position as the grandson of the king, the luxury and vice that allured in ten
thousand forms, the refinement, the subtlety, and the mysticism of a false
religion, had made an impression on his mind and character. In the stern
simplicity of the wilderness all this disappeared.
Amidst the solemn
majesty of the mountain solitudes Moses was alone with God. Everywhere the
Creator's name was written. Moses seemed to stand in His presence and to be
overshadowed by His power. Here his self-sufficiency was swept away. In the
presence of the Infinite One he realized how weak, how inefficient, how
short-sighted, is man.
Here Moses gained
that which went with him throughout the years of his toilsome and care-burdened
life--a sense of the personal presence of the Divine One. Not merely did he
look down the ages for Christ to be made manifest in the flesh; he saw Christ
accompanying the host of Israel in all their travels. When misunderstood and
misrepresented, when called to bear reproach and insult, to face danger and
death, he was able to endure "as seeing Him who is invisible." Hebrews 11:27.
Moses did not
merely think of God, he saw Him. God was the constant vision before him. Never
did he lose sight of His face.
To Moses faith was
no guesswork; it was a reality. He believed that God ruled his life in
particular; and in all its details he acknowledged Him. For strength to
withstand every temptation, he trusted in Him.
The great work
assigned him he desired to make in
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the highest degree
successful, and he placed his whole dependence upon divine power. He felt his
need of help, asked for it, by faith grasped it, and in the assurance of
sustaining strength went forward.
Such was the
experience that Moses gained by his forty years of training in the desert. To
impart such an experience, Infinite Wisdom counted not the period too long or
the price too great.
The results of that
training, of the lessons there taught, are bound up, not only with the history
of Israel, but with all which from that day to this has told for the world's
progress. The highest testimony to the greatness of Moses, the judgment passed
upon his life by Inspiration, is, "There arose not a prophet since in Israel
like unto Moses, whom the Lord knew face to face." Deuteronomy 34:10.
Paul, Joyful in Service
With the faith and
experience of the Galilean disciples who had companied with Jesus were united,
in the work of the gospel, the fiery vigor and intellectual power of a rabbi of
Jerusalem. A Roman citizen, born in a Gentile city; a Jew, not only by descent
but by lifelong training, patriotic devotion, and religious faith; educated in
Jerusalem by the most eminent of the rabbis, and instructed in all the laws and
traditions of the fathers, Saul of Tarsus shared to the fullest extent the
pride and the prejudices of his nation. While still a young man, he became an
honored member of the Sanhedrin. He was looked upon as a man of promise, a
zealous defender of the ancient faith.
In the theological
schools of Judea the word of God had been set aside for human speculations; it
was robbed of its power by the interpretations and traditions of the rabbis.
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Self-aggrandizement, love of domination, jealous exclusiveness, bigotry and
contemptuous pride, were the ruling principles and motives of these teachers.
The rabbis gloried
in their superiority, not only to the people of other nations, but to the
masses of their own. With their fierce hatred of their Roman oppressors, they
cherished the determination to recover by force of arms their national
supremacy. The followers of Jesus, whose message of peace was so contrary to
their schemes of ambition, they hated and put to death. In this persecution,
Saul was one of the most bitter and relentless actors.
In the military
schools of Egypt, Moses was taught the law of force, and so strong a hold did
this teaching have upon his character that it required forty years of quiet and
communion with God and nature to fit him for the leadership of Israel by the
law of love. The same lesson Paul had to learn.
At the gate of
Damascus the vision of the Crucified One changed the whole current of his life.
The persecutor became a disciple, the teacher a learner. The days of darkness
spent in solitude at Damascus were as years in his experience. The Old
Testament Scriptures stored in his memory were his study, and Christ his
teacher. To him also nature's solitudes became a school. To the desert of
Arabia he went, there to study the Scriptures and to learn of God. He emptied
his soul of prejudices and traditions that had shaped his life, and received
instruction from the Source of truth.
His afterlife was
inspired by the one principle of self-sacrifice, the ministry of love. "I am
debtor," he said, "both to the Greeks, and to the barbarians; both to the
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wise, and to the
unwise." "The love of Christ constraineth us." Romans 1:14; 2 Corinthians 5:14.
The greatest of
human teachers, Paul accepted the lowliest as well as the highest duties. He
recognized the necessity of labor for the hand as well as for the mind, and he
wrought at a handicraft for his own support. His trade of tentmaking he pursued
while daily preaching the gospel in the great centers of civilization. "These
hands," he said, at parting with the elders of Ephesus, "have ministered unto
my necessities, and to them that were with me." Acts 20:34.
While he possessed
high intellectual endowments, the life of Paul revealed the power of a rarer
wisdom. Principles of deepest import, principles concerning which the greatest
minds of this time were ignorant, are unfolded in his teachings and exemplified
in his life. He had that greatest of all wisdom, which gives quickness of
insight and sympathy of heart, which brings man in touch with men, and enables
him to arouse their better nature and inspire them to a higher life.
Listen to his words
before the heathen Lystrians, as he points them to God revealed in nature, the
Source of all good, who "gave us rain from heaven, and fruitful seasons,
filling our hearts with food and gladness." Acts 14:17.
