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The
Burdened Gently Led By Christ
Octavius Winslow,
D.D.
He
shall gently lead those that are with youngIsaiah 40:11
THOSE
that are with youngthose that are burdened; for such are they
whom Jesus gently leads. This is a large portion of the little flock
of which Christ is the Chief Shepherd, Leader, and Exemplar. In nothing
scarcely is the assimilation strongerin no particular more appropriate.
It is proper and befitting that the sheep of the Burden-bearer should
themselves be a burdened flock. But little would they know of Him as suchin
the glory of His Godhead, in the compassion of His manhood, in the strength
of His shoulder, and in the tenderness of His heartbut for their
wearisome, toilsome travail. They must be with young to know
what the gentleness of Christ is. A general view of our humanity
will present to the eye the spectacle of the whole creation (rational
and irrational) groaning and travailing together in pain until now.
Our humanity is a burdened humanity, and we, who believe, share that burden
in addition to those of which the unregenerate feel nothing. Spiritual
life renders the soul sensible to many a crushing weight, of which the
soul spiritually dead is unconscious, just as the corpse feels no pressure.
We would not anticipate other portions of this chapter, yet we cannot
forbear the remark, at this stage, that, if you discover in your soul
that spiritual sensibility, that sense of pain, suffering, and depression
produced by a holy consciousness of indwelling evil, of a nature totally
depraved, or those diversified spiritual exercises of the soul through
which the flock of the Lords pasture more or less pass, then have
you one of the most indubitable evidences of spiritual life. We repeat
the remarkit is only a living man who is conscious of the pressure;
a corpse cannot feel. Spiritual sensibility is a sign of spiritual life.
The Lords people, then, find them where you may, in high circles
or low, rich or poor, are a burdened people. Each one has his cross, each
his load, each his pressure. Oh, how ought this truth to unite the people
of God in holy affection, forbearance, and sympathy towards one another!
The precept which recognizes the burdens of the Lords people, in
the same words binds them upon our hearts: Bear ye one anothers
burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ. But let us specify some
of the burdens of the Lords people,those of whom it is said,
He shall gently lead those that are with young,and this
will prepare us to consider the gentleness of Christ towards them.
All the Lords people are sensible of the burden of conscious guilt.
In this particular it may with truth be said that He fashioneth
their hearts alike. In this schoolpainful yet neededall
are experimentally taught; and it may be added, that from it they never
entirely graduate until called home to glory. The lesson of our original
and deep sinfulness, the weakness, impurity, and vileness of the flesh,that
there dwelleth in it no good thing,is the daily, hourly lesson of
the Christians life. If we ever extract any honey from that precious
declaration, By grace are ye saved, it is under the pressure
of our personal and inexpressible vileness and nothingness. Into this
bitter cup the Lord distills the sweetness and savour of His most free
and rich grace. But oh, how few of our species are conscious of this burdenthe
burden of the curse! And yet it confronts them at every step, meets them
in every object, starts up before them at each turn. We cannot gaze upon
the outspread landscape, nor walk into the beautiful garden, nor sail
upon the lovely lake,we cannot pluck the flowers, nor breathe the
air, nor quaff the spring, but the sad, sad truth confronts us,the
curse of God has blighted and blasted all! Is man spiritually sensible
of this? Ah, no! He sighs, but knows not why. He is fettered, but feels
no chain; sickens, and knows not the cause. He marvels to find a sepulchre
in his gardendisease, decay, and death in such close proximity to
his choicest, sweetest, dearest delights. He wonders that his flower fades,
that his spring dries, that his sheltering gourd withers in a night. He
knows not that the curse is therethat the overshadowing vine breeds
its own worm. Thus he treads lifes short journey, from the cradle
to the grave, crushed beneath this tremendous weight, nor sees, as he
passes, the uplifted cross where He was impaled who died to deliver us
from its weight, yea, who was made a curse for us. Here and
there we see one of this long and gloomy procession awakened to the conviction
of the truth, and exclaiming, What shall I do to be saved?
