Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 304 pages of information about Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing.

Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing eBook

Timothy Shay Arthur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 304 pages of information about Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing.

What is more beautiful in the earthly life of Jesus, than this manly harmony, equipoise, and rest?  He enjoyed peace, and promised it to His friends.  And this peace of His, He did not for others postpone to a distant day, or shut up altogether in a future Heaven, but left it to His disciples on earth.  What, then, was His peace?

His peace was not inactivity.  They must mistake who give a material sense to the images of Heaven as a state of rest.  If Christ’s life represented Heaven, its peace is not slothful ease, but intense exertion.  How He laboured in word and deed of virtue!  He walked in coarse raiment from town to town, from city to city, from the dessert to the waves of the sea.  His ministry was toil from the day of His baptism to the scene upon Calvary.  And yet His life was peace.  He expressed no wish to retire to an unoccupied ease.  His absorption in duty was His joy.  He was so peaceful because so engaged.  His labours were the elements of His divine tranquillity.

And so active and earnest must we be, if we would have calmness and peace.  An appeal may here be made to every one’s experience.  Every one will confess that when he had least to do, when mornings came and went, and suns circled, and seasons rolled, and brought no serious business, then time was a burthen; existence a weariness; and the hungry soul, which craves some outward satisfaction, was found fallen back upon itself and preying upon its own vitality.  Are not the idlest of men proverbially the most miserable?  And is not the young woman often to be seen passing restless from place to place, because exempt from the necessity of industry, till vanity and envy, growing rank in her vacant mind, makes her far more an object of compassion than those who work hardest for a living?  The unemployed, then, are not the most peaceful.  The labourer has a deeper peace than any idler ever knew.  His toils make his short pauses refreshing.  Were those pauses prolonged they would be invaded by a miserable ennui.  Perfect peace will be found here or hereafter, not when we sink down into torpor, but only when the soul is wrought into high action for high ends.

Another element of the peace of Jesus was His sinlessness.  And all human experience testifies that nothing has so much disturbed tranquillity as conscious guilt, or the memory of wrong-doing.  Peace is forfeited by every transgression.  Angry words, envious looks, unkind and selfish deeds, will all prevent peace from visiting our hearts.

We have noticed already another element of peace—­mental and moral harmony.  There is a spiritual proportion when every power does its work, every feeling fills its measure, and all make a common current to bear the soul along to ever new peace and joy.  Our inward discords are the woes of life.  The peaceful heart is quiet, not because inactive, but through intense harmonious working.

The cravings of the human heart for peace and rest must seek satisfaction in the ways indicated, or fail of satisfaction.  There must be activity, abstinence from guilt, and moral harmony.  Thus alone can we receive the peace which Jesus said He would leave to His true followers.

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Project Gutenberg
Words of Cheer for the Tempted, the Toiling, and the Sorrowing from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.