of it on the Gospel pages? Would her deed
of careful keeping have been told over all the world? She broke the
vase and poured it out, lost it, sacrificed it, and now the perfume fills
all the earth. We may keep our life if we will, carefully preserving it
from waste; but we shall have no reward, no honor from it, at the last.
But if we empty it out in loving service, we shall make it a lasting
blessing to the world, and we shall be remembered forever.
CHAPTER II.
LAID ON GOD'S ALTAR.
"My life is not my own, but Christ's, who gave it, And he bestows it
upon all the race; I lose it for his sake, and thus I save it; I hold it close,
but only to expend it; Accept it, Lord, for others, through thy grace."
We have to die to live. That is the central law of life. We must burn to
give light to the world, or to give forth odor of incense to God's praise.
We cannot save ourselves and at the same time make anything worthy
of our life, or be in any deep and true sense an honor to God and a
blessing to the world. The altar stands in the foreground of every life,
and can be passed by only at the cost of all that is noblest and best.
All the practical side of religion is summed up in the exhortation of St.
Paul, that we present our bodies a living sacrifice to God. Anciently, a
man brought a lamb and presented it to God, laid it on the altar, to be
consumed by God's fire. In like manner, we are to present our bodies.
The first thing is not to be a worker, a preacher, a saver of souls; the
very first thing in a Christian life is to present one's self to God, to lay
one's self on the altar. We need to understand this. It is easier to talk
and work for Christ than to give ourselves to him. It is easier to offer
God a few activities than to give him a heart. But the heart must be first,
else even the largest gifts and services are not acceptable.
"'Tis not thy work the Master needs, but thee,-- The obedient spirit, the
believing heart."
"A living sacrifice." A sacrifice is something really given to God, to be
his altogether and forever. We cannot take it back any more. One could
not lay a lamb on God's altar and then a minute or two afterward run up
and take it off. We cannot be God's to-day and our own to-morrow. If
we become his at all, in a sacrifice which he accepts, we are his always.
How can we present ourselves as a sacrifice to God? By the complete
surrender of our heart and will and all our powers to him. Absolute
obedience is consecration. The soldier learns it. He is not his own. He
does not think for himself, to, make his own plans; he has but one
duty--to obey. Payson used to talk of his "lost will"--lost in God's will,
he meant. That is what presenting one's self a sacrifice means.
It is a "living" sacrifice. Anciently, the sacrifices were killed; they were
laid dead on the altar. We are to present ourselves living. The fire
consumed the ancient offering; the fire of God's love and of his Spirit
consumes our lives by purifying them and filling them with divine life.
Those on whom the fire fell on the day of Pentecost became new men.
There was a new life in their souls, a new ardor, a new enthusiasm.
They were on fire with love for Christ. They entered upon a service in
which all their energies flamed.
The living sacrifice includes all the life,--not what it is now only, but
all that it may become. Life is not a diamond, but a seed, with
possibilities of endless growth. Dr. Lyman Abbott has used this
illustration: "I pluck an acorn from the greensward, and hold it to my
ear; and this is what it says to me: 'By and by the birds will come and
nest in me. By and by I will furnish shade for the cattle. By and by I
will provide warmth for the home in the pleasant fire. By and by I will
be shelter from the storm to those who have gone under the roof. By
and by I will be the strong ribs of the great vessel, and the tempest will
beat against me in vain, while I carry men across the Atlantic.' 'O
foolish little acorn, wilt thou be all this?' I ask. And the acorn answers,
'Yes; God and I.'"
I look into the faces
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