Here and there we descry a pilgrim, with the load upon his back, climb
the sacred hill, and reach the crosslookand leave his burden,
and pursue his way, rejoicing in Christ, and exclaiming, There is
now no condemnation! But the great mass pass on insensible and dead.
Not so the Lords people. Emancipated, indeed, we are from the curse
and condemnation of sin, for Christ our Surety was delivered for
our offences, and was raised again for our justification: nevertheless,
the more healthy our spiritual life, the more frequently and closely the
conscience deals with atoning blood, the more alive and sensitive will
be our spiritual sensibility to the conviction and pressure of that curse,
which, though removed as a condemnation, yet remains as a fact. The tenderness
which the blood imparts, the conviction of indebtedness which Divine grace
gives, deepens the sensibility of sin; and, although standing beneath
the shadow of the cross, and reading our pardon there, the conviction
of its exceeding sinfulness is not the less, but all the more, acute.
The curse, though removed, has left its lingering shadow upon the soul,
and this, to a saint of God, is no little burden. And when to this is
added the faltering of the Christian walk, the flaw of service, the imperfection
of worship, the dead insect tainting the perfume of the sacred anointing,
the dust upon the sandal, the trailed robe, the concealed, but not less
real and sinful, appetency of the heartits foolishness and inconstancyoh,
is there no painfully-felt burden in all this to a mind whose moral perceptions
are quick, and whose spirituality covets the close and holy walk with
God?
How keenly sensible, too, are many of Gods people of the burden
of bodily infirmity. The apostle numbers himself among them, when, so
feelingly and vividly describing this infirmity of the flock, he says,
We that are in this tabernacle do groan, being burdened. While
all believers are conscious of this, many are more painfully so than others.
Some know not a single days perfect health, yea, many not an hours
freedom from wearying pain. Days of languor and nights unsoothed by sleep
are appointed to them. Others, while, perhaps, exempt from positive disease,
are afflicted with an acutely nervous, sensitive temperament, subjecting
them to a species of sorrow which compels them to nurse their burden in
lonely isolation. It is with them incessant suffering. The trembling of
the aspen leaf startles them, their own shadow alarms them, the flutter
of an angels wing, as he sweeps past on his mission of love, would
discompose them. This is their burden, and the last, because the least
known of all, that receives the soothing of human kindness, consideration,
and sympathy. Christians thus afflicted require a mode of treatment peculiarly
patient and gentle. Those who are not conversant with the delicate sensibility
of the nervous system can but imperfectly estimate the acute suffering
of such. Is it trespassing too curiously into the awful mystery of Christs
unknown agony, to venture the surmise that, in the terrible conflict which
so fearfully agitated His whole frame in the garden, as to clothe it with
a vesture of blood, there entered deeply this element of sufferingthe
exquisite sympathy of the nervous system? If this be true, and we see
no reason to question it, then how appropriate, precious, and soothing
His compassion and sympathy with all His members similarly afflicted!
What, beloved, if your case distances the sympathy, or baffles the cure,
or even awakens the reproach, of your fellows, let it suffice that every
nerve quivering with agony, that every pulse fluttering with excitement,
awakens a response of tenderness and sympathy in the Sufferer of Gethsemane.
And oh, if this be so, you can well afford to part with a creatures
compassion and help, since it but makes room for Christ. Ah! one five
minutes experience of His love in the heart, is of more worth than
an eternity of the creatures. And little think we often, as we feel
the human arm droop, and see the human eye withdrawn, and are conscious
of the chill that has crept over the warm bosom upon which we fondly leaned,
that Jesus is but preparing us for a more full and entire enthronement
of Himself in our soul.
Then, there are others whose burden is a constant tendency to mental despondency
and gloom. Whether this is constitutional, is produced by sorrow, or is
the result of disease, the effect is the samea life perpetually
cloud-vailed and depressed, scarcely relieved by a transient gleam of
sunshine. No little burden is this. A mind diseased involves
more real suffering, and demands more Divine grace, than a body diseased.
