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WE speak here
more particularly of spiritual compassion, that which is born in a
renewed heart, and which finds hospitality there. This compassion has in
it the quality of mercy, is of the nature of pity, and moves the soul
with tenderness of feeling for others. Compassion is moved at the sight
of sin, sorrow and suffering.
It stands at
the other extreme to indifference of spirit to the wants and woes of
others, and is far removed from insensibility and hardness of heart, in
the midst of want and trouble and wretchedness. Compassion stands beside
sympathy for others, is interested in them, and is concerned about them.
That which
excites and develops compassion and puts it to work, is the sight of
multitudes in want and distress, and helpless to relieve themselves.
Helplessness especially appeals to compassion. Compassion is silent but
does not remain secluded. It goes out at the sight of trouble, sin and
need.
Compassion
runs out in earnest prayer, first of all, for those for whom it feels,
and has a sympathy for them. Prayer for others is born of a sympathetic
heart. Prayer is natural and almost spontaneous when compassion is
begotten in the heart. Prayer belongs to the compassionate man.
There is a
certain compassion which belongs to the natural man, which expends its
force in simple gifts to those in need, not to be despised. But
spiritual compassion, the kind born in a renewed heart, which is
Christlike in its nature, is deeper, broader and more prayer-like.
Christlike compassion always moves to prayer. This sort of compassion
goes beyond the relief of mere bodily wants, and saying, "Be ye warmed
-- be ye clothed." It reaches deeper down and goes much farther.
Compassion
is not blind. Rather we should say, that compassion is not born of
blindness. He who has compassion of soul has eyes, first of all, to see
the things which excite compassion. He who has no eyes to see the
exceeding sinfulness of sin, the wants and woes of humanity, will never
have compassion for humanity.
It is
written of our Lord that "when He saw the multitudes, He was moved with
compassion on them." First, seeing the multitudes, with their hunger,
their woes and their helpless condition, then compassion. Then prayer
for the multitudes. Hard is he, and far from being Christlike, who sees
the multitudes, and is unmoved at the sight of their sad state, their
unhappiness and their peril. He has no heart of prayer for men.
Compassion
may not always move men, but is always moved toward men. Compassion may
not always turn men to God, but it will, and does, turn God to man. And
where it is most helpless to relieve the needs of others, it can at
least break out into prayer to God for others. Compassion is never
indifferent, selfish, and forgetful of others. Compassion has alone to
do with others.
The fact
that the multitudes were as sheep having no shepherd, was the one thing
which appealed to our Lord's compassionate nature. Then their hunger
moved Him, and the sight of the sufferings and diseases of these
multitudes stirred the pity of His heart.
Father of mercies, send Thy grace
All powerful from above,
To form in our obedient souls
The image of Thy love.
O may our sympathizing breasts
That generous pleasure know;
Kindly to share in others' joy,
And weep for others' woe.
But
compassion has not alone to do with the body and its disabilities and
needs. The soul's distressing state, its needs and danger all appeal to
compassion. The highest state of grace is known by the infallible mark
of compassion for poor sinners. This sort of compassion belongs to
grace, and sees not alone the bodies of men, but their immortal spirits,
soiled by sin, unhappy in their condition without God, and in imminent
peril of being forever lost.
When
compassion beholds this sight of dying men hurrying to the bar of God,
then it is that it breaks out into intercessions for sinful men. Then it
is that compassion speaks out after this fashion:
But feeble my compassion proves,
And can but weep where most it loves;
Thy own all saving arm employ,
And turn these drops of grief to joy.
The prophet
Jeremiah declares this about God, giving the reason why sinners are not
consumed by His wrath:
It is of the Lord's mercies we are not consumed, because His compassions
fail not.
And it is this divine quality in us which makes us so much like God. So
we find the Psalmist describing the righteous man who is pronounced
blessed by God: "He is gracious and full of compassion, and righteous."
And as
giving great encouragement to penitent praying sinners, the Psalmist
thus records some of the striking attributes of the divine character:
"The Lord is gracious and full of compassion, slow to anger, and of
great mercy."
It is no
wonder, then, that we find it recorded several times of our Lord while
on earth that "He was moved with compassion." Can any one doubt that His
compassion moved Him to pray for those suffering, sorrowing ones who
came across His pathway?
Paul was
wonderfully interested in the religious welfare of his Jewish brethren,
was concerned over them, and his heart was strangely warmed with tender
compassion for their salvation, even though mistreated and sorely
persecuted by them. In writing to the Romans, we hear him thus express
himself:
I say the truth in Christ, I lie not, my conscience also bearing me
witness in the Holy Spirit, that I have great heaviness and continual
sorrow in my heart; for I could wish that myself were accursed for my
brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh.
What
marvelous compassion is here described for Paul's own nation! What
wonder that a little later on he records his desire and prayer:
Brethren, my heart's desire and prayer to God for Israel is that they
might be saved.
