The Greatest Thing In the World | Page 3

Henry Drummond
among the great Lakes, I have come
across black men and women who remembered the only white man
they ever saw before--David Livingstone; and as you cross his
footsteps in that dark continent,
MEN'S FACES LIGHT UP
as they speak of the kind doctor who passed there years ago. They
could not understand him; but they felt the love that beat in his heart.
They knew that it was love, although he spoke no word.
Take into your sphere of labor, where you also mean to lay down your
life, that simple charm, and your lifework must succeed. You can take
nothing greater, you need take nothing less. You may take every

accomplishment; you may be braced for every sacrifice; but if you give
your body to be burned, and have not Love, it will profit you and the
cause of Christ nothing.
II. THE ANALYSIS.
After contrasting Love with these things, Paul, in three verses, very
short, gives us an amazing analysis of what this supreme thing is.
I ask you to look at it. It is a compound thing, he tells us. It is like light.
As you have seen a man of science take a beam of light and pass it
through a crystal prism, as you have seen it come out on the other side
of the prism broken up into its component colors--red, and blue, and
yellow, and violet, and orange, and all the colors of the rainbow--so
Paul passes this thing, Love, through the magnificent prism of his
inspired intellect, and it comes out on the other side broken up into its
elements.
In these few words we have what one might call
THE SPECTRUM OF LOVE,
the analysis of Love. Will you observe what its elements are? Will you
notice that they have common names; that they are virtues which we
hear about every day; that they are things which can be practised by
every man in every place in life; and how, by a multitude of small
things and ordinary virtues, the supreme thing, the summum bonum, is
made up?
The Spectrum of Love has nine ingredients:
Patience "Love suffereth long." Kindness "And is kind." Generosity
"Love envieth not." Humility "Love vaunteth not itself, is not puffed
up." Courtesy "Doth not behave itself unseemly." Unselfishness
"Seeketh not its own." Good temper "Is not provoked." Guilelessness
"Taketh not account of evil." Sincerity "Rejoiceth not in
unrighteousness, but rejoiceth with the truth."

Patience; kindness; generosity; humility; courtesy; unselfishness; good
temper; guilelessness; sincerity--these make up the supreme gift, the
stature of the perfect man.
You will observe that all are in relation to men, in relation to life, in
relation to the known to-day and the near to-morrow, and not to the
unknown eternity. We hear much of love to God; Christ spoke much of
love to man. We make a great deal of peace with heaven; Christ made
much of peace on earth. Religion is not a strange or added thing, but
the inspiration of the secular life, the breathing of an eternal spirit
through this temporal world. The supreme thing, in short, is not a thing
at all, but the giving of a further finish to the multitudinous words and
acts which make up the sum of every common day.
Patience. This is the normal attitude of love; Love passive, Love
waiting to begin; not in a hurry; calm; ready to do its work when the
summons comes, but meantime wearing the ornament of a meek and
quiet spirit. Love suffers long; beareth all things; believeth all things;
hopeth all things. For Love understands, and therefore waits.
Kindness. Love active. Have you ever noticed how much of Christ's life
was spent in doing kind things--in merely doing kind things? Run over
it with that in view, and you will find that He spent a great proportion
of His time simply in making people happy, in
DOING GOOD TURNS
to people. There is only one thing greater than happiness in the world,
and that is holiness; and it is not in our keeping; but what God has put
in our power is the happiness of those about us, and that is largely to be
secured by our being kind to them.
"The greatest thing," says some one, "a man can do for his Heavenly
Father is to be kind to some of His other children." I wonder why it is
that we are not all kinder than we are? How much the world needs it!
How easily it is done! How instantaneously it acts! How infallibly it is
remembered! How superabundantly it pays itself back--for there is no
debtor in the world so honorable, so superbly honorable, as Love.

"Love never faileth." Love is success, Love is happiness, Love is life.
"Love," I say with Browning, "is
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