And yet, how large a class is this! What numbers are there of the Lords
people whose spiritual hope is obscured by mental disease, and whose mental
disease is, in its turn, produced by some physical irritantso close
is the relation and so sympathetic the emotions of the body and mind.
What a mystery is our being! There is Oneand but Onewho understands
it. He knoweth our frame; He remembereth that we are dust.
Your Saviour, beloved, experienced mental gloom and spiritual depression
as you never can. It was not always sunshine and joy with your Lord. His
path often wound along the lonely vale, and across the dreary desert,
and through the deep gloom of the pathless forestand He knows the
way that you take. The spiritual despondency of your soul, the cloud-vailings
of your mind, the absence of vigorous faith, of heaven-springing joy,
and of undimmed hope, affect not your union with Christ, touch not your
interest in the love of God, and render not doubtful or insecure your
place in the many-mansioned house of your Father in heaven. Will not this
truth be a little help heavenward? Will not this assurance, founded as
it is on the Word of God, distil some joy into your heart, and throw some
gleam of sunshine upon your path, and strengthen you as a child of the
light to walk through darkness, until you reach that world of glory of
which it is said, And there is no night there! Who is
among you that feareth the Lord, that obeyeth the voice of his servant,
that walketh in darkness, and hath no light? let him trust in the name
of the Lord, and stay upon his God, (Isa. 50:10.) Light is
sown for the righteous, and gladness for the upright in heart. Take
heart and go forward; light and gladness shall spring up in
your path just where and when the God who loves you, and the Shepherd
who leads you, sees best. They are sown by Gods hand,
and they shall spring forth beneath His smile. A love unchanging and a
covenant-keeping God is bringing you home to Himself.
There is often, too, in the experience of many, the burden of some heavy
daily cross. A personal grief, or a domestic trial, or a relative calamity,
is the weight they bear, perhaps with not a days cessation. Is it
no burden to have a wounded spirit? Is it no burden to nurse a sorrow
which interdicts all human sympathy, which admits not, from its profound
depth and sacredness, another to share it? Is it no burden to stand up
alone for Jesus and His truth in the domestic circle, allied in the closest
bonds of nature to those concerning whom we must exclaim, I am become
a stranger unto my brethren, and an alien unto my mothers childrenin
whom your spiritual joy awakens no response, and your spiritual sorrow
no sympathy? But, oh, what a privilege and honour to endure reproach,
and separation, alienated affection, studied neglect, and relentless persecution,
for Christs sake! And on him they laid the cross, that he
might bear it after Jesus. Tried, persecuted disciple, to
you it is given, in the behalf of Christ, not only to believe in His name,
but also to suffer for His sake. Upon you Jesus has laid the burden,
the sweet, the precious burden, of His cross, that you might bear it after
Him. Did ever burden confer such honour, bring such repose, secure a crown
so bright, or lead to such glory and blessedness? Whoever shall
confess me before men, him shall the Son of man also confess before the
angels of God. Lord! make Thyself more precious to my heartthen
will Thy burden be lighter, Thy yoke easier, shame for Thee will be sweeter,
and Thy cross, rude and heavy though it be, will become increasingly my
joy, my glory, and my boast! Let us now turn our thoughts to the gentleness
with which the Divine Shepherd leads these His burdened ones He
shall GENTLY lead those that are with young.
The Leader is Jesusthe Shepherd. He claims this as one part of His
pastoral office. The sheep hear his voice: and he calleth his own
sheep by name, and leadeth them out. He leadeth them outleadeth
them out of their unregenerate nature, out of their state of condemnation,
out of the world, and out of their families. And whither does He lead
them? He leads them to His cross, to Himself; and, thus accepting and
resting in Him as their righteousness, and their salvation, and their
portion, He then leads them out to the green pastures He has provided
for the flock, where He causeth them to lie down in safe and quiet resting-places.
Oh, what a momentous step is this, the first that His people take! To
be led out of our own righteousness and unrighteousness, out of our wrecked
and polluted selves, out of the false confidences, the spurious hopes,
the ritual worship, and pharisaical religion to which we had been so long
and so fondly wedded, and led to embrace the Lord Jesus as our one, our
sole, our sure hope for eternity, oh, it is heavens first, heavens
last and latest step; this step taken, heaven is sure! Test your religion,
beloved, by this. Has Jesus so taught you? Has His sovereign grace been
exhibited in leading you out of your worldly circle? His converting grace
in leading you out of your self-righteousness? His pardoning, justifying
grace in leading you to peace, holiness, and hope?then, if this
be so, you are Christs, and Christ is yours. Thus does the Lord
lead His people. He leads them through the wilderness, up the steep ascent,
and down into the low valley, through water and fire, cloud and storm,
thorn-brake and desert, watching them with an eye that never slumbers,
keeping them by a hand that never wearies, and encircling them with a
love that never chills. Thus, step by step He leads them on, from grace
to glory, from earth to heaven, from the wilderness below to the paradise
above. Not one of that flock, thus led, thus guarded, thus loved, shall
be missing when the Shepherd folds them on high. His rod and His
staff will be found to have restored them, guided them, comforted
them, and at last to have brought them homelittle faith, and fickle
love, and weak grace, and limited experience, and defective knowledge,
and faltering steps, finding their way, through trial and temptation and
suffering, home to Godnot one vessel of mercy missing.
Oh, who but Christ could accomplish this? Who but the Divine Shepherd
could thus have kept, and thus have gathered, and thus have folded the
sheep scattered up and down in the cloudy and dark day? What an evidence
of the Godhead of Christ! Oh, crown His deity! crown it with your faith,
crown it with your love, crown it with your praise, ye who have now
received the atonement; for nothing short of this could place you
within the realms of glory. And this, when there, will be your crown and
joy for ever.
The gentleness of Christ is a theme on which the Holy Ghost
frequently dwells. It is an essential perfection of His nature. The nature
of Christ is gentle. It is not an accident of His being, an engrafted
virtue, a cultivated graceit is essential to His very existence.
Recollect that the two natures of our Lord were perfect. If we look at
His superior naturethe divinethe wondrous truth meets the
eye as if emblazoned in letters of living light, God is love.
Now, Christ was an embodiment of the essential love of God; consequently,
gentleness was a perfection of His being. If we view His inferior naturethe
humannot less manifest was His gentleness, since His humanity, though
identified with the curse, and laden with sin, and encompassed with infirmity,
and shaded with sorrow, yet was sinless humanity, free from all and the
slightest moral taint; and so gentleness, in its most exquisite form,
was one of its most distinguished attributes. If, too, we connect with
this truth the fulness of the Spirit in our Lords human nature,
the evidence of its essential and perfect gentleness is complete. And
was not the gentleness of Christ visible in His every act? There was nothing
censorious in His disposition, nothing harsh in His manner, nothing bitter
or caustic in His speech. If, with withering rebuke, He denounced the
hypocrisy of the scribes, or the self-righteousness of the Pharisees,
or the extortion of the lawyers, or His rejection by the nation He had
come to save, while no voice could speak in words more fearful, yet none
in tones more tremulous with the deepest, tenderest emotion. But oh, how
much oftener the blessing breathed from His lip than the woe! Judgment
was His strange work; mercy His delight. Truly in all His works, in all
His ways, in all His discourses, the beautiful prophecy that foretold
the gentleness of His grace was fulfilled: He shall come down like
rain on the mown grass, as showers that water the earth. The
bruised reed shall he not break, and the smoking flax shall he not quench.
But let us consider this specific illustration of Christs gentlenessHis
dealings with the burdened. He gently leadeth those that are with
young.
