登陆注册
25531900000005

第5章 EVANGELIST(2)

'Wherefore dost thou so cry?' asks Evangelist. 'Because,' replied the man, 'I am condemned to die.' 'But why are you so unwilling to die, since this life is so full of evils?' And I suppose we must all hear Evangelist putting the same pungent question to ourselves every day, at whatever point of the celestial journey we at present are. Yes; why are we all so unwilling to die? Why do we number our days to put off our death to the last possible period? Why do we so refuse to think of the only thing we are sure soon to come to? We are absolutely sure of nothing else in the future but death. We may not see to-morrow, but we shall certainly see the day of our death. And yet we have all our plans laid for to-

morrow, and only one here and one there has any plan laid for the day of his death. And can it be for the same reason that made the man in rags unwilling to die? Is it because of the burden on our back? Is it because we are not fit to go to judgment? And yet the trumpet may sound summoning us hence before the midnight clock strikes. If this be thy condition, why standest thou still? Dost thou see yonder shining light? Keep that light in thine eye. Go up straight to it, knock at the gate, and it shall be told thee there what thou shalt do next. Burdened sinner, son of man in rags and terror: What has burdened thee so? What has torn thy garments into such shameful rags? What is it in thy burden that makes it so heavy? And how long has it lain so heavy upon thee? 'I cannot run,' said the man, 'because of the burden on my back.' And it has been noticed of you that you do not laugh, or run, or dress, or dance, or walk, or eat, or drink as once you did. All men see that there is some burden on your back; some sore burden on your heart and your mind. Do you see yonder wicket gate? Do you see yonder shining light? There is no light in all the horizon for you but yonder light over the gate. Keep it in your eye; make straight, and make at once for it, and He who keeps the gate and keeps the light burning over it, He will tell you what to do with your burden. He told John Gifford, and He told John Bunyan, till both their burdens rolled off their backs, and they saw them no more.

What would you not give to-night to be released like them? Do you not see yonder shining light?

Having set Christian fairly on the way to the wicket gate, Evangelist leaves him in order to seek out and assist some other seeker. But yesterday he had set Faithful's face to the celestial city, and he is off now to look for another pilgrim. We know some of Christian's adventures and episodes after Evangelist left him, but we do not take up these at present. We pass on to the next time that Evangelist finds Christian, and he finds him in a sorry plight. He has listened to bad advice. He has gone off the right road, he has lost sight of the gate, and all the thunders and lightnings of Sinai are rolling and flashing out against him. What doest thou here of all men in the world? asked Evangelist, with a severe and dreadful countenance. Did I not direct thee to His gate, and why art thou here? Christian told him that a fair-spoken man had met him, and had persuaded him to take an easier and shorter way of getting rid of his burden. Read the whole place for yourselves. The end of it was that Evangelist set Christian right again, and gave him two counsels which would be his salvation if he attended to them: Strive to enter in at the strait gate, and, Take up thy cross daily. He would need more counsel afterwards than that; but, meantime, that was enough. Let Christian follow that, and he would before long be rid of his burden.

In the introductory lecture Bishop Butler has been commended and praised as a moralist, and certainly not one word beyond his deserts; but an evangelical preacher cannot send any man with the burden of a bad past upon him to Butler for advice and direction about that. While lecturing on and praising the sound philosophical and ethical spirit of the great bishop, Dr. Chalmers complains that he so much lacks the sal evangelicum, the strength and the health and the sweetness of the doctrines of grace.

Legality and Civility and Morality are all good and necessary in their own places; but he is a cheat who would send a guilt-burdened and sick-at-heart sinner to any or all of them. The wicket gate first, and then He who keeps that gate will tell us what to do, and where next to go; but any other way out of the City of Destruction but by the wicket gate is sure to land us where it landed Evangelist's quaking and sweating charge. When Bishop Butler lay on his deathbed he called for his chaplain, and said, 'Though I

have endeavoured to avoid sin, and to please God to the utmost of my power, yet from the consciousness of my perpetual infirmities I

am still afraid to die.' 'My lord,' said his happily evangelical chaplain, 'have you forgotten that Jesus Christ is a Saviour?'

'True,' said the dying philosopher, 'but how shall I know that He is a Saviour for me?' 'My lord, it is written, "Him that cometh to Me, I will in no wise cast out."' 'True,' said Butler, 'and I am surprised that though I have read that Scripture a thousand times, I never felt its virtue till this moment, and now I die in peace.'

