May
31, 2005
The
Way Which Leads To Life, Part I
"Narrow
is the gate and difficult is the way which leads to life,
and there are few who find it." (1)
"In
the time of Christ the people of Palestine lived in walled
towns, which were mostly situated on hills or mountains. The
gates, which were closed at sunset, were approached by steep,
rocky roads, and the traveler journeying homeward at the close
of the day often had to press his way in eager haste up the
difficult ascent in order to reach the gate before nightfall.
The loiterer was left without.
"The
narrow, upward road leading to home and rest furnished Jesus
with an impressive figure of the Christian way. The path which
I have set before you, He said, is narrow; the gate is difficult
of entrance; for the golden rule excludes all pride and self-seeking.
There is, indeed, a wider road; but its end is destruction.
If you would climb the path of spiritual life, you must constantly
ascend; for it is an upward way. You must go with the few;
for the multitude will choose the downward path.
"In
the road to death the whole race may go, with all their worldliness,
all their selfishness, all their pride, dishonesty, and moral
debasement. There is room for every man's opinions and doctrines,
space to follow his inclinations, to do whatever his self-love
may dictate. In order to go in the path that leads to destruction,
there is no need of searching for the way; for the gate is
wide, and the way is broad, and the feet naturally turn into
the path that ends in death.
"But
the way to life is narrow and the entrance strait. If you
cling to any besetting sin you will find the way too narrow
for you to enter. Your own ways, your own will, your evil
habits and practices, must be given up if you would keep the
way of the Lord. He who would serve Christ cannot follow the
world's opinions or meet the world's standard. Heaven's path
is too narrow for rank and riches to ride in state, too narrow
for the play of self-centered ambition, too steep and rugged
for lovers of ease to climb. Toil, patience, self-sacrifice,
reproach, poverty, the contradiction of sinners against Himself,
was the portion of Christ, and it must be our portion, if
we ever enter the Paradise of God.
"Yet
do not therefore conclude that the upward path is the hard
and the downward road the easy way. All along the road that
leads to death there are pains and penalties, there are sorrows
and disappointments, there are warnings not to go on. God's
love has made it hard for the heedless and headstrong to destroy
themselves. It is true that Satan's path is made to appear
attractive, but it is all a deception; in the way of evil
there are bitter remorse and cankering care. We may think
it pleasant to follow pride and worldly ambition, but the
end is pain and sorrow. Selfish plans may present flattering
promises and hold out the hope of enjoyment, but we shall
find that our happiness is poisoned and our life embittered
by hopes that center in self. In the downward road the gateway
may be bright with flowers, but thorns are in the path. The
light of hope which shines from its entrance fades into the
darkness of despair, and the soul who follows that path descends
into the shadows of unending night." (2)
1. Matthew
7:14.
2. Thoughts From The Mount Of Blessing, pp., 138, 139.
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