We have an apposite illustration of this in the considerate tenderness
of Jacob: And he said unto him, My lord knoweth that the children
are tender, and the flocks and herds with young are with me; and if men
should over-drive them one day, all the flock will die. Let my lord, I
pray thee, pass over before his servant: and I will lead on softly,
(Gen. 33:13,14.) If such the tenderness, such the considerateness of man,
what must be that of Christ! Who can portray the gentleness with which
He leads His people? His gentleness, as displayed in conversion, how great!
drawing them with cords of love, and with the bands of a mangradually
unvailing their vileness, and thus step by step leading them into assured
peace. His teaching, how gentle! I have many things to say unto
you, but ye cannot bear them now. Here a little and there a little,
He, by the Spirit, softly leads us to truthdoctrine explaining doctrine,
precept leading to precept, promise following promise, and so, by a gradual
unfolding of the gospel, by a process of instruction the most gentle,
we are fed, first with the milk, and then with the strong meat of the
Word, and so grow up into Christ, the Truth. Submit yourself, then, beloved,
to His teaching. Burdened with a sense of your ignorance, wearied with
the teaching of men, perplexed and discouraged by the conflicting of human
judgment, come and learn of Christ. You will advance more in Divine instruction
in one day at the feet of Jesus than in a lifetime at the feet of Gamaliel.
The very gentleness of His teaching instructs. His patience, forbearance,
and painstaking, His words of heart-cheer and commendation, untinged by
an unkind look, and untinctured by a harsh word, will advance your experimental
knowledge of Himself, and so advance your soul heavenward.
Not less gentle is His guidance. Is the path our heavenly Father has chosen
for us paved with flint and sown with briar? Is it narrow and serpentine,
difficult and perilous, often lone and dreary? How gently the Shepherd
leads us along! How he goes before, straitening the crooked, and smoothing
the rough places, and rolling the stone from before us! What unexpected
mercies and interpositions and aids He causes to spring forth in our way;
how He mitigates expected suffering, allays foreboding fears, and disappoints
all our unbelieving and mournful anticipations, preventing us with His
goodness! And when we have reached that event in our life which we the
most dreaded, the spot which looked the darkest in our history, lo! we
have stood amazed at the marvellous loving-kindness of our Godthat
very event has proved our greatest blessing, and that very spot the sunniest
and the brightest in the wildernessso gently has Jesus led us!
In affliction and sorrow, how gentle His dealings! Perhaps, it is then
that we learn more of this perfection of our dear Lord than at any other
time. The time of trial is a time that tests the reality of things. It
brings to the proof the friendship of the world, the real help of the
creature, the actual sufficiency of all earthly things. Times of affliction
are verily times of trial. But the greatest and grandest discovery of
all is the sufficiency, the preciousness, and the gentleness of Christ.
Oh, how little is known of the Man of sorrows but in the hour
of sorrow! There are soundings in the depths of His infinite love, tenderness,
and sympathy only made in the many and deep waters of adversity. How gently
does He deal with our burdened hearts then! There is not a being in the
universe that knows how to deal with sorrow, how to heal a wounded spirit,
how to bind up a broken heart, as Jesus. Lord, teach us this truth! Lead
us into the depths of Thy love. Unvail the springs of Thy sympathy. Shew
us that in the languor of sickness, in the tortures of pain, in the agony
of bereavement, in the woundings of trial, in the losses of adversity,
Thou still art gentle, and that Thy gentleness maketh us great.
We need as much the gentleness of Christ in the smooth as in the rough
path. Smooth paths are slippery paths. Times of prosperity are perilous
times to the Christian. Never is the man of God, the man of Christian
principle, more exposed to the corruption of his own nature, the assaults
of Satan, and the seductions of the world, as when the world prospers
with, and the creature smiles upon him. Then is he walking upon enchanted
ground,then he needs to pray, Hold thou me up, and I shall
be safe. Let integrity and uprightness preserve me.
Oh to be kept from this sinful, ungodly, treacherous world! If riches
increase, to give the more to Christ; if honours accumulate, to walk the
humbler with God; if influence and position and power augment, to write
upon it all, HOLINESS UNTO THE LORD. But what can thus preserve,
thus sanctify, but the gentleness of Christ, who will not suffer
the moon to smite us by night, nor the sun by daywho, in the
night-season of adversity and in the daytime of prosperity hides us in
the cleft of the rock, and thus gently leads us heavenward?
