As an educator no part of the Bible is of greater value than
are its biographies. These biographies differ from all others in that they are
absolutely true to life. It is impossible for any finite mind to interpret
rightly, in all things, the workings of another. None but He who reads the
heart, who discerns the secret springs of motive and action, can with absolute
truth delineate character, or give a faithful picture of a human life. In God's
word alone is found such delineation.
No truth does the
Bible more clearly teach than that what we do is the result of what we are. To
a great degree the experiences of life are the fruition of our own thoughts and
deeds.
"The curse
causeless shall not come." Proverbs 26:2.
"Say ye to the
righteous, that it shall be well with him. . . . Woe unto the wicked! it shall
be ill with him: for the reward of his hands shall be given him." Isaiah 3: 10,
11.
"Hear, O earth:
behold, I will bring evil upon this people, even the fruit of their thoughts."
Jeremiah 6:19.
Terrible is this
truth, and deeply should it be impressed. Every deed reacts upon the doer.
Never a human being but may recognize, in the evils that curse his life,
fruitage of his own sowing. Yet even thus we are not without hope.
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To gain the
birthright that was his already by God's promise, Jacob resorted to fraud, and
he reaped the harvest in his brother's hatred. Through twenty years of exile he
was himself wronged and defrauded, and was at last forced to find safety in
flight; and he reaped a second harvest, as the evils of his own character were
seen to crop out in his sons--all but too true a picture of the retributions of
human life.
But God says: "I
will not contend forever, neither will I be always wroth: for the spirit should
fail before Me, and the souls which I have made. For the iniquity of his
covetousness was I wroth, and smote him: I hid Me, and was wroth, and he went
on frowardly in the way of his heart. I have seen his ways, and will heal him:
I will lead him also, and restore comforts unto him and to his mourners. . . .
Peace, peace to him that is far off, and to him that is near, saith the Lord;
and I will heal him." Isaiah 57:16-19.
Jacob in his
distress was not overwhelmed. He had repented, he had endeavored to atone for
the wrong to his brother. And when threatened with death through the wrath of
Esau, he sought help from God. "Yea, he had power over the Angel, and
prevailed: he wept, and made supplication." "And He blessed him there." Hosea
12:4; Genesis 32:29. In the power of His might the forgiven one stood up, no
longer the supplanter, but a prince with God. He had gained not merely
deliverance from his outraged brother, but deliverance from himself. The power
of evil in his own nature was broken; his character was transformed.
At eventide there
was light. Jacob, reviewing his life-history, recognized the sustaining power
of God--"the God which fed me all my life long unto this day, the Angel which
redeemed me from all evil." Genesis 48: 15, 16.
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The same experience
is repeated in the history of Jacob's sons--sin working retribution, and
repentance bearing fruit of righteousness unto life.
God does not annul
His laws. He does not work contrary to them. The work of sin He does not undo.
But He transforms. Through His grace the curse works out blessing.
Of the sons of
Jacob, Levi was one of the most cruel and vindictive, one of the two most
guilty in the treacherous murder of the Shechemites. Levi's characteristics,
reflected in his descendants, incurred for them the decree from God, "I will
divide them in Jacob, and scatter them in Israel." Genesis 49:7. But repentance
wrought reformation; and by their faithfulness to God amidst the apostasy of
the other tribes, the curse was transformed into a token of highest honor.
"The Lord separated
the tribe of Levi, to bear the ark of the covenant of the Lord, to stand before
the Lord to minister unto Him, and to bless in His name." "My covenant was with
him of life and peace; and I gave them to him for the fear wherewith he feared
Me, and was afraid before My name. . . . He walked with Me in peace and equity,
and did turn many away from iniquity." Deuteronomy 10:8; Malachi 2:5, 6.
The appointed
ministers of the sanctuary, the Levites received no landed inheritance; they
dwelt together in cities set apart for their use, and received their support
from the tithes and the gifts and offerings devoted to God's service. They were
the teachers of the people, guests at all their festivities, and everywhere
honored as servants and representatives of God. To the whole nation was given
the command: "Take heed to thyself that
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thou forsake not
the Levite as long as thou livest upon the earth." "Levi hath no part nor
inheritance with his brethren; the Lord is his inheritance." Deuteronomy 12:
19; 10:9.
By Faith to Conquest
The truth that as a
man "thinketh in his heart, so is he" (Proverbs 23:7), finds another
illustration in Israel's experience. On the borders of Canaan the spies,
returned from searching the country, made their report. The beauty and
fruitfulness of the land were lost sight of through fear of the difficulties in
the way of its occupation. The cities walled up to heaven, the giant warriors,
the iron chariots, daunted their faith. Leaving God out of the question, the
multitude echoed the decision of the unbelieving spies, "We be not able to go
up against the people; for they are stronger than we." Numbers 13:31. Their
words proved true. They were not able to go up, and they wore out their lives
in the desert.
