THE SEAMLESS COAT OF JESUS
Jesus never pitied Himself, nor did He seek the pity of any man.
One day He asked His disciples, 'Whom do men say that I, the Son of
Man, am?'
'John the Baptist,' replied one
'Elijah,' said another.
'Jeremiah or one of the prophets,' answered a third.
'But whom say ye that I am?' He asked.
'Thou art the Christ, the Son of the living God,' replied ever-ready
Simon Peter.
At last their eyes had pierced through the veil of His humanity, the
disguise of His lowly village ancestry, and His humble occupation as
a carpenter, and recognized the King, King Eternal, King of Kings,
and Lord of Lords. The splendor of His Being, before which seraphim
and cherubim, angels and archangels veil their faces, was so
accommodated to their poor eyes and minds that their eyes were not
blinded and they were not afraid.
'Blessed art thou, Simon Barjona,' said Jesus, 'for flesh and blood
hath not revealed it to thee, but my Father which is in Heaven.'
The secret was out! The Son of God, the Eternal Word, 'full of grace
and truth,' was made flesh and was in the world, dwelling among men.
But the secret must not just yet go further, so 'He charged His
disciples that they should tell no man that He was Jesus the
Christ.' It must not be bruited abroad. He must draw the veil yet
closer about Himself, that only sincere, humble souls might know
Him, and that the sin of men might run its course, and its malignity
and utter enmity to God might be revealed in their treatment of Him,
the well-beloved, only begotten Son of the Father.
From that time forth Jesus began to show unto His disciples how that
He must go unto Jerusalem and suffer many things of the elders and
chief priests and scribes, and be killed, and be raised the third
day.'
Such statements, it should seem, would have dumbfounded the
disciples. But not Peter; his poor, dull mind was roused and his
tongue loosed, and he took Jesus 'and began to rebuke Him, saying:
Be it far from Thee, Lord ('pity Thyself' is the marginal reading),
this shall not be unto Thee.'
But Jesus did not pity Himself, and He would have none of Peter's
pity nor worldly counsel and comfort. 'Get thee behind me, Satan,'
said He to Peter, 'thou art an offense unto Me: for thou savourest
not the things that be of God, but those that be of men.'
But while Jesus would not pity Himself, nor even permit Peter to
counsel pity, yet what, humanly speaking, could be more pathetic
than the scene at the Cross, when He, the most loving and devoted of
the sons of men, and the poorest, was stripped of His only suit of
clothes, His only earthly possession, and nailed nude to the Cross
to die, while those who crucified Him divided the poor little bundle
of clothes among themselves and cast lots for His seamless coat?
His coat without seam, that must not be rent! Think of that
careless, cruel soldier stalking about in the coat of Jesus! What a
picture!
But while the soldiers, for their own selfish purpose, spared the
seamless coat that day, how often has it been rent since then, and
that by those who profess to know and love Him.
I like to think of that first society of His people, which we now
speak of as the Early Church, as the seamless robe of Jesus. It
enshrined His spiritual presence. He clothed Himself with it as with
a garment. Through its members He, the risen Christ, was still seen
by the children of men.
He was revealed in its spiritual life. To the wonder-struck
multitude on the day of Pentecost, amazed at the glowing,
fire-baptized disciples, and inquiring, 'What meaneth this?' while
'others, mocking, said, These men are full of new wine,' Peter
replied: 'This Jesus whom ye crucified hath God raised up, whereof
we are witnesses. Therefore being by the right hand of God exalted,
and having received of the Father the promise of the Holy Ghost, He
hath shed forth this, which ye now see and hear.'
The radiant, joy-filled, fearless, conquering life of the Early
Church was the life, the presence of Christ, in its members. 'It is
not I that live, but Christ that liveth in me,' wrote Paul. And
'When Christ, who is our life, shall appear, then shall ye also
appear with Him in glory.'
He was made manifest in the activities of the Early Church. 'Ye men
of Israel, why marvel ye at this? or why look so earnestly on us, as
though by our own power or holiness we had made this man to walk?'
asked Peter of the Jerusalem crowd after healing the lame man at the
temple gate called Beautiful. 'The God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and
of Jacob, the God of our fathers, hath glorified His Son Jesus . .
and His name through faith in His name hath made this man strong,
whom ye see and know yea, the faith which is by Him hath given him
this perfect soundness in the presence of you all.' What they did,
they did by the power of Christ working in and through them, as the
branch brings forth fruit by the power of the vine from which comes
its life.
But most surely was He seen and known in and by the love which His
disciples had one for the other. 'By this shall all men know that ye
are My disciples,' said Jesus, 'If ye have love one to another.'
While they loved 'they were of one heart!' and so long as they were
of one heart, they were of one mind.' Their unity began in the heart
and extended to the head, and worked itself out in deeds of loving
fellowship and service. Many of them even sold their possessions and
had all things in common, so great was their love for the Saviour
and for each other.
Like the coat of the Master, the infant Church was 'without seam,
woven from the top throughout.'
The first rent in the seamless robe came when Ananias and his wife,
Sapphira, sought credit for a love and generosity of which their
wretched hearts were destitute, by pretending to give all when they
were holding back part of the price of their sold possession.
A wider rent was threatened when the Grecians began to murmur
against the Hebrews 'because their widows were neglected in the
daily ministrations.' But this was wisely and promptly arrested by
the action of the Apostles in appointing 'seven men of honest
report, full of the Holy Ghost and wisdom,' to look after that
business.
