Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing (CMSW) - www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/ Document : 688 Title: Is It Well With the Child? It is well: A Sermon Preached in North Bute Parish Church, on September 27th, 1896 Author(s): Dewar, Reverend Peter Is it well with the child? It is well." SERMON PREACHED IN NORTH BUTE PARISH CHURCH ON SEPTEMBER 27th, 1896 BY REV. PETER DEWAR, M.A. MINISTER OF NORTH BUTE GLASGOW Printed at the University Press by ROBERT MACLEHOSE & CO., 153 WEST NILE ST. 1896 In Memoriam " Is it well with thee? is it well with thy husband ? is it well with the child ? And she answered, It is well." 2 Kings iv. 26. ONE of the most beautiful incidents in the gracious, beneficent career of the prophet Elisha is the story of his relations with the Lady of Shunem, a story which gives us a charming glimpse into the domestic life of Israel, with its anxieties, sorrows, and sweetness. It is a story that speaks not to the hearts of Hebrews only, but to the heart of universal man ; for it brings vividly before us the universality and identity of human affection and human suffering. Elijah had been the prophet of wrath and judgment. Elisha came with a gentler mission. He was not secluded in mountain fastnesses, but dwelt in his own house in the Royal City, and his deeds were not of wild terror, but of " gracious, soothing, homely beneficence, bound up with the tenor of human life." Like Samuel, he seems to have made circuits over the whole country, rousing and instructing the people at large. So continually did he pass by Shunem, the present village of Salem, that a rich lady there prepared a special chamber for his accommodation at successive visits. This woman had a kind heart, whose sympathies centred at home, but reached out to all who needed her care ; and this heart, which royally ruled her whole being, had servants in eyes that were quick to see, and hands that were swift to bless. She saw and noted the prophet's worn face, and appreciated the chance that came to her of offering him refreshment. For his rich and childless hostess at Shunem Elisha obtains the gift of a son, the honour most highly prized by Hebrew women. How proud she must have been of her only boy, who would one day inherit his father's great wealth and perpetuate his name ! What a pleasure she must have taken in moulding his mind, in forming his character, in bringing him up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord, in teaching him to believe that there was an all-loving, all-good, all-mighty Friend, who was seeking, by a thousand gentle touches, to fold him in His arms, and carry him in His bosom, and make him the child of truth, the soul of honour, the heir of glory ! No age is provided with a prophylactic against death and disease ; and so a life of untroubled serenity and of unclouded sunshine is on this earth impossible. The home of the Shunammite, which had been the sanctuary of domestic felicity and of sunny serenity, is suddenly transformed into an abode of sorrow and woe. It is harvest-time—a season everywhere associated with the sunshine of joy and gladsomeness. In the blue and cloudless oriental heaven there shone the morning sun, and the child is sent out to play in the harvest field. The fond mother watches him depart, thinks of the pleasant day he would spend among the reapers, and how he would minister to the general gladsomeness, and looks forward with pleasure to the delightful evening that would be spent in the home circle, when the reapers returned with rejoicing, bringing their sheaves with them. But glad anticipation is swiftly changed into crushing solicitude ; for, in the harvest field, the child suddenly cries to his father, " My head, my head," and is carried, prostrate and moaning, to his mother. She nurses him most tenderly and assiduously. He sits on her knees until noon, and then death mercifully intervenes and terminates his excruciating sufferings. The beauteous bud was cut down and withered before it had blossomed into flower, or before the flower had ripened its promise of fruit. The beautiful boy, whom God had given her, as Isaac was given, to light up her life with joy and hope, was gone. The hope that lent to life its richest value was cruelly frustrated. The cup of the purest joy that she had ever tasted was suddenly dashed, when she had but tasted it, dashed seemingly for ever from her lips. How did she bear her terrible loss ? Did she allow her life to be hopelessly darkened by this awful bereavement ? Was she resentful against God for raising infinite hopes seemingly only to overwhelm them with misery and anguish ? Did she abandon herself to despondency and despair? No. She exhibited marvellous self-control, rare force of character, beautiful piety. She carried her dead boy to the prophet's room. And there she must have seen in spirit, standing by the bier of her darling, the angels of faith and hope and love — a vision which rolled away the stone from the door of her heart and pointed her thoughts heavenwards. The anguish of her thoughts was still as she recalled the long succession of centuries through which God had been faithful to her fathers; as she mused over the immortal words of ancient saints and psalmists which told " how God's compassions fail not " : how "the thoughts He thinks towards us are thoughts of peace and not of evil, to give us a future and a hope" : how " His mercy endureth for ever" : how "with Him is the fountain of life, and in His light we shall see light " : how " weeping may endure for a night but joy cometh in the morn." Accordingly, when Elisha despatched a messenger to inquire, " Is it well with thee ? is it well with thy husband ? is it well with the child ?" she nobly answered, " It is well." Could it be well with her, when the light had been quenched in her home ? Could it be well with her husband, when he had now no heir to his property, no son to come after him ? Could it be well with the child, when he lay cold and stiff in death ? Yes ; for " as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are God's ways higher than our ways, and God's thoughts than our thoughts." It was well with the life which seemed to go away; for, through ways unknown to her, the God of tenderness and love would lead her child into higher realms of life, and bring him nearer and nearer to Himself. A gifted woman of our own day, who drifted from Christianity into atheism, but who, a few years ago, emerged out of atheism, by way of spiritualism, into that strange, shadowy dreamland called the realm of Theosophy, has left on record an account of what moved her to abandon faith in God. Her child became ill, and for weeks hovered between life and death, but at last happily recovered. But the mother did not, strange to say, adoringly fall on her knees and praise the Author of every good and perfect gift for His unspeakable goodness. " There had grown up in my mind," she says, " a feeling of angry resentment against God, who had been for weeks, as I thought, torturing my helpless baby. For some time a stubborn antagonism to the Providence who ordains the sufferings of life had steadily been increasing in me, and this sullen challenge, 'Is God good ? ' found voice in my heart during these silent days and nights. My mother's sufferings and much personal unhappiness had been intensifying the feeling ; and, as I watched my baby in its agony, and felt so helpless to relieve, more than once the indignant cry broke from my lips, ' How canst Thou torture a baby so ? What has she done that she should suffer so ? Why dost Thou not kill her at once, and let her be at peace ?' More than once I cried, 0 God, take the child, but do not torment her 1' All my personal belief in God, all my intense faith in His constant direction of affairs, all my habit of continual prayer and of realization of His presence were against this person in whom I believed, and whose individual finger I saw in my baby's agony." How infinitely more grand — how infinitely more noble is the temper of the soul of the Shunammite than that of the English woman ! The one lived in an age in which the idea of immortal life was indeed descried and apprehended, but it was but dimly descried and imperfectly apprehended, like some object indistinctly seen in the morning twilight The other lived in an age which has been gloriously illuminated and ennobled by the new light shed on human life and destiny by Jesus Christ, who has revealed to us an existence beyond death, which is not severed at all from anything that is pure and holy and beautiful in this present life : who has told us of an eternal manhood, of which this is the infancy: of an eternal harvest, of which this is the seed-time : of a family, embracing all the good and holy and pure who have ever lived or whom we have ever known. The one woman, under the strain of affliction, instinctively felt that God was all-good, all-loving, all-merciful ; that behind the blackest cloud of her sorrow there shone the light of infinite, eternal, and unchangeable love, and when asked " Is it well with thee ? is it well with thy husband ? is it well with the child ?" answered " it is well." The other woman, under the stress of trouble, surrendered herself to despondency and despair, blasphemously threw it in God's face that He had tortured her child, and, in a spirit of intellectual arrogance, virtually cried out, " Henceforth I cease to believe in God and in Christ ; let me now break their bands asunder, and cast their cords from me." The choice between faith and infidelity is a choice that we are sooner or later called to make. God help us to make the nobler choice. God help us to choose the better part ; to hold fast to faith, and master the reasons for despondency and despair. If in this life only we had hope in Christ we would indeed be of all men most miserable. If an appalling gloom enshrouded the tomb, if there were nothing beyond death, life would crush us by its mockery and grotesqueness, as well as by its intolerable burdens and mysteries. That our whole life is not darkened by the projected gloom of the future is due entirely to the religion of Christ, who has destroyed death, and brought life and immortality to light. Death, whose power has been broken, whose sting has been extracted, is no longer, as heathenism said, " the King of terrors," but an Angel from heaven whom our Father sends to unbar our prison door, to usher us into the glorious liberty of the children of God, to reunite us, in glory and joy, to the loved ones who have gone before. "There is a reaper whose name is death, And with his sickle keen He reaps the bearded grain at a breath, And the flowers that grow between. " Shall I have nought that is fair ?' saith he : ' Have nought but the bearded grain ? Though the breath of these flowers is sweet to me, I will give them all back again.' " He gazed at the flowers with tearful eyes : He kissed their drooping leaves. It was for the Lord of Paradise He bound them in his sheaves. " My Lord has need of these flowerets gay,' The reaper said and smiled, " Dear tokens of the earth are they, Where He was once a child. " ' They shall all bloom in fields of light, Transplanted by my care ; And saints, upon their garments white, These sacred blossoms wear.' "And the mother gave in tears and pain The flowers she most did love, She knew she should find them all again In the fields of light above. "Oh ! not in cruelty, not in wrath, The reaper came that day. 