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Published Sep. 1, 2006 |
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Are you
spiritual enough to see clearly?
Is your spiritual vision blurred by your carnality?
The Light Of
The Body
Luke 11:34
The light of the body is the
eye: therefore when thine eye is single, thy whole
body also is full of light; but when thine eye is
evil, thy body also is full of darkness.
35)
Take heed therefore that the
light which is in thee be not darkness.
36)
If thy whole body therefore be
full of light, having no part dark, the whole shall
be full of light, as when the bright shining of a
candle doth give thee light.
I.
Everything We See Depends on the Condition of the
Eyes.
At
first sight this might seem a somewhat inappropriate
comparison. For a lamp is an organ that distributes
light, and the eye an organ that receives it. Put a
lamp into a darkened chamber, and the room is
lightened by its radiance; but put an eye into that
chamber and the darkness still remains. It seems
strange at first, to thoughtful readers, that our
Lord, who never spoke in foolishness, should compare
the eye of the body to a lamp.
But
the point of comparison on which the Master seizes
is entirely independent of that contrast. His point
is that everything we see depends on the condition
of the lamp. If a lamp is burning brightly we see
things as they are. We recognize the books upon the
table, and the photographs upon the wall. But if a
lamp be flickering or smoky everything is distorted
or obscured, and so, says the Lord, is it with the
eye. If you are color-blind you cannot see the
glorious redness of the rose. If short-sighted you
cannot see the friend who is signaling to you from
the hill. If you suffer from impending cataract I
may sit on the next chair to you and yet all that
you distinguish is a shadow. Still is the rose red,
though you cannot see it in your color-blindness.
Still is the friend waving on the hill or seated by
your side. There is nothing the matter with reality;
the pity is that you are seeing badly—the lamp of
the body is the eye.
One
might illustrate that point from one of the healing
miracles of Jesus. I refer to the cure of the blind
man in the eighth chapter of St. Mark. When our Lord
asked the man if he saw aught, he replied that he
saw men as trees walking. Now these men were not
trees; they were ordinary and law-abiding citizens.
Yet to him they were all specters, threatening and
gigantic, just because he was not seeing rightly.
The lamp was flickering, and objects were distorted.
I do not think he would ever forget that, even when
he came to die. He would never be frightened by
specters any more, even the grim specter of the
grave. He would recall the day when in the village
street there were fearsome' and gigantic forms, and
they all sprang from his imperfect vision.
II. What We See Depends on What We Are.
And
so passing into deeper regions we detect the truth
the Master is proclaiming. He is proclaiming that
what we spiritually see really depends on what we
are. As the lamp conditions the aspect of the room,
so does the inward eye condition everything. We see
by life and character, by all that we have made
ourselves, by every secret sin that we have
cherished, by every battle we have fought and won.
There was He, moving in their midst, shining in the
splendor of good deeds. He was set on a candlestick,
visible, conspicuous, radiant in loveliness of life.
Yet some said He was beside Himself, and some that
He was a glutton and a wine-bibber, and others that
He cast out devils by Beelzebub. They saw by what
they were. Bound in their ancient prejudices, angry
at being interfered with, eager to justify
themselves, convicted of their sin, they described
the Carpenter, but could not see the Lord. If any of
you are like that—if you see the Carpenter but
cannot see the Lord—let me ask you, tenderly and
quietly, What kind of life have you been living?
The
same truth that Jesus uses here to explain the
rejection of Himself runs out into every
environment, whether of nature or of man. What we
see in others ultimately depends on what we are.
When the inward lamp is bright we see reality. When
it is smoky everything is smutty. The judgments
which we pass on other people (and we pass such
judgments every day) are always judgments of
ourselves. When our Lord said, Judge not that ye be
not judged, He was not thinking of an external fiat.
He did not mean (as some have taken it) that curses
come home to roost. He meant that what we see in
other people reveals our real character, and on that
is based the judgment of eternity. The lamp of the
body is the eye. If the lamp be dim everything is
dulled. If the inward eye has a cataract, loveliness
itself is but a blur. That is why certain folk could
look on Him who was the Altogether Lovely One and
only see a glutton and a wine-bibber.
It is
in these scriptures that our Lord reveals the glory
of His nature. Judge Him by what He saw and you
touch the tassel of the Son of God. He saw the
Kingdom in a mustard-seed, and the adoring woman in
a harlot. He saw the solid rock in Simon, and the
lover in the son of thunder. He saw in a child the
citizen of heaven, in a bit of bread His broken
body, in a cup of common wine His sacred blood. If
what we see depends on what we are, who shall fathom
the glory of the Lord? Never was there a vision such
as this, because never was there a nature such as
this. The argument from vision has been strangely
neglected by the theologians in their proofs of the
divinity of Christ. Church, if the eyes of God are
like the eyes of the Lord Jesus—if God sees as Jesus
saw when He moved across our sinful world—then there
is hope for you and me, and we can rise after a
hundred failures
When
the light of Christ dwells fully in the heart, it
extends its influence to every thought, word, and
action; and directs its possessor how he is to act
in all places and circumstances. It is of the utmost
importance to have the soul properly influenced by
the wisdom that comes from above. Christ shows that
there can be no devotion without heavenly light. It
is my prayer for the light of Christ to dwell in the
hearts of every Christian.
In His Service,
Pastor Donald Pierce |
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