Our Daily Homily
by F B Meyer
Thou art the same. - Hebrews 1:12
Thou art the same, when contrasted with nature. - The solid bases of the hills were laid in their sockets by Thy
hands. The blue tapestry of the sky was woven by Thy fingers; and it is as easy for Thee to lay it aside and substitute
new heavens as for us to lay aside a worn-out dress and take another. And as the change of dress does not affect
the nature of the wearer, neither will all the changes of creation or nature affect the power of Thine hand or
the tenderness of Thy heart. Thou art the same!
Thou art the same, when contrasted with men. They come and go. The great ones of the past-Abraham, Moses, David,
Elijah - stood with Thee for a moment on the earth, and then passed into the great silence. Augustine, Luther,
Calvin, Knox, wrought for Thee and with Thee, and passed away. