THE
HEART OF JESUS
Give
me a heart like Thine;
By
Your wonderful power,
By
Your grace every hour,
Give
me a heart like Thine.
We
sang that verse with all our might, one morning, in one of those
hours of heart-humbling and heart-searching, when I was a cadet in
the training home, and at least one of the cadets looked through the
words and caught the spirit of the song.
At
the close of the meeting he came to me with a serious look and a tone
of earnest inquiry, and asked: "Do we really mean it, that we
can have a heart like His? I told him that I was certain that we
could, and that the dear Lord wanted to give us hearts just like His
own:--
A
humble, lowly, contrite heart,
Believing,
true and clean.
A
heart in every thought renewed,
And
full of love Divine;
Perfect
and right and pure and good,
A
copy, Lord, of Thine.
Indeed,
Jesus was "the firstborn among many brethren" (Rom. 8:29).
He is our "elder brother," and we are to be like Him. "As
He is, so are we in this world" (I John 4:17), and "He that
says he abides in Him ought himself also so to walk, even as He
walked" (I John 2:6). Now, it is impossible for us to walk like
Him, to live like Him, unless we have a heart like His. We cannot
bear the same kind of fruit unless we are the same kind of tree. So
He wants to make us like Himself. We judge trees by their fruit, and
so we judge Jesus, and then we can find out what kind of a heart He
had.
We
find in Him love; therefore Jesus had a loving heart. He bore the
luscious fruit of perfect love. There was no hatred with His love, no
venom, no spite, no selfishness; He loved His enemies and prayed for
His murderers. It was not a fickle love, turning about every new
moon, but a changeless, eternal love. "I have loved you with an
everlasting love" (Jer. 31:3), God says. Oh, glory to God! How
marvellous that is! It is just this kind of love He wants us to
have. Listen! He says: "A newcommandment I give to you, That you
love one another; as I have loved you" (John 13:34). That is
tremendous, to command me to love my brother even as Jesus loves me;
but that is what He says, and to do that I must have a heart like
the heart of Jesus.
I
know if we examine love we find that it includes all the other
graces; but we will look into the heart of Jesus for some of them.
Jesus had a humble heart.
He
said of Himself "I am meek and lowly in heart" (Matt.
11:29); and Paul tells us that He "made Himself of no
reputation, and took on Him the form of a servant, and ... humbled
Himself."
Bless
His dear name! He did humble Himself, for, though He was the Lord of
life and glory, yet He stooped to be born of a lowly virgin in a
manger, and wrought as an unknown carpenter for thirty years, and
then choose to live with the poor, the ignorant and the vile, instead
of the rich, the noble and the learned. While Jesus never seemed ill
at ease or constrained in the presence of those who were mighty with
this world's greatness, or wise with its learning, yet His simple,
humble heart found its mates among the lowly, hard-working, common
people. He cleaved to them. He would not be lifted up. They wanted to
do it for Him, but He slipped away for prayer among the
mountains,
and then returned and preached such a straight sermon that nearly all
His disciples left Him.
Just
a short time before His death, He took the menial place of a slave,
and washed His disciples' feet, and then said, "I have given you
an example, that you should do as I have done to you" (John
13:15). How that helped me in the training home! The second day I was
there they sent me down into a dark little cellar to black half a
cart-load of dirty boots for the cadets. The devil came at me, and
reminded me that, a few years before, I had graduated from a
university, that I had spent a couple of years in a leading
theological school, had been pastor of a metropolitan church, had
just left evangelistic work in which I saw hundreds seeking the
Saviour, and that now I was only blacking boots for a lot of ignorant
lads. My old enemy is the devil! But I reminded him of the example of
my Lord, and he left me. Jesus said, "If you know these things,
happy are you if you do them" (John 13:7). I was doing them -
the devil knew it and let me alone, and I was happy. That little
cellar was changed into one of Heaven's ante-rooms, and my Lord
visited me there. "God resists the proud, but gives grace to the
humble" (Jas. 4:6). If you would have a heart like that of Jesus
it will be one filled with humility, that "is not puffed up,"
that "seeks not her own" (I Cor. 13:4, 5). "Be clothed
with humility" (I Pet. 5:5). Jesus had a meek and gentle heart.
Paul
speaks of "the meekness and gentleness of Christ" (2 Cor.
10:1); and Peter tells us that "when He was reviled, (He)
reviled not again; when He suffered, He threatened not, but committed
Himself to Him who judges righteously" (I Pet. 2:23). He did not
strike back when He was injured; He did not try to justify Himself
but committed His cause to His heavenly Father, and waited. "He
was oppressed, and He was afflicted, yet He opened not His mouth. He
is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her
shearers is dumb, so He opens not His mouth" (Isa. 53:7).
That
was the very perfection of meekness, that not only would He not
strike back when He was lied about, but suffered the most cruel and
shameful wrongs. "Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth
speaketh" (Matt. 12:34), and because His blessed heart was full
of meekness He did not thunder back at His enemies. It is just this
kind of heart He wants us to have when He commands us to "Resist
not evil; but whoever shall smite you on the right cheek,
turn
to him the other also ... and whoever shall compel you to go a mile,
go with him twain" (Matt. 5:39, 41).
I
know a coloured brother, over six feet tall, with a full chest and
brawny arms, who was recently put off a street car, in the most
indecent and brutal manner, but where he had as much right to be as
the conductor himself. Some one who knew his past fighting record
said, "Why don't you fight him, George?"
I
couldn't fight him, for God has taken all the fight out of me,"
replied George. "When you put your knife in the fire and draw
the temper out of it, it won't cut," he added and fairly shouted
for Joy. "Blessed are the meek" (Matt. 5:5), for "He
will beautify the meek with salvation" (Ps. 149:4).
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