Two, however, of
the twelve who had viewed the land, reasoned otherwise. "We are well able to
overcome it" (Numbers 13:30), they urged, counting God's promise superior to
giants, walled cities, or chariots of iron. For them their word was true.
Though they shared with their brethren the forty years' wandering, Caleb and
Joshua entered the Land of Promise. As courageous of heart as when with the
hosts of the Lord he set out from Egypt, Caleb asked for and received as his
portion the stronghold of the giants. In God's strength he drove out the
Canaanites. The vineyards and olive groves where his feet had trodden became
his possession. Though the cowards and rebels perished in the wilderness, the
men of faith ate of the grapes of Eschol.
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No truth does the
Bible set forth in clearer light than the peril of even one departure from the
right--peril both to the wrongdoer and to all whom his influence shall reach.
Example has wonderful power; and when cast on the side of the evil tendencies
of our nature, it becomes well-nigh irresistible.
The strongest
bulwark of vice in our world is not the iniquitous life of the abandoned sinner
or the degraded outcast; it is that life which otherwise appears virtuous,
honorable, and noble, but in which one sin is fostered, one vice indulged. To
the soul that is struggling in secret against some giant temptation, trembling
upon the very verge of the precipice, such an example is one of the most
powerful enticements to sin. He who, endowed with high conceptions of life and
truth and honor, does yet willfully transgress one precept of God's holy law,
has perverted his noble gifts into a lure to sin. Genius, talent, sympathy,
even generous and kindly deeds, may thus become decoys of Satan to entice souls
over the precipice of ruin.
This is why God has
given so many examples showing the results of even one wrong act. From the sad
story of that one sin which "brought death into the world and all our woe, with
loss of Eden," to the record of him who for thirty pieces of silver sold the
Lord of glory, Bible biography abounds in these examples, set up as beacons of
warning at the byways leading from the path of life.
There is warning
also in noting the results that have followed upon even once yielding to human
weakness and error, the fruit of the letting go of faith.
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By one failure of
his faith, Elijah cut short his lifework. Heavy was the burden that he had
borne in behalf of Israel; faithful had been his warnings against the national
idolatry; and deep was his solicitude as during three years and a half of
famine he watched and waited for some token of repentance. Alone he stood for
God upon Mount Carmel. Through the power of faith, idolatry was cast down, and
the blessed rain testified to the showers of blessing waiting to be poured upon
Israel. Then in his weariness and weakness he fled before the threats of
Jezebel and alone in the desert prayed that he might die. His faith had failed.
The work he had begun he was not to complete. God bade him anoint another to be
prophet in his stead.
But God had marked
the heart service of His servant. Elijah was not to perish in discouragement
and solitude in the wilderness. Not for him the descent to the tomb, but the
ascent with God's angels to the presence of His glory.
These life records
declare what every human being will one day understand--that sin can bring only
shame and loss; that unbelief means failure; but that God's mercy reaches to
the deepest depths; that faith lifts up the repenting soul to share the
adoption of the sons of God.
The Discipline of Suffering
All who in this
world render true service to God or man receive a preparatory training in the
school of sorrow. The weightier the trust and the higher the service, the
closer is the test and the more severe the discipline.
Study the
experiences of Joseph and of Moses, of Daniel
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and of David.
Compare the early history of David with the history of Solomon, and consider
the results. {Ed 151.5}
David in his youth
was intimately associated with Saul, and his stay at court and his connection
with the king's household gave him an insight into the cares and sorrows and
perplexities concealed by the glitter and pomp of royalty. He saw of how little
worth is human glory to bring peace to the soul. And it was with relief and
gladness that he returned from the king's court to the sheepfolds and the
flocks.
When by the
jealousy of Saul driven a fugitive into the wilderness, David, cut off from
human support, leaned more heavily upon God. The uncertainty and unrest of the
wilderness life, its unceasing peril, its necessity for frequent flight, the
character of the men who gathered to him there,--"everyone that was in
distress, and everyone that was in debt, and everyone that was discontented" (1
Samuel 22:2),--all rendered the more essential a stern self-discipline. These
experiences aroused and developed power to deal with men, sympathy for the
oppressed, and hatred of injustice. Through years of waiting and peril, David
learned to find in God his comfort, his support, his life. He learned that only
by God's power could he come to the throne; only in His wisdom could he rule
wisely. It was through the training in the school of hardship and sorrow that
David was able to make the record--though afterward marred with his great
sin--that he "executed judgment and justice unto all his people." 2 Samuel
8:15.
