Chapter 5
THE MELTED HEART OF CALVARY "MY heart is like wax; it is melted," was the language of " the Lord Jesus Christ on the Cross as foreshadowed by the psalmist in the 22nd Psalm, fitly named " a psalm of sobs " by Archbishop Alexander, for, he says, in the Hebrew there is not a single complete sentence in the first part, but all is in fragmentary sighs, like the words of a dying person, when there is not strength to complete a sentence. In the pathway of the soul brought into conformity to the death of the Son of God, there comes a time when there opens to him, by the deep in-working of the Spirit, the meaning of fellowship with His heart In its meltedness under the touch of God. " Put on, therefore, as God's eject, holy and beloved, a heart of compassion " (" bowels of mercies," A.V., Colossians 3: 12, R..V.) , writes the apostle to the Colossians ; and in all his letters he so lays bare his own heart that he himself becomes an example in his own person of that " heart of compassion " which he enjoins upon his readers. " Though ye have ten thousand tutors in Christ, yet have ye not many fathers," he exclaims to the Corinthians as he writes to them in their babyhood of the spiritual life, to lovingly admonish them, and bid them beware of the danger of being " puffed up " and " glorying " in spiritual experiences greater than others. They gloried in being "rich" and " reigning ", whilst he and the other apostles were living as "men doomed to death ". These " babes in Christ ", yet " carnal ", whom he could not feed with strong spiritual meat, were glorying in being " wise in Christ ", whilst he and Apollos were " fools for Christ's sake ". They were " strong ", whilst the chosen vessel called to suffer great things for the name of Christ, was *' weak ". They had " glory lf , whilst he had only " dishonour . . .". What a contrast between the rich, reigning, strong " babes in Christ ;? and the apostle with the great heart who calls himself their " father "—for "in Christ Jesus M he had begotten them through, the Gospel ! " Ten thousand tutors 11 ! " Not many fathers" ! How true it is to-day ! " Many hacks rs " (James 3:1), but not many willing to suffer, and to bear others on their hearts, until they are borne through their babyhood stage into maturity, A " heart of compassion "—of yearning, tender pity born only of the life of God in a believer, and which brings in power to surfer and to endure for the growth and life of other souls. There are those who think that fellowship with Christ in His death means a lessening of sensitiveness and power to feel, whilst others rebel against this thought, and say they do not believe in the eliminating of the " emotional " in spiritual experience. The life of the Lord Himself, and especially the letters of Paul, show us clearly the true balance between these two extremes. In the first case, the truth is that fellowship with Christ in His death simply delivers us from undue self-sensitiveness, and sets us free to be increasingly and acutely sensitive for all that concerns Christ and others ! And in the second case, all that is needed is that the surface emotionalism be taken away, so that the very deepest depths of the whole inmost being may be opened for the life of God to be poured out for souls. The expression in the Authorised Version of Colossians 3:12 is very suggestive: " Put on bowels of mercies " ? This speaks of depth and truth and power of sacrifice which does not come from the moving only of the surface emotion in a " powerful " meeting. Br, Woods Smyth points out in connection with this word in Colossians 3: is, that Professor Bain tells us that " feelings " and " emotions " are " dis- tributed throughout the nerve centres of the internal organs of the body ". " Hence their great power compared with mere thought, which is confined to the limited range of the head." This means true "emotion' 1 and " feeling " for others, and speaks of the deepest work of God in our whole being. " Thought " " confined to the limited range of the head " describes the " ten thousand tutors " who can be teaching, and giving light and knowledge without a trace of the " bowels of mercies " — the " heart of compassion " referred to by Paul. In brief, it is heart we want — the power to fed and to sacrifice for others, for it is the lack of heart which makes " truth " cold and repelling to needy souls. " My bowels, my bowels ! I am pained at my very heart; my heart is disquieted in me; I cannot hold my peace ,f (Jere- miah 4: 19, R.V.), cries the prophet Jeremiah concerning Israel; and this capacity for suffering over others made him peculiarly a picture of Christ when He came as a ** Man of Sorrows ", This inward " melting " of the heart, when the "nerve centres of the internal organs of the body" are moved, so that the whole man is broken up with pain for others, is referred to as the experience of the Saviour when He cried: " My heart is like wax ; it is melted in the midst . + ." (Psalm 22: 14). This same wonderful moving of the whole inner being in strong compassion is said to be the cause of God the Father sending the Son as the Dayspring