The rending of this seamless robe can always be traced back to lack
of love. The great heresy of the ages is not manifested so much in
false doctrine as in failing love and consequent false living. Faith
is lost when love leaks out and living becomes selfish. Heresy
begins in the heart, not in the head. The heretic of the early
Christian society was the loveless schismatic. 'I hear there are
divisions' ('schisms,' margin) 'among you,' wrote Paul to the
Corinthians, 'and I partly believe it. For there must be also
heresies ' ('sects, schismatics ') 'among you that they which are
approved may be made manifest among you.'
In the tenth chapter of 1st Corinthians, Paul gives us examples of
what befell God's ancient people, the Church in the wilderness, and
he says: 'These things were our example. . . All these things
happened unto them for examples: and they are written for our
admonition upon whom the ends of the world are come.' As we study
the history of Israel we see, as in type, the things we must do and
avoid doing if we would save ourselves and guard the heritage God
has given us. Again and again we see the rending or attempted
rending of the seamless robe of the Ancient Church. Sometimes it was
through envy and jealousy that the rending was attempted. On one
occasion Miriam and Aaron would have rent the seamless robe. They
spoke against their brother, Moses: 'Hath the Lord indeed spoken
only by Moses? Hath He not spoken also by us?' But the Lord was
listening. 'The Lord heard it . . . and the anger of the Lord was
kindled against them,' and lo! 'Miriam became leprous, white as
snow.' Korah and Dathan would have rent the robe, but again with
sure and swift judgment God acted as umpire, and Korah and Dathan
perished in their presumption.
Again the rending was attempted by Absalom through unholy ambition.
By flattering words and fair promises he sought to steal the hearts
of the men of Israel, only to perish in his deceit and pride and
have his name handed down through the ages and spit upon as a
synonym of unfaithfulness and basest treachery.
A fatal rending was finally occasioned by the supercilious pride of
those in authority, against which God Himself took up arms. When
Rehoboam, turning from the advice of wise old men, listened to the
haughty counsel of his young nobles and declared his little finger
should be thicker than the loin of his father, ten tribes forsook
him, and the seamless robe of the Ancient Church of Israel was
fatally and finally rent asunder and is not yet mended, for to this
day the ten tribes are known as the 'lost tribes.' What the oily
duplicity of Absalom failed to accomplish the insolent arrogance of
Rehoboam brought to pass. A further rending was caused by the
shameless, sinful neglect of those who should have shepherded the
sheep. Jeremiah and the lesser prophets weep and lament and bitterly
protest against those who fleece and scatter the sheep instead of
feeding and shepherding them, causing the people of God to wander
and perish for lack of humble oversight and loving care.
Paul found partiality, favoritism, and a partisan spirit endangering
the unity of the seamless robe in Corinth: while at Ephesus he
foresaw danger arising from the perversity of those who selfishly
sought leadership, and he forewarned them in his farewell address of
this danger.
Listen! 'Take heed therefore unto yourselves and to all the flock
over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed the
Church of God which He hath purchased with His own Blood. For I know
' -- Oh, the pity of it! -- 'I know that after my departing shall
grievous wolves enter in, not sparing the flock. Also of your own
selves shall men arise, speaking perverse things to draw away
disciples after them' -- rending the seamless robe, to gratify their
own lust for leadership
I think of The Salvation Army as a seamless robe of the Master,
beneath whose unrent folds in all lands cluster unnumbered
multitudes. Little children, unspoiled as yet, but compassed about
with innumerable perils, are there, looking to The Army for the
bread of Eternal Life whereby their souls shall live, for guidance
amid hidden and treacherous snares, and for protection from lurking
and watchful foes. Adolescent boys and girls are there, with all
their inexplicable moods and trying tempers, their day dreams, their
pride and foolishness, their loyalty and rebellions, their ardor and
despair, their hopes, their loves, their fun and laziness, their
humility, conceit, strange insight, and hasty judgments, their
sensitiveness and abysmal ignorance; there they are beneath the
folds of this seamless Salvation Army robe of the Saviour.
Straying girls and wronged women are there: great sinners, terrible
criminals, hopeless outcasts, washed in the Blood of the Lamb, are
there. Widows and orphans, husbands and wives bearing burdens of
toil and care and anxiety, are there. Aged people, with white hair
and feeble steps and dim eyes, are there. The heathen are coming
under its world-wide sheltering folds, and for the sake of all these
who look trustingly to it for safety and shelter, it must not be
rent.
For sixty years sinister eyes have watched to see it rent in twain.
Futile attempts have been made by some to rend it, and they have
torn off a bit here and there. But the robe still spreads its ample
and ever-expanding folds over the nations.
It must not be rent, and yet it may be unless we 'serve the Lord
with all humility of mind,' and in honor prefer others before self,
remembering Paul's exhortation to his Philippian brethren 'Fulfill
ye my joy, that ye be like-minded, having the same love, being of
one accord, of one mind. Let nothing be done through strife or
vainglory: but in lowliness of mind let each esteem other better
than themselves.' Let us keep in mind the prayer of Jesus just
before the shame and suffering of Pilate's judgment hall and the
tragedy of the Cross. I pray for them . . that they all may be one;
as Thou, Father, art in Me, and I in Thee, that they also may be one
in us: that the world may believe that Thou hast sent Me. . . I in
them, and Thou in Me, that they may be made perfect In one: and that
the world may know that Thou hast sent Me, and hast loved them, as
Thou hast loved Me ' (John xvii. 21, 23).
If ever this seamless coat is rent, then in the solemn words of the
Redeemer: 'Woe to that man by whom the offense cometh.'
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