The third and the last time on which the pilgrims meet with their old friend and helper, Evangelist, is when they are just at the gates of the town of Vanity. They have come through many wonderful experiences since last they saw and spoke with him. They have had the gate opened to them by Goodwill. They have been received and entertained in the Interpreter's House, and in the House Beautiful.

同类推荐
  • 佛说咒齿经

    佛说咒齿经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Cloister and the Hearth

    The Cloister and the Hearth

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 支诺皋上

    支诺皋上

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 正名

    正名

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Georgics

    The Georgics

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 剑纵春秋

    剑纵春秋

    在这个时代,每个人都是自己人生的主角。这是一个以江犁为视角,领略修行界无限风景的故事。
  • 傲世仙

    傲世仙

    张岩本是一富家少爷,却被家仆出卖,一夜之间家族人全部被杀,父亲生死不知,张岩也在族人的拼死保护中逃得一命,最后被逼跳下悬崖,而那群杀害张岩全家的人为的就是张岩身上的一块不知名的玉佩…
  • 无尾案件

    无尾案件

    乡村失火案,真相大白时,调查者却不得不想法掩盖,一个卡夫卡式的荒谬故事。
  • 皇宫潜伏:皇妃不靠谱

    皇宫潜伏:皇妃不靠谱

    她是东宸国的宁和公主。她清丽,满腔爱国热血,一身超绝武功只想报效国家。可是,她的丈夫却是凤秦国的王爷。对立的国家,对立的立场,彼此都需要将对方致于死地,这样的两人要如何相爱?而她丢失的记忆究竟是什么?一旦想起,又会掀起如何的滔天巨浪?爱情、国家、责任,何去何从?背叛,报复,利用,何时止休?步步疑云,重重迷雾一一散开……他怀抱着他国皇子的柔媚妃嫔,妖娆笑道:“你的女人,很入我的眼,今晚陪本王。作为交换,我的女人也送你了。”纤长一指,指向了席中漠然而坐的她。
  • 找寻曾经的记忆

    找寻曾经的记忆

    一场车祸,让新婚的她丢失了一些记忆,司云轩为了找到妻子失去的记忆,想尽一切办法。在司云轩的努力下,陈若兰是否能恢复记忆,和丈夫幸福的生活在了一起?
  • 花开那一季

    花开那一季

    她从来不认为看见一个人心会痛,可是当她看见他接受其他女人的时候,她心真的痛了。
  • 九阳焚神

    九阳焚神

    太古年间,诸神射日,十日灭九,天地大乱。一颗火焰心脏,两把寂寞宝刀。少年稀里糊涂的卷进了一场惊天大秘之中,以悍然之姿将这天砍的稀巴烂。【修士境界——醒命星,开星府,融星灵,游星空……】
  • 大话暗黑

    大话暗黑

    “戚天,我们和平共处、你做老大,请用圣灵泉……”光明神一脸巴结、端茶倒水捶背捏足。“欺天,这是地狱、您走错地了!奴才给您擦鞋……”魔神哈达子直流、添着流云靴。“骑天,四小兽焉能扛起您那尊屁、给您做巡视喽啰看得上不?”麒麟、龙、凤与龟趴伏于地、低眉顺目。“正好尔等聚众一堂,给你们融个魂、夜长该梦美人是吧?谁先来……”戚天面带微笑、欣赏跌坐于地嗦嗦发抖的众神。突然,天边九彩祥云起,飘来:“俺老孙来也,谁长了三头六臂、敢与俺老孙齐名,来、大战三百回合……”
  • 京门风月

    京门风月

    前世家族被诛尽,谢芳华重生之后,她就发誓一定保得侯府不倒,谢氏不灭!混入皇室隐卫习武艺,学权谋,八年后回京。南秦京城因她的归来霎时风起云涌。而她不止识风月,也能定乾坤!却被英亲王府的秦铮无赖缠上!爷的媳妇儿,哪里跑!本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 开心修仙记

    开心修仙记

    杨诚走在路上被跳楼自杀的考生砸死,轮回之主念他生性善良、死的无辜,判他转生通天塔界,从此踏上修仙之路。他不喜欢打打杀杀,只为开心修仙,偶尔追求美女,偶尔看看夕阳,岂不快哉?炼器是他的最大爱好,因为它曾经是个军事迷,于是乎各种奇怪的法宝改变了修仙世界。