from on high to visit us. This came about through " the heart of mercy of our God " (Luke 1 :78, A.V.m.), and Jeremiah, in fellowship with God, also pictures Him moved and troubled over Ephraim as a " dear son ", who had turned away from Him, It is this wondrous unveiling of the heart of our Father-God which we so deeply need to know, so that we may speak as Jeremiah spoke of Him, to wandering souls, " I am a Father to Israel, and Ephraim is My first-born," said the Lord; and " I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himself " but " as often as I speak against him, I do earnestly remember him. still . . , " (Jeremiah 31: SO). Dr. Woods Smyth points out that this same word " bowels of mercies "," bowels of compassion," is translated "tender- hearted " in various passages. " Be ye kind, tender-hearted, forgiving one another " (Ephesians 4: 32), the apostle writes to the Ephesians; M If there are any Under mercies and com- passions, fulfil ye my joy, that ye be of " Onesimus ... I have sent back to thee in his own person, that is my very heart . . ." (Philemon 12, R.V.) he writes to Philemon. These passages show how God can communicate to His redeemed the very " heart of mercy ", and " bowels of compassion ", which moved Him to give His Son to die for sinners, and moved (hat Holy One upon His Cross in strong love and pity for all who crucified Him. "Tender-hearted, forgiving . . . even as God forgave," said Paul. And who that has known how freely, and sweetly, and compassionately, the whole inner being can be moved by the love of God to pour out gracious, loving, melting M forgive- ness " to another, even before the very first trace of sorrow or regret for wrong doing is seen, will not better be able to tell of Gad's forgiveness to any repentant sinner or child of God ? And how these "tender mercies" and " compassions" rejoice in filling to the full the joy of others, and is poured out also in gracious, exquisite, tactful words, as seen, in the apostle's letter to Philemon over Ins runaway slave. How Paul's " heart of mercy " — " heart of compassion "—comes out in Ins language concerning him. " My child, whom I have begotten in my bonds," he writes (v. io, R.V.). And this about a Phrygian stave ! The " very heart " of Paul had yearned over this soul, in "bowels of mercies ", so that he ceased to be to him a " slave ", and he saw only in him a child ", begotten in his time of suffering and sorrow. What a wealth of gracious, God-given compassion was manifested in Paul ! His letters may be said to be " all heart" — not "heart" in our narrow conception of "heart" in the sense of earthly, personal affection, loving only those who Jove us (Matthew 5: 46); but " heart " in the wider, fuller, rich revelation opened to us in the words of our theme — bowels of compassion," yearning, pitying, suffering. pouring out in wealth of divine fulness upon all, irrespective of any thought of " return ". " I seek not yours, but you," the apostle writes to the Corinthians; " for the children ought not to lay up for the parents, but the parents for the children. And I will mo&t gladly spend, and be spent out for your souls . . ." (s Corinthians 12: 14, 15, R.V.). " Though the more abundantly I love you, the less I be loved " (A.V.). And again to the Thessalonians he writes: " Life is for us life indeed, since you are standing fast in the Lord " (1 Thessa- lonians 3: 8, Weymouth), and "when I could no longer endure the uncertainty ", 1 " sent tc know the condition of your faith . . ." (1 Thessalonians 3 : 5, Weymouth) ; showing how deeply Paul's " heart of compassion " lived In the life of those he had nurtured for Christ (1 Thessalonians 2: 7), as " a father ... his own children " (v. u, Weymouth). Ten thousand tutors I Not many " fathers ", we can say in the light of this glimpse into the heart of the apostle Paul. " Tutors " to teach, correct, admonish, advise — but few to suffer with others, with such burden of heart as to write in need with "anguish of heart and many tears". Few to yearn over others with the whole inner being moved in compassionate longing for their welfare in fellowship with the very " heart of mercy of our God "- Would we say to-day that the apostle's language was exaggerated ? Gould he really speak of a soul he had yearned over as his ! * very heart " ? Yes, for Paul's great heart was in fellowship with God, and with His Son Jesus Christ, and " desperate tides of the whole great world's anguish " were " forced through the channels of this single heart " (Meyer's " Saint Paul "), reaching out upon even a slave, brought to him in his bonds. Is this " heart of compassion " possible for each of us ? Yes, for the apostle writes: " Put on" as " God's elect, holy and belovedf a heart of compassion . . .