The discipline of
David's early experience was lacking in that of Solomon. In circumstances, in
character, and in life, he seemed favored above all others. Noble
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in youth, noble in
manhood, the beloved of his God, Solomon entered on a reign that gave high
promise of prosperity and honor. Nations marveled at the knowledge and insight
of the man to whom God had given wisdom. But the pride of prosperity brought
separation from God. From the joy of divine communion Solomon turned to find
satisfaction in the pleasures of sense. Of this experience he says:
"I made me great
works; I builded me houses; I planted me vineyards: I made me gardens and
orchards: . . . I got me servants and maidens: . . . I gathered me also silver
and gold, and the peculiar treasure of kings and of the provinces: I gat me men
singers and women singers, and the delights of the sons of men, as musical
instruments, and that of all sorts. So I was great, and increased more than all
that were before me in Jerusalem. . . . And whatsoever mine eyes desired I kept
not from them, I withheld not my heart from any joy; for my heart rejoiced in
all my labor. . . . Then I looked on all the works that my hands had wrought,
and on the labor that I had labored to do: and, behold, all was vanity and
vexation of spirit, and there was no profit under the sun. And I turned myself
to behold wisdom, and madness, and folly: for what can the man do that cometh
after the king? even that which hath been already done."
"I hated life. . .
. Yea, I hated all my labor which I had taken under the sun." Ecclesiastes
2:4-12, 17, 18.
By his own bitter
experience, Solomon learned the emptiness of a life that seeks in earthly
things its highest good. He erected altars to heathen gods, only to learn how
vain is their promise of rest to the soul.
In his later years,
turning wearied and thirsting from
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earth's broken
cisterns, Solomon returned to drink at the fountain of life. The history of his
wasted years, with their lessons of warning, he by the Spirit of inspiration
recorded for after generations. And thus, although the seed of his sowing was
reaped by his people in harvests of evil, the lifework of Solomon was not
wholly lost. For him at last the discipline of suffering accomplished its work.
But with such a
dawning, how glorious might have been his life's day had Solomon in his youth
learned the lesson that suffering had taught in other lives!
The Testing of Job
For those who love
God, those who are "the called according to His purpose" (Romans 8:28), Bible
biography has a yet higher lesson of the ministry of sorrow. "Ye are My
witnesses, saith the Lord, that I am God" (Isaiah 43:12)--witnesses that He is
good, and that goodness is supreme. "We are made a theater unto the world, both
(R.V., margin) to angels, and to men." 1 Corinthians 4:9, margin.
Unselfishness, the
principle of God's kingdom, is the principle that Satan hates; its very
existence he denies. From the beginning of the great controversy he has
endeavored to prove God's principles of action to be selfish, and he deals in
the same way with all who serve God. To disprove Satan's claim is the work of
Christ and of all who bear His name.
It was to give in
His own life an illustration of unselfishness that Jesus came in the form of
humanity. And all who accept this principle are to be workers together with Him
in demonstrating it in practical life. To choose the right because it is right;
to stand for truth at the cost of suffering and sacrifice--"this is the
heritage of the
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servants of the
Lord, and their righteousness is of Me, saith the Lord." Isaiah 54:17.
Very early in the
history of the world is given the life record of one over whom this controversy
of Satan's was waged.
Of Job, the
patriarch of Uz, the testimony of the Searcher of hearts was, "There is none
like him in the earth, a perfect and an upright man, one that feareth God, and
escheweth evil."
Against this man,
Satan brought scornful charge: "Doth Job fear God for nought? Hast Thou not
made an hedge about him, and about his house, and about all that he hath on
every side? . . . Put forth Thine hand now, and touch all that he hath;" "touch
his bone and his flesh, and he will curse Thee to Thy face."
The Lord said unto
Satan, "All that he hath is in thy power." "Behold, he is in thine hand; but
save his life."
Thus permitted,
Satan swept away all that Job possessed--flocks and herds, menservants and
maidens, sons and daughters; and he "smote Job with sore boils from the sole of
his foot unto his crown." Job 1:8-12; 2:5-7.
Still another
element of bitterness was added to his cup. His friends, seeing in adversity
but the retribution of sin, pressed on his bruised and burdened spirit their
accusations of wrongdoing.
Seemingly forsaken
of heaven and earth, yet holding fast his faith in God and his consciousness of
integrity, in anguish and perplexity he cried:
"My soul is weary
of my life."