'Twas an Angel visited the green earth And took the flowers away." Did not Christ utter words of supreme hope and consolation when He said ? - " Not a sparrow falleth to the ground without your Father. But the very hairs of your head are all numbered. Fear ye not therefore, ye are of more value than many sparrows." " Let not your hearts be troubled : ye believe in God, believe also in Me. In My Father's house are many mansions : if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto Myself ; that where I am, there ye may be also." " I am the resurrection, and the life : he that believeth in Me, though he were dead, yet shall he live : and whosoever liveth and believeth in Me shall never die." "Father I will that they also whom Thou hast given Me be with Me where I am, that they may behold My glory which Thou hast given me." The splendour of our Father's house on high can be painted by no artist or described by no poet ; for, as yet, " we see through a glass darkly" ; we walk by faith not by sight. Earth has no measure ; imagination no conception ; arithmetic no calculus. " Eye hath not seen nor ear heard, nor has it entered into the heart of man to consider what things God has prepared for them that love him." But this much we may believe, that the Father's house is immeasurably large, indescribably beautiful, seeing that it is the dwelling-place of the Most High, the temple of the all-mighty, all-wise, all-good Architect of the universe. If, in the different domains of terrestrial nature, we have such marvellous displays of God's omnipotence, wisdom, and goodness, such gracious illustrations of His delight in beauty, what treasure-houses of His wisdom, what regal chambers of His majesty, what peaceful abodes of His grace, what luminous plains of His glory, what wondrous ways of His love must burst in full orbed splendour on the enraptured vision of His children in the home on high ! Is it not a source of infinite solace for us to know that those who have fallen asleep in Jesus live where He lives : that His home is their home : that they share its peace as well as its splendour, its eternal glory and happiness as well as its dignity and activities ? Is it not a source of infinite joy for us to believe that Jesus is preparing a place for each of us in that heavenly home : a place fitted to our distinct character : a separate work fitted to develop that character to perfection : and that the dearest dreams of home-life shall find their happy fulfilment in a perfect society "where youth never grows old and life never dies : where beauty never pales and love never cools: where health never languishes : where joy never wanes : where no sigh is heard, and no tear is seen." When we think on the splendour of the Father's house that awaits us, can we be Christians if our hearts are not filled with an inconquerable hope, an unutterable thankfulness ? Ought we not to long to be clothed upon with the white raiment of a spiritual and imperishable life and to have the frail tenement of our mortality replaced by " the building of God, the house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens " ? Ought we not to long for possession of the swift dove-wings that would carry us far away beyond reach of the sin and misery, the toil and unrest of earth, into that fair land of unbroken rest, perpetual peace, and unfading joy ? Ought we not to long to escape from this loveless and impure and hostile world into that blessed communion of holy and good and pure spirits, where "with the morn those angel faces smile which we have loved long since and lost awhile" ? Can we mourn for those dearer to us than life itself when they pass out of this troubled world into the peace and blessedness of the Father's house and "are crowned with eternal gladness" ? "Those whom the gods love die young" was a saying of the ancients, and has it not a beautiful meaning to those familiar with the tender and loving associations with which Jesus Christ has surrounded our heavenly home. Unstained by sin, unworn by toil, unscarred with wounds, unwrung with remorse, they have " passed from the sea to the shore, from exile to their country, from prison to the palace," and now they live before their Father's face in the strength and beauty of immortal youth. There are present with us this afternoon dear friends, whose hearts ache with the terrible blow which so recently and so suddenly laid low to human eyes a young life which was opening with splendid promise under the hand of their cherishing care and love. A voice, which made sweet music in their home, is silent ; a form, which was as an angel's presence there, has vanished ; a fair young girl — whose heart was so loving and devout, whose intelligence was so bright and cultivated, whose feelings were so pure and refined, whose susceptibilities for " whatsoever things are true and honest and just and pure and lovely and of good report " were so quick and tender that she endeared herself to all with whom she was brought into contact — has passed away into the brightness which is beyond ; and never, till death, will they forget " the touch of that vanished hand and the sound of that voice which is still." As there rises up before my mind's eye that gracious, radiant, youthful form, who so often, in bygone years, worshipped God with us in this place in the beauty of holiness, and who now peacefully reposes in our romantically-situated churchyard, surrounded with the flowers she loved so well, I cannot help recalling the beautiful lines in which Wordsworth sings of a heaven that lies about infancy, of an earth apparelled in celestial light that