**. And why ? " See- ing that ye have put off the * old man ' with his doings ..." (Colossians 3: 9, R.V.). Calvary's Cross is the place of blessing. There let the old narrow, earth-born limitations be put away. There let the old selfish, self-seeking, self-grasping life be left, as we " put on " the " new man which is being renewed . . ." after the image of Him that created him, where there cannot be " earthly distinctions* divisions, separation ",but " Christ all in all ", In the heavenly sphere—" In Christ Jesus " — alone can the " heart cf compassion " be given, and the soul be so taken into fellowship with Christ's sufferings as to know throughout its whole being that yearning love and pity which is, in truth, of God, and not of man. It is written that the " new man ** is " being renewed " — a gradual process which follows the crisis of the definite "putting off" of all that is of the old creation, and the decisive putting away of all " anger, wrath, malice, railing, shameful speaking . . .'*. And in the "renewal" of the " new man " comes, in due season, the stage of real fellowship with Christ in His travail over others, when the whole inner being is moved by the " tender mercies " of God to pain over a nation — as with Jeremiah; or to yearning for Christ to be formed in others, as with Paul; to the compassionate, gracious manifestation of God's forgiving love (Ephesians 4: 32), and the impossibility of " shutting up " f! compassion " from any in need (1 John 3: 17); to the yearning, longing prayers for others " in the tender mercies of Christ Jesus " (" tender heart ", AJford) (Philippians 1:8); and the glad spending out of life and love for all, though the more abundantly the love is given, the " less the outpourer is loved " ! But how does this come about ? " He that believeth into Me " (lit. Greek), the Lord Jesus said, and this means a faith in Him which draws the soul into Him on His Gross— something more than a mental assent to His finished work, or a faith similar to faith in some other person. It means a faith which unites the trusting 1 one with the Saviour. " I, if 1 be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto Myself. But this He said signifying by what manner of death He should die " (John 12; 32, 33}, The Saviour on the Gross draws, and the believing one is drawn into Him there, by the working of the divine Spirit, so that the Saviour and the saved are united in His death. Thus is the believer M planted together " (Romans 6 : 5) with Him in death, or ' ' grafted ' ' into Him on His Cross, as a graft is placed on the stock with the view of vital union, so that stock and graft become one, and share in one life.
These arc the stages of the work of the Spirit in bringing the believer into that place in Christ whence out of Him shall flow the rivers of living water: The uplifted Christ draws; the believer " believes into " — or is drawn into Him on His Cross. Then the Holy Spirit grafts the trusting one } with a view to vital union, and " plants " him ever deeper and deeper into the c< likeness of His death '% as by faith he abides in his place of " crucified with Christ ". As the "graft" is kept In place — bound with cords of surrender and faith to the Crucified One — the vital assimilation goes on, until the Saviour and the saved become so one that His death works in him in deeper power } and he is evermore becoming " conformable to His death" (Philippians 3: 10). In this ever-deepening con- formity the grafted soul, planted into Him, begins to know aspect after aspect of His death on the Cross, until there comes the knowledge of His broken and melted !ten?t t and out of the depths of the one who has thus " believed into " the Redeemer, comes the outflow of rivers of life, breaking forth from the Lamb slain in the midst of the Throne, and through the one brought into vital union and conformity to Him, Then he is " always delivered unto death for Jesus 1 sake, that the life also of Jesus may be manifested in (his) mortal flesh ". "So then death worketh in us, but life in you," adds the apostle, for the " death working " is the condition for the life-stream to flow to others. Out of the heart are the " issues of life ", wrote Solomon, and this is specially seen in the death of the Christ on the Cross ! His body was broken for us, and becomes, in a strange, deep, spiritual sense, the " true meat " for all who truly are united to Him, and live by Him, as He lived by the Father. His *' soul " was poured out unto death, that He might " divide the spoil with the strong" (Isaiah 53: 12), and bring all united to Him, out of the power of darkness, by the hating of their soulish life, and the laying of it down with the Repre- sentative Man on the Gross. Out of His broken heart came the " issues of life " for the dying world. " He that believeth on Me, as the Scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water "; or, as the old Syriac gives it, " Out of the depths of his life shall pour torrents of living water ". The Lord said " rivers ", and rivers He must mean. Rivers of life broke out of His heart, opened on the Cross, and they are issuing now in limitless measure from the Lamb slain in the midst of the Throne. The children of God must learn that only through the inlet of Csbary can the life-streams In the heart of God break into the world ; and again, only through each believer as he is brought into deep conformity with the death of the Son of God.
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