"Keep yourselves in the love
of God" (Jude 21).
Jude's is one of the briefest of
all the letters in the New
Testament, containing only
twenty-five verses. It is,
perhaps, the last of the
epistles. Though the date is not
definitely settled, it was
probably written after the
destruction of Jerusalem, when
most of the Apostles had
finished their work. There is a
most delightful spirit of
humility in the letter. The
writer called himself a servant,
and the bondsman of Jesus
Christ, and the brother of
James; and that is a beautiful
modesty, for, in fact, it is
generally believed that he was
the Lord's own brother and the
son of Joseph and Mary.
To no particular church or
people was the letter written,
but the accounts make it
especially applicable to us. It
is very practical. The heart of
Jude was stirred because certain
men were denying God and the
Lord Jesus Christ. He said,
because of this, "I exhort you
that you should contend
earnestly for the faith once
delivered to the saints." That
expression in the Greek,
however, reads for the faith
delivered "once and for all" to
the saints. So the doctrine is
the same today as in the days of
Jude and before then. Reading on
to the twentieth and
twenty-fifth verses, they
indicate that we are expected to
contend as did the early
disciples.
It has always seemed to me that
faith produced men, and their
living in the world was a
contending for the faith. We
have the pattern of the life of
the Apostolic Christian given to
us. If you study the Acts of the
Apostles, the letters of Paul,
Peter, John, and, better still,
the wonderful prayer of Christ
in the seventeenth chapter of
John, you will see that there
were three great elements in
their character. They were in
the world, but not of it; they
were constantly looking for the
coming of Christ; and they were
filled with missionary fire and
zeal. These three
Characteristics must predominate
now if the church is to have
power. When one is in the world
and not of it, he realizes he is
a pilgrim and a stranger here,
and he endures trials and
temptations, because he knows
that they are but for a little
while. The second characteristic
has just as great an influence.
The disciples were constantly
expecting the return of our
Lord; they remembered the
testimony of the men who had
heard the angels on the slopes
of Olivet, and again and again
they opened their eyes,
expecting to behold Him face to
face. It was this hope in their
hearts which inspired their
lives, transfigured the cross
and its shame, and kept them
pure in the midst of all
temptation and sin.
The third characteristic is
equally important. How much we
need to long for the salvation
of others! Nothing so touches
the hidden, springs of the
Christian heart as to feel in
some measure that he is
responsible for those about him.
Some one has said, when God
would draw out all the
fathomless love of a woman's
heart, He lays a helpless babe
upon her bosom; and it is true
that the church will awake to
power when she awakes to
responsibility.
There is something which I have
in mind which will give us all
the things I have spoken about.
It is described in the text. If
there could be any subject
growing out of the text to
describe it, I should say that
it would be "Live in the
sunshine." I know what the
sunshine does for the clouds; it
gives them a silver lining. I
know what it does for the grass
and the trees and the flowers;
it warms and nourishes until
they blossom into beauty and
fruitfulness. Take the plant
away from the light, and it will
droop and die; place it where
the sun will kiss it, and every
leaf rejoices. This is the very
poorest illustration as to what
the love of God will do for us;
so let us keep ourselves in the
love of God.
I. That word "keep" is the key
word of Jude's epistle. In it we
are told that God will keep us,
but we are also told to keep
ourselves. We are told to
persevere, but it is also said
we will be preserved. This is
God and man working together,
and it is singular, to say the
least, that the word "preserve"
and the word "persevere" are
composed of exactly the same
letters. The literal rendering
of the expression that God will
keep us is "as in a garrison."
How secure, then, we must be!
How May We Keep Ourselves In The
Love Of God?
1. No way so efficient as by
prayer. There are different
kinds of prayer. Jacob prayed
when he met the angel of Jabbok,
and his name changed from Jacob
to Israel. Moses prayed when he
plead with God to look with
favor again upon His chosen
people. Christ prayed in the
garden, for it is said: "Being
in an agony, He prayed more
earnestly." But this is not the
kind of prayer I have in mind;
it is rather the kind that
Christ offered when He was alone
on the mountain with God. I
imagine the Father talked with
Him more than He with the
Father. It is the kind that
David describes when he says.