And now, beloved, what a help heavenward, what strength and heart-cheer,
will you find in a believing reception of this truththe gentleness
of Christ! Never doubt, never question, never reject it. It is an ingredient
in every cup you drink, it is light in every cloud you behold, it is an
accent in every voice you hear of Christs dealings, leadings, and
teachings. He is, He must be, gentle. He is not only gentle, but He is
gentleness. Gentleness is His nature, because love is His essence. The
heart of Christ is such that it cannot be otherwise than gentle in its
every feeling. The physician is not less kind because he prescribes a
nauseous remedy, nor the surgeon less feeling because he makes a deep
incision, nor the parent less loving because he employs the rod. Nor is
your Lord less so, because the way by which He leads, and the discipline
by which He sanctifies, and the method by which He instructs you, may
for a moment vail the reality, light, and comfort of this truthHe
gently leadeth those that are with young. Did Jacob lead the flocks
and herds with young gently and softly lest they should die? Oh, how much
more gently and softly does our Jacob, our true Shepherd, lead us! He
shall feed his flock like a shepherd; he shall gather the lambs with his
arm, and carry them in his bosom, and shall gently lead those that are
with young. Lest we should be weary, He will not overdrive us; lest
we should faint, He leads us by springs of water; lest our soul should
be discouraged by reason of the way. He causeth us to lie down beneath
the shadow of the Rock that is higher than we.
If this be so, then yield yourself to the Lords leading. Be satisfied
that He is leading you by the right way homeward. Do not distrust His
wisdom, nor question His love, nor fret, murmur, and rebel that the way
is not exactly just as you would have chosen. Be sure of this, it is the
right way; and if it is one of self-denial and of difficulty, one of straitness
and of cloud, yet it is the way home, the ordained way, the only way that
will bring you into the beatific presence of Jesus. And His gentleness
will constrain Him to bear with you, and will suggest just such wise and
holy discipline as will impart robustness to your religion, completeness
to your Christian character, and sanctity to all the relations and doings
of life.
O Lord, I am oppressed, undertake for me; I am burdened, gently lead me;
I am in darkness, stay my soul upon Thee; I am in perplexity, skillfully
guide me. Let me hear Thy voice saying, This is the way, walk ye
in it. Let Thy pillar of cloud by day, and of fire by night, lead
and guide me gently homeward. Make Thy way straight before my feet. My
foes watch for my halting, my enemies wait for my stumblinghold
Thou me up, and I shall be safe. Sorrow swells my heart, tears dim my
eyes, the billows swell, the sky lowers, the cloud darkens, the winds
sigh mournfully, and all my landscape is wintry and cheerlessdraw
me within thy warm, thy sheltering love. Thou hast laid me upon this bed
of weakness and of paincome and make it in my sickness, and pillow
this sleepless, weary head upon Thy breast. Thou hast nipped my favourite
flower, hast withered my pleasant gourd, hast removed my strong stay,
hast dried up my present resources, and hast left me to tread the vale
of life in loneliness, in want, and in tearssoothe, succour, and
uphold my trembling heart, my weak faith, my desponding mind. In
the multitude of my thoughts within me, [let] thy comforts delight my
soul. In my widowhood, in my orphanage, in my friendlessness, in
my desolateness, in my need, I look, I run, I cleave to Thee. Cast me
not off from the bosom to which I fly. Shelter me from the storm and tempest
within Thy wounded side. Let that eye that never wanders in its glance
of love, that voice that never falters in its accents of tenderness, that
hand that never droops in its outstretched help, that heart that never
chills, that faithfulness that never veers, restore, soothe, and engirdle
me. Lord, no parent, no brother, no friend, no lover is like Thee; and
I am learning Thy worth, Thy gentleness, and Thy preciousness in Thine
own appointed, wise, and holy way. Only let the result of this Thy present
dealing be my deeper holiness, my richer experience, my maturer Christianity,
my greater usefulness, my more advanced meetness for heaven, my more simple,
single, unreserved consecration to Thee, and Thy more undivided, undisputed,
and supreme enthronement within my soul.
