October
5, 2005
Your
Brother Was Dead, Part II
"It
was right that we should make merry and be glad, for your
brother was dead and is alive again, and was lost and is found"
(1)
"A
great famine arises, he begins to be in want, and he joins
himself to a citizen of the country, who sends him into the
field to feed swine. To a Jew this was the most menial and
degrading of employments. The youth who has boasted of his
liberty now finds himself a slave. He is in the worst of bondage--"holden
with the cords of his sins." (2) The glitter and tinsel
that enticed him have disappeared, and he feels the burden
of his chain. Sitting on the ground in that desolate and famine-stricken
land, with no companions but the swine, he is fain to fill
himself with the husks on which the beasts are fed. Of the
gay companions who flocked about him in his prosperous days
and ate and drank at his expense, there is not one left to
befriend him. Where now is his riotous joy? Stilling his conscience,
benumbing his sensibilities, he thought himself happy; but
now, with money spent, with hunger unsatisfied, with pride
humbled, with his moral nature dwarfed, with his will weak
and untrustworthy, with his finer feelings seemingly dead,
he is the most wretched of mortals.
"What
a picture here of the sinner's state! Although surrounded
with the blessings of His love, there is nothing that the
sinner, bent on self-indulgence and sinful pleasure, desires
so much as separation from God. Like the ungrateful son, he
claims the good things of God as his by right. He takes them
as a matter of course, and makes no return of gratitude, renders
no service of love. As Cain went out from the presence of
the Lord to seek his home; as the prodigal wandered into the
'Far country,' so do sinners seek happiness in forgetfulness
of God.
"Whatever
the appearance may be, every life centered in self is squandered.
Whoever attempts to live apart from God is wasting his substance.
He is squandering the precious years, squandering the powers
of mind and heart and soul, and working to make himself bankrupt
for eternity. The man who separates from God that he may serve
himself, is the slave of mammon. The mind that God created
for the companionship of angels has become degraded to the
service of that which is earthly and bestial. This is the
end to which self-serving tends." (3) To be Continued.
1. Luke
15:32.
2. Proverbs 5:22.
3. Christ's Object Lessons, pp. 200, 201.
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