"O that Thou
wouldest hide me in the grave,
That Thou wouldest
keep me secret, until Thy wrath be
past,
That Thou wouldest
appoint me a set time, and
remember me!" Job
10:1; 14:13.
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"Behold, I cry out
of wrong, but I am not heard:
I cry for help, but
there is no judgment. . . .
He hath stripped me
of my glory,
And taken the crown
from my head. . . .
My kinsfolk have
failed,
And my familiar
friends have forgotten me. . . .
They whom I loved
are turned against me. . . .
Have pity upon me,
have pity upon me, O ye my friends;
For the hand of God
hath touched me."
"Oh that I knew
where I might find Him,
That I might come
even to His seat! . . .
Behold, I go
forward, but He is not there;
And backward, but I
cannot perceive Him:
On the left hand,
where He doth work, but I cannot
behold Him:
He hideth Himself
on the right hand, that I cannot see
Him.
But He knoweth the
way that I take;
When He hath tried
me, I shall come forth as gold."
"Though He slay me,
yet will I trust in Him."
"I know that my
Redeemer liveth,
And that He shall
stand up at the last upon the earth:
And after my skin
hath been destroyed, this shall be,
Even from my flesh
shall I see God:
Whom I shall see
for myself,
And mine eyes shall
behold, and not as a stranger."
Job 19:7-21, R.V.;
23:3-10, R.V.; 13:15; 19:25-27,
R.V., margin.
According to his
faith, so was it unto Job. "When He hath tried me," he said, "I shall come
forth as gold." Job 23:10. So it came to pass. By his patient endurance he
vindicated his own character, and thus the character of Him whose
representative he was. And "the Lord turned the captivity of Job: . . . also
the Lord gave Job twice as much as he had before. . . . So the Lord blessed the
latter end of Job more than his beginning." Job 42:10-12.
On the record of
those who through self-abnegation have entered into the fellowship of Christ's
sufferings,
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stand--one in the
Old Testament and one in the New-- the names of Jonathan and of John the
Baptist.
Jonathan, by birth
heir to the throne, yet knowing himself set aside by the divine decree; to his
rival the most tender and faithful of friends, shielding David's life at the
peril of his own; steadfast at his father's side through the dark days of his
declining power, and at his side falling at the last--the name of Jonathan is
treasured in heaven, and it stands on earth a witness to the existence and the
power of unselfish love.
John the Baptist,
at his appearance as the Messiah's herald, stirred the nation. From place to
place his steps were followed by vast throngs of people of every rank and
station. But when the One came to whom he had borne witness, all was changed.
The crowds followed Jesus, and John's work seemed fast closing. Yet there was
no wavering of his faith. "He must increase," he said, "but I must decrease."
John 3:30.
Time passed, and
the kingdom which John had confidently expected was not established. In Herod's
dungeon, cut off from the life-giving air and the desert freedom, he waited and
watched.
There was no
display of arms, no rending of prison doors; but the healing of the sick, the
preaching of the gospel, the uplifting of men's souls, testified to Christ's
mission.
Alone in the
dungeon, seeing whither his path, like his Master's, tended, John accepted the
trust--fellowship with Christ in sacrifice. Heaven's messengers attended him to
the grave. The intelligences of the universe, fallen and unfallen, witnessed
his vindication of unselfish service.
And in all the
generations that have passed since then,
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suffering souls
have been sustained by the testimony of John's life. In the dungeon, on the
scaffold, in the flames, men and women through centuries of darkness have been
strengthened by the memory of him of whom Christ declared, "Among them that are
born of women there hath not risen a greater." Matthew 11:11.
"And what shall I
more say? for the time would fail me to tell of Gideon, and of Barak, and of
Samson, and of Jephthah; . . . and Samuel, and of the prophets: who through
faith subdued kingdoms, wrought righteousness, obtained promises, stopped the
mouths of lions, quenched the violence of fire, escaped the edge of the sword,
out of weakness were made strong, waxed valiant in fight, turned to flight the
armies of the aliens.
"Women received
their dead raised to life again: and others were tortured, not accepting
deliverance; that they might obtain a better resurrection: and others had trial
of cruel mockings and scourgings, yea, moreover of bonds and imprisonment: they
were stoned, they were sawn asunder, were tempted, were slain with the sword:
they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins; being destitute, afflicted,
tormented; (of whom the world was not worthy:) they wandered in deserts, and in
mountains, and in dens and caves of the earth.
"And these all,
having obtained a good report through faith, received not the promise: God
having provided some better thing for us, that they without us should not be
made perfect." Hebrews 11:32-40.