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Resolution
THE MYSTERY OF THE PRECIOUS BLOOD
PART 1
SALVATION! What music is there in that word - music that
never tires but is always new, that always rouses yet always rests us!
It holds in itself all that our hearts would say. It is sweet vigor to
us in the morning, and in the evening it is contented peace. It is a
song that is always singing itself deep down in the delighted soul.
Angelic ears are ravished by it up in Heaven; and our Eternal Father
Himself listens to it with adorable complacency. It is sweet even to
Him out of Whose mind is the music of a thousand worlds. To be saved!
What is it to be saved? Who can tell? Eye has not seen, nor ear heard.
It is a rescue, and from such a shipwreck. It is a rest, and in such an
unimaginable home. It is to lie down forever in the bosom of God in
an endless rapture of insatiable contentment.
"Thou shalt call His name Jesus; for He shall save His people from
their sins." Who else but Jesus can do this, and what else even from
Him do we require but this? For in this lie all things which we can
desire. Of all miseries the bondage of sin is the most miserable. It is
worse than sorrow, worse than pain. It is such a ruin that no other
ruin is like unto it. It troubles all the peace of life. It turns
sunshine into darkness. It embitters all pleasant fountains, and
poisons the very blessings of God which should have been for our
healing. It doubles the burdens of life, which are heavy enough
already. It makes death a terror and a torture, and the eternity beyond
the grave an infinite and intolerable blackness. Alas! we have felt
the weightiness of sin, and know that there is nothing like it. Life
has brought many sorrows to us, and many fears. Our hearts have ached a
thousand times. Tears have flowed. Sleep has fled. Food has been
nauseous to us, even when our weakness craved for it. But never have we
felt any thing like the dead weight of a mortal sin. What then must a
life of such sins be? What must be a death in sin? What the irrevocable
eternity of unretracted sin?
From all this horror whither
shall we look for deliverance? Not to
ourselves; for we know the practical infinity of our weakness, and the
incorrigible vitality of our corruption. Not to any earthly power; for
it has no jurisdiction here. Not to philosophy, literature, or science;
for in this case they are but sorry and unhelpful matters. Not to any
Saint, however holy, nor to any Angel, however mighty; for the least
sin is a bigger mountain than they have faculties to move. Not to the
crowned queen of God's creation, the glorious and the sinless Mary;
for even her holiness cannot satisfy for sin, nor the whiteness of
her purity take out its deadly stain. Neither may we look for
deliverance direct from the patience and compassion of God Himself; for
in the abysses of His wisdom it has been decreed, that without shedding
of blood there shall be no remission of sin. It is from the Precious
Blood of Jesus Christ alone that our salvation comes. Out of the
immensity of Its merits, out of the inexhaustible treasures of Its
satisfactions, because of the resistless power of Its beauty over the
justice and the wrath of God, because of that dear combination of Its
priceless worth and Its benignant prodigality, we miserable sinners are
raised out of the depths of our wretchedness, and restored to the peace
and favor of our Heavenly Father.
Is hope sweet where despair had almost begun to reign? Is it a joy to
be emancipated from a shameful slavery, or set free from a noxious
dungeon? Is it gladness to be raised as if by miracle from a bed of
feebleness and suffering, to sudden health and instantaneous vigor?
Then what a gladness must salvation be! For, as there is no earthly
misery like sin, so is there no deliverance like that with which
Jesus makes us free. Words will not tell it. Thought only can think it,
and it must be thought out of an enlightened mind and a burning heart,
dwelt on for a long, long while. The first moment after death is a
moment which must infallibly come to every one of us. Earth lies behind
us, silently wheeling its obedient way through the black-tinted space.
The measureless spaces of eternity lie outstretched before us. The
words of our sentence have scarcely floated away into silence. It is a
sentence of salvation. The great risk has been run, and we are saved.
God's power is holding our soul lest it should die of gladness. It
cannot take in the whole of its eternity. The least accidental joy is a
world of beatitude in itself. The blaze of the vision is overwhelming.
Then the truth that eternity is eternal - this is so hard to master. Yet
all this is only what we mean when we pronounce the word salvation. How
hideous the difference of that first moment after death, if we had not
been saved! It turns us cold to think of it. But oh, joy of joys! we
have seen the face of Jesus; and the light in His eyes, and the smile
upon His face, and the words upon His lips, were salvation.
But there are some who do not feel that sin is such a horror or
captivity. They say it lays no weight upon their hearts. They say their
lives are full of sunshine, and that time flows with them as the merry
rivulet runs in summer with a soothing brawl over its colored stones,
and its waters glancing in the sun. They say it is so with them; and
truly they should know best. Yet I hardly believe them. If they are
happy, it is only by fits and starts; and then not with a complete
happiness. There is ever an upbraiding voice within. An habitual sinner
always has the look of a jaded and disappointed man. There is weariness
in the very light of his eyes, vexation in the very sound of his voice.
Why is he so cross with others, if he is so happy with himself? Then
are there not also dreadful times, private times when no one but God
sees him, when he is chilled through and through with fear, when he is
weary of life because he is so miserable, when the past weighs upon him
like a nightmare, and the future terrifies him like a coming wild
beast? When death springs upon him, how will he die? When judgment
comes, what will he answer? Yet even if the sinner could go through
life with the gay indifference to which he pretends, he is not to be
envied. It is only a sleep, a lethargy, or a madness - one or other of
these according to his natural disposition. For there must be an
awakening at last; and when and where will it be? They that walk in
their sleep are sometimes wakened if they put their foot into cold
water. What if the sinner's awakening should be from the first touch of
the fire that burns beyond the grave?
But we claim no share in any foolish happiness of sin. We are on God's
side. We belong to Jesus. Sin is our great enemy, as well as our great
evil. We desire to break with it altogether. We are ashamed of our past
subjection to it. We are uneasy under our present imperfect separation
from it. Our uppermost thought - not not merely our uppermost thought,
our only thought - is our salvation. We care for no science, but the
science of redeeming grace. The Cross of Christ is our single wisdom.
Once we wished for many things, and aimed at many things. But we are
changed now. Our lives are amazingly simplified, simplified by the fear
of sin and by the love of God. Our anxiety now is, that all this may
remain. We fear another change, especially a change back again. We can
think calmly of no change except from little love to much love, and
from much love to more love. The right of Jesus to our love, to our
best love, to all our love, is becoming plainer and plainer to us. His
exceeding loveliness is growing more and more attractive, because it is
revealing Itself to us every day like a new revelation. What depths
there are in Jesus, and how wonderfully He lights them up with the
splendors of His eternal love! Do we not feel every day more and more
strongly, that we must be more for Jesus than we are, that of all
growing things Divine love is the most growing, that all idea of a
limit to our love of Jesus, or of moderation in our service of Him, is
a folly as well as a disloyalty? He was the brightness of innumerable
lives and the sweetness of innumerable sorrows, when He was but the
expectation of longing Israel. What must He be now, when He has come,
when He has lived, and shed His Blood, and died, and risen, and
ascended, and then come back again in all the unutterable endearments
of the Blessed Sacrament? Why are our hearts so cold? Why is our love
so faithless, and our faith so unloving? We try, and still we do not
love as we wish to love. We try again, and love more; and yet it is
sadly short of the love we ought to have. We strive and strive, and
still we only languish when we ought to burn. He longs for our love,
sweet, covetous lover of souls as He is. He longs for our love; and we
long for nothing so much as to love Him. Surely there must be a time
and a place, when both He and we shall be satisfied; but the place will
be Heaven, and the time nothing else than the great timeless eternity.
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