Is there a thing beneath the sun
That strives with Thee my heart to share?
Oh! tear it thence, and reign alone,
The Lord of every motion there!
I cite you, my Christian reader, as Christs witness to this truth.
Has not the Lord dealt gently with you? Gently has He carried you over
the rough place,gently has He led you through the swelling tide,
gently has He wounded, and with what gentleness has he healed you,gently
has He chastened, and how gently has He dried your tears. With what gentleness
has He dealt with you in sickness, in suffering, and in grief. How gently
He has corrected your backslidings, restored your wanderings, guided your
perplexities, removed your burdens; and thus, with a power that is never
exhausted, with a skill that is never baffled, with a patience that never
wearies, with a love that never falters, and with a gentleness that never
overdrives, Christ is leading you step by step heavenward, where, with
a depth of gratitude and an emphasis of meaning unfelt before, you shall
exclaim, Thy gentleness hath MADE ME GREAT.
Beloved, burdened with sin, burdened with grief, burdened with sorrow,
listen to the gentle voice which bids thee cast thy burden on the
Lord, and He will sustain thee. Thy burdenwhatever it may
bethy burden of care, thy burden of anxiety, thy burden of sickness,
thy burden of weariness,cast it upon Jesus the Burden-bearer, roll
it from off thy shoulder upon His, transfer it from thy heart to His heart,
in the simplicity and directness of a faith that doubts not, hesitates
not, demurs not, because His word has promised that His grace and strength
and love shall sustain you. No burden will Jesus have you feel but the
easy burden of His commands, the gentle burden of His love, the honoured
burden of His cross. In bearing these you shall find rest; for there is
real rest in obedience, in love, in the cross, yea, in whatever binds
the heart to Christ.
Imitate Christ in His gentleness. Be gentle to others as He is gentle
to you. The servant of the Lord must be gentle. The great
apostle could say, We were gentle among you, even as a nurse cherisheth
her children. The wisdom that is from above is first pure,
then gentle, and it teaches us to speak evil of no man, to
be no brawlers, but gentle, shewing all meekness unto alt men. Be
gentle to the lambs of the flock; be gentle to them whose grace is little,
whose faith is weak, whose strength is small, whose infirmities are many,
whose sorrows are keen, whose trials are severe, whose positions and paths
in life are difficult and perilous. Oh, I beseech you, by the meekness
and gentleness of Christ, that you be in this particular, Christ-like.
Be gentle to them that have fallen by the power of temptation; those who
have travelled in the ways of the Lord with so slow and tardy a step that
they have been overtaken by evil. Be gentle to the bruised reed and the
smoking flax. Be gentle, very gentle, to the broken heart and the wounded
spirit. Speak gently to those whom shame and grief and sin have bowed
down to the earth. Speak gently of those who, through weakness and frailty,
have erred in judgment or in practice. Oh, learn of Jesus, in the gentleness
with which He leads the burdened, and consider yourself as never so closely
assimilated to Him as when meekness, lowliness, and gentleness clothe
you as with a garment, and beautify your whole carriage with their lustre.
Gently,
Lord, oh, gently lead us,
Through this gloomy vale of tears,
Though the changes Thoust decreed us,
Till our last great change appears.
When temptations darts assail us,
When in devious paths we stray,
Let thy goodness never fail us,
Lead us in Thy perfect way.
In the hour of pain and anguish,
In the hour when death draws near,
Suffer not our hearts to languish,
Suffer not our souls to fear.
When this mortal life is ended,
Bid us in Thine arms to rest,
Till, by angel bands attended,
We awake among the blest.
Then, oh, crown us with thy blessing,
Through the triumphs of Thy grace:
Then shall praises never ceasing
Echo through Thy dwelling-place.
Octavius Winslow
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