lies around the child : " Our birth is but a sleeping and a forgetting; The soul that rises with us — our life's sta r—. Hath had elsewhere its setting, And cometh from afar : Not in entire forgetfulness, And not in utter nakedness, But trailing clouds of glory do we come From God, who is our home : Heaven lies about us in our infancy." What a comfort it must be for parents, when their hearts are bleeding with sorrow and love, to repose faith in the beautiful words of the Lord Jesus, which tell us of a Father's house on high : that it is not the will of our Father in heaven that one of these little ones should perish : that in heaven their angels do always behold the face of His Father which is in heaven : that of such is the kingdom of heaven. May these words breathe comfort into the troubled hearts of the sorrowing family present with us this afternoon, and dwell richly in them in all wisdom. May they believe that it is well with the dear child, the sweet blossom of their earthly hopes, whose beloved form is now clothed with angelic beauty, and whom they shall see again blooming in a happier land. To her, death indeed has been the beginning of a life of honour and glory and immortality ; and, " when the day breaks and the shadows flee away," she will clasp them in an embrace of immortal tenderness when their footsteps press the blessed shore. " One less at home : the charmed circle broken, A clear face missed day by day from its accustomed place, Cleansed and saved and perfected by grace. " One more in heaven : one less at home : One voice of welcome hushed for evermore : One farewell word, unspoken on the shore Where parting comes not — one soul landed more. " One more in heaven : one less on earth ; Its pains, its sorrows, and its toils to share : One less the pilgrim's daily cross to bear, One more the crown of ransomed saints to wear. " One more in heaven : one more at home, That home where separation cannot be, That home where none are missed eternally." " Now our Lord Jesus Christ and God, even our Father, who hath loved us and given us everlasting consolation and good hope through grace, comfort your hearts and stablish you in every good word and work." " Unto Him that loved us and washed us from our sins in His own blood, and made us kings and priests unto God and His Father — to Him be glory and dominion for ever and ever. AMEN." LEAD, kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom, Lead Thou me on ; The night is dark, and I am far from home, Lead Thou me on : Keep Thou my feet; I do not ask to see The distant scene ; one step enough for me. I was not ever thus, nor prayed that Thou Shouldst lead me on : I loved to choose and see my path ; but now Lead Thou me on ! I loved the garish day, and, spite of fears, Pride ruled my will : remember not past years. So long Thy power has blest me, sure it still Will lead me on O'er moor and fen, o'er crag and torrent till The night is gone. And with the morn those angel-faces smile, Which I have loved long since, and lost awhile. BRIEF life is here our portion ; Brief sorrow, short-lived care ; The life that knows no ending, The tearless life is there. O happy retribution ! Short toil, eternal rest ; For mortals and for sinners A mansion with the blest ! There grief is turned to pleasure, Such pleasure, as below No human voice can utter, No human heart can know. And now we fight the battle, But then shall wear the crown Of full and everlasting And passionless renown. And now we watch and struggle, And now we live in hope, And Sion in her anguish, With Babylon must cope. But He whom now we trust in Shall then be seen and known, And they that know and see Him Shall have Him for their own. The morning shall awaken, The shadows shall decay, And each true-hearted servant Shall shine as doth the day : Yes ; God, our King and Portion, In fulness of His grace, We then shall see for ever, And worship face to face. O sweet and blessed country, The home of God's elect ! O sweet and blessed country, That eager hearts expect ! Jesus, in mercy bring us To that dear land of rest ; Who art, with God the Father, And Spirit, ever blest. ART thou weary, art thou languid, Art thou sore distrest ? "Come to Me," saith One, "and coming, Be at rest." Hath He marks to lead me to Him, If He be my guide? " In His feet and hands are wound-prints, And His side." Is there diadem, as monarch, That His brow adorns? "Yea, a crown, in very surety But of thorns !" If I find Him, if I follow, What His guerdon here? " Many a sorrow, many a labour, Many a tear." If I still hold closely to Him, What hath He at last? "Sorrow vanquished, labour ended, Jordan past !" If I ask Him to receive me, Will He say me nay? "Not till earth, and not till heaven Pass away !" Finding, following, keeping, struggling, Is He sure to bless ? "Angels, martyrs, saints, and prophets, Answer, Yes !" SAFELY, safely gathered in, No more sorrow, no more sin, No more childish griefs or fears, No more sadness, no more tears ; For the life, so young and fair, Now hath passed from earthly care, God Himself the soul will keep, Giving His beloved — sleep. Safely, safely gathered in, Free from sorrow, free from sin, Passed beyond all grief and pain, Death, for thee, is truest gain ; For our loss we must not weep, Nor our loved one long to keep From the home of rest and peace, Where all sin and sorrow cease. Safely, safely gathered in, No more sorrow, no more sin ; God has saved from weary strife, In its dawn, this young fresh life Which awaits us now above, Resting in the Saviour's love. Jesus, grant that we may meet There, adoring at Thy feet. GLASGOW: PRINTED AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS BY ROBERT MACLEHOSE AND CO. 1