See him in the
dungeon at Philippi, where, despite his pain-racked body, his song of praise
breaks the silence of midnight. After the earthquake has opened the prison
doors, his voice is again heard, in words of cheer to the heathen jailer, "Do
thyself no harm: for we are all here" (Acts 16:28)--every man in his place,
restrained by the presence of one fellow prisoner. And the jailer, convicted
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of the reality of
that faith which sustains Paul, inquires the way of salvation, and with his
whole household unites with the persecuted band of Christ's disciples.
See Paul at Athens
before the council of the Areopagus, as he meets science with science, logic
with logic, and philosophy with philosophy. Mark how, with the tact born of
divine love, he points to Jehovah as "the Unknown God," whom his hearers have
ignorantly worshiped; and in words quoted from a poet of their own he pictures
Him as a Father whose children they are. Hear him, in that age of caste, when
the rights of man as man were wholly unrecognized, as he sets forth the great
truth of human brotherhood, declaring that God "hath made of one blood all
nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth." Then he shows how,
through all the dealings of God with man, runs like a thread of gold His
purpose of grace and mercy. He "hath determined the times before appointed, and
the bounds of their habitation; that they should seek the Lord, if haply they
might feel after Him, and find Him, though He be not far from every one of us."
Acts 17:23, 26, 27.
Hear him in the
court of Festus, when King Agrippa, convicted of the truth of the gospel,
exclaims, "Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian." With what gentle
courtesy does Paul, pointing to his own chain, make answer, "I would to God,
that not only thou, but also all that hear me this day, were both almost, and
altogether such as I am, except these bonds." Acts 26:28, 29.
Thus passed his
life, as described in his own words, "in journeyings often, in perils of
waters, in perils of robbers, in perils by mine own countrymen, in perils by
the
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heathen, in perils
in the city, in perils in the wilderness, in perils in the sea, in perils among
false brethren; in weariness and painfulness, in watchings often, in hunger and
thirst, in fastings often, in cold and nakedness." 2 Corinthians 11:26, 27.
"Being reviled," he
said, "we bless; being persecuted, we suffer it: being defamed, we entreat; "as
sorrowful, yet alway rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rich; as having
nothing, and yet possessing all things." 1 Corinthians 4:12, 13; 2 Corinthians
6:10.
In service he found
his joy; and at the close of his life of toil, looking back on its struggles
and triumphs, he could say, "I have fought a good fight." 2 Timothy 4:7.
These histories are
of vital interest. To none are they of deeper importance than to the youth.
Moses renounced a prospective kingdom, Paul the advantages of wealth and honor
among his people, for a life of burden bearing in God's service. To many the
life of these men appears one of renunciation and sacrifice. Was it really so?
Moses counted the reproach of Christ greater riches than the treasures in
Egypt. He counted it so because it was so. Paul declared: "What things were
gain to me, these have I counted loss for Christ. Yea verily, and I count all
things to be loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord:
for whom I suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but refuse, that
I may gain Christ." Philippians 3:7, 8, R.V., margin. He was satisfied with his
choice.
Moses was offered
the palace of the Pharaohs and the monarch's throne; but the sinful pleasures
that make men forget God were in those lordly courts, and he chose instead
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the "durable riches
and righteousness." Proverbs 8:18. Instead of linking himself with the
greatness of Egypt, he chose to bind up his life with God's purpose. Instead of
giving laws to Egypt, he by divine direction enacted laws for the world. He
became God's instrument in giving to men those principles that are the
safeguard alike of the home and of society, that are the cornerstone of the
prosperity of nations--principles recognized today by the world's greatest men
as the foundation of all that is best in human governments.
The greatness of
Egypt is in the dust. Its power and civilization have passed away. But the work
of Moses can never perish. The great principles of righteousness which he lived
to establish are eternal.
Moses' life of toil
and heart-burdening care was irradiated with the presence of Him who is "the
chiefest among ten thousand," and the One "altogether lovely." Canticles 5:10,
16. With Christ in the wilderness wandering, with Christ on the mount of
transfiguration, with Christ in the heavenly courts--his was a life on earth
blessing and blessed, and in heaven honored.
Paul also in his
manifold labors was upheld by the sustaining power of His presence. "I can do
all things," he said, "through Christ which strengtheneth me." "Who shall
separate us from the love of Christ? shall tribulation, or distress, or
persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? . . . Nay, in all
these things we are more than conquerors through Him that loved us. For I am
persuaded, that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor
powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height, nor depth, nor any
other created thing (Rotherham's translation), shall be able to separate
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us from the love of
God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord." Philippians 4:13; Rom. 8:35-39.
Yet there is a
future joy to which Paul looked forward as the recompense of his labors--the
same joy for the sake of which Christ endured the cross and despised the shame
--the joy of seeing the fruition of his work. "What is our hope, or joy, or
crown of rejoicing?" he wrote to the Thessalonian converts. "Are not even ye in
the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at His coming? For ye are our glory and
joy." I Thessalonians 2:19, 20.
Who can measure the
results to the world of Paul's lifework? Of all those beneficent influences
that alleviate suffering, that comfort sorrow, that restrain evil, that uplift
life from the selfish and the sensual, and glorify it with the hope of
immortality, how much is due to the labors of Paul and his fellow workers, as
with the gospel of the Son of God they made their unnoticed journey from Asia
to the shores of Europe?
What is it worth to
any life to have been God's instrument in setting in motion such influences of
blessing? What will it be worth in eternity to witness the results of such a
lifework?