We have an
interesting case in Matthew which gives us an account of what excited so
largely the compassion of our Lord at one time:
But when He saw the multitudes, He was moved with compassion on them,
because they fainted, and were scattered abroad, as sheep having no
shepherd. Then saith He unto His disciples, The harvest truly is
plenteous, but the laborers are few. Pray ye therefore the Lord of the
harvest, that He will send forth laborers into his harvest.
It seems
from parallel statements that our Lord had called His disciples aside to
rest awhile, exhausted as He and they were by the excessive demands on
them, by the ceaseless contact with the persons who were ever coming and
going, and by their exhaustive toil in ministering to the immense
multitudes.
But the
multitudes precede Him, and instead of finding wilderness solitude,
quiet and repose, He finds great multitudes eager to see and hear, and
to be healed. His compassions are moved. The ripened harvests need
laborers. He did not call these laborers at once, by sovereign
authority, but charges the disciples to betake themselves to God in
prayer, asking Him to send forth laborers into his harvest.
Here is the
urgency of prayer enforced by the compassions of our Lord. It is prayer
born of compassion for perishing humanity. Prayer is pressed on the
church for laborers to be sent into the harvest of the Lord. The harvest
will go to waste and perish without the laborers, while the laborers
must be God-chosen, God-sent, and God-commissioned.
But God does
not send these laborers into His harvest without prayer. The failure of
the laborers is owing to the failure of prayer. The scarcity of laborers
in the harvest is due to the fact that the church fails to pray for
laborers according to his command.
The ingathering of the harvests of earth for the granaries of heaven is
dependent on the prayers of God's people.
Prayer
secures the laborers sufficient in quantity and in quality for all the
needs of the harvest. God's chosen laborers, God's endowed laborers, and
God's thrust-forth laborers, are the only ones who will truly go, filled
with Christlike compassion and endued with Christlike power, whose going
will avail, and these are secured by prayer. Christ's people on their
knees with Christ's compassion in their hearts for dying men and for
needy souls, exposed to eternal peril, is the pledge of laborers in
numbers and character to meet the wants of earth and the purposes of
heaven.
God is
sovereign of the earth and of heaven, and the choice of laborers in his
harvest he delegates to no one else. Prayer honors him as sovereign and
moves him to his wise and holy selection. We will have to put prayer to
the front ere the fields of paganism will be successfully tilled for
Christ. God knows His men, and He likewise knows full well His work.
Prayer gets God to send forth the best men and the most fit men and the
men best qualified to work in the harvest. Moving the missionary cause
by forces this side of God has been its bane, its weakness and its
failure.
Compassion
for the world of sinners, fallen in Adam, but redeemed in Christ will
move the church to pray for them and stir the church to pray the Lord of
the harvest to send forth laborers into the harvest.
Lord of the harvest, hear
Thy needy servants' cry;
Answer our faith's effectual prayer, And all our wants supply.
Convert and send forth more
Into Thy church abroad;
And let them speak Thy word of power,
As workers with their God.
What a
comfort and what hope there is to fill our breasts when we think of One
in heaven who ever lives to intercede for us, because "His compassion
fails not!" Above everything else, we have a compassionate savior, one
"who can have compassion on the ignorant, and on them who are out of the
way, for that He himself is compassed about with infirmity." The
compassion of our Lord well fits Him for being the great high priest of
Adam's fallen, lost and helpless race.
And if He is
filled with such compassion that it moves Him at the Father's right hand
to intercede for us, then by every token we should have the same
compassion on the ignorant and those out of the way, exposed to divine
wrath, as would move us to pray for them. Just in so far as we are
compassionate will we be prayerful for others.
Compassion
does not expend its force in simply saying, "Be ye warmed; be ye
clothed," but drives us to our knees in prayer for those who need Christ
and His grace.
The Son of God in tears
The wondering angels see;
Be thou astonished, 0 my soul!
He shed those tears for thee.
He wept that we might weep;
Each sin demands a tear;
In heaven alone no sin is found,
And there's no weeping there.
Jesus Christ
was altogether man. While He was the divine Son of God yet at the same
time, He was the human Son of God. Christ had a preeminently human side,
and, here, compassion reigned. He was tempted in all points as we are,
yet without sin.
At one time
how the flesh seems to have weakened under the fearful strain upon Him,
and how He must have inwardly shrunk under the pain and pull! Looking up
to heaven, He prays, "Father, save Me from this hour." How the spirit
nerves and holds -"but for this cause came I to this hour."
Only He can
solve this mystery who has followed his Lord in straits and gloom and
pain, and realized that the "spirit is willing but the flesh is weak."
All this but fitted our Lord to be a compassionate Savior. It is no sin
to feel the pain and realize the darkness on the path into which God
leads. It is only human to cry out against the pain, the terror, and
desolation of that hour.
It is divine
to cry out to God in that hour, even while shrinking and sinking down,
"For this cause came I unto this hour." Shall I fail through the
weakness of the flesh? No. "Father, glorify Thy name." How strong it
makes us, and how true, to have one pole star to guide us to the glory
of God! |