"My meditation of Him shall be
sweet." Faith is the eye with
which we can see God, and
meditation the wing with which
we fly to Him. It is the kind of
prayer offered when the
suppliant feeds that he is the
only one in all the universe; it
is the kind of prayer which if
our mother could hear, or the
dearest friend we had on earth,
we should feel that it had been
diverted and had not reached
God. It is the kind of prayer we
offer when we let God talk to us
as well as talk to Him. This
will keep us in the love of God.
2. Few things will so help us as
this old book, the Bible. Two
gentlemen were riding together,
and when they were about to
separate, one asked the other,
"Do you ever read your Bible?"
"Yes," said his friend; "I do,
but I receive no benefit because
I feel that I do not love God."
"Neither did I," replied the
other; "but God loved me," and
that answer fairly lifted the
man into the skies, for it gave
him a new thought. The question
is not at all as to how much I
love God, but rather as to how
much God loves me. Read the
Bible in that way, and it will
help you to live in the text.
Love dictated every word, love
selected every sentence, love
presented every Providence, love
sent Christ to die upon the
cross, and you can not read it
in this way without keeping
yourself in the love of God.
3. All the means of grace will
keep us, but if there is one
above another it would be the
Lord's Supper. The very coming
to the table and taking that
which represents His body and
His blood really lifts the soul
into such a condition that it is
one with Christ. He that hath
seen Christ hath seen the
Father, and he that is in Christ
is in the Father. What better
way, could there be of entering
into His love?
II. There must be emphasis upon
the preposition "in." The Greek
signifies the closest
connection, the most intimate
association and the most perfect
communion. All these things are
possible. The soul of Jonathan
was knit to the soul of David,
and there may be just as close a
fellowship between Christ and
His followers. Now and then in
this world we find persons whose
lives are so blended that they
almost look alike. This is
oftentimes true of the husband
and wife. Tennyson had it in his
mind when he said: "In the long
years liker must they grow."
This communion of the believer
with Christ is suggested by the
stones in a building, which take
hold upon the foundation; by the
branches which take hold upon
the vine; by the different
members of the body all knit
together; by the union of the
husband and wife; by the union
of the Father and the Son; so
that in this union there is a
stability, vitality,
consciousness, affection and
perfect harmony. If one is in
Christ, he will live above the
world and the storm's effect.
The earth may be covered with
storms, but a little way up the
atmosphere is clear and the sun
is shining. If we wait upon the
Lord, we shall renew our
strength; we shall mount with
wings as eagles. The Love Of God
III. Would that we might
understand the meaning of the
expression "the love of God." It
is hinted at in this world.
Passing along the streets, one
hears the words of a song or
catches the strains of a piece
of music being played, and he
says, "That is from Beethoven or
Mozart, I recognize the
movement." So in this life, we
catch strains of the love of
God. We behold it in the
mother's disinterested,
self-denying love; we see it in
the lover's glow, and in the
little child's innocent
affection; but these things are
only hints. The Bible gives us
the best revelation. Beginning
with Genesis the scroll is
constantly unfolding. Patriarchs
and prophets, judges and kings,
each tell their story. So,
little by little, we get flashes
out of His great heart until
they all come together as the
rays of the sun are converged in
the sun-glass; then we begin to
understand. It was not, however,
until the Sun of Righteousness
arose at the advent that there
came the morning light which
gives us the thought, not of the
administration of God, but of
His heart. What is infinite
love? The purest, sweetest,
tenderest thing known on earth
is the over-hanging heart of a
mother over the cradle that
contains her babe that can give
nothing back; receiving
everything and returning nothing
-- yet the love of the mother is
but a drop in the ocean when
compared with the love of God.
It is infinite, infinite!
There's a wideness in God's
mercy
Like the wideness of the sea;
There's a kindness in His
justice,
Which is more than liberty.
For the love of God is broader
Than the measure of man's mind,
And the heart of the Eternal
Is most wonderfully kind.
Over in England an archdeacon,
having reached almost the end of
his life, had his home so
constructed that he could spend
his closing days in sunshine. In
the morning they placed his
chair so that he could turn his
face toward the east and see the
rising sun; at noontime they
wheeled his chair into the south
window, where he could behold
the sun in his meridian; but in
the evening hours they would
place him in the west window,
where he could behold the king
of day sinking behind the
distant hills. So let me ask you
in the morning of your life to
keep your faces toward the east
window, and at noontide live in
the south window, but when
evening time comes, turn your
face toward the west window, so
that all your journey through
you may live in the sunshine,
and thus keep yourselves in the
love of God.
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