December 23
Evenings With JesusFor what is your life? It is even a vapour, that appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away. - James 4:14.
IF life be compared to things so evanescent, let us seek the “wisdom which cometh from above,” that we may well and wisely consider our latter end. How short is human life, if we fix the period! Place it at threescore years and ten; place it even at fourscore years; “It is soon cut off, and we fly away.” But how uncertain is our reaching this period! at what age, in what place, in what condition, in what employment, have not men died! How many of our companions and neighbours have been unexpectedly and prematurely carried down to the dust! Let none, therefore, rely on youth or strength, for “surely every man at his best estate is vanity.”
Seeing that we are hastening to the grave, let us consider what is true wisdom, what the one proper and rational part which creatures circumstanced as we are have to act. Is it not to prefer the soul to the body, and eternity to time? Is it not to make the concern of the apostle supremely and constantly our own,-“That I may win Christ and be found in him”? This subject should teach us, also, that; “Whatsoever our hand findeth to do, to do it with all our might,” and to do it immediately, for there is “no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom in the grave whither we are going.” While we delay, our opportunities may have fled, never to be recalled; while we linger, we ourselves may be gone, and every possibility of usefulness be cut off. The season for doing good with us is limited to this short and equally uncertain duration. In consequence of this, what an inestimable value attaches to the present hour!
Let us therefore “redeem the time, because the days are evil.” To the Christian earth has one privilege above heaven; it is the privilege of beneficence. They who are now in joy and felicity would be ready, were it the will of God, to descend from their glory and re-enter the body and traverse again this vale of tears, to be able to do what we have now an opportunity of doing,-of “serving our generation by the will of God.” Of our Saviour it is said, He went about doing good. He said, “I must work while it is called today, for the night cometh, when no man can work;” but at last he said, “I have glorified thee on the earth, I have finished the work thou gavest me to do, and now I am no more in the world: holy Father, I come to thee.” And such, too, is the removal that awaits all his followers.
We shall soon be no more in the world; how soon it is impossible to determine. But with some, from the infirmities of nature and the course of years, the event cannot be very remote. With many, “the night is far spent, and the day is at hand.” “Now is their salvation nearer than when they believed.” O Thou in whose hands our breath is, and whose are all our ways, “So teach us to number our days, that we may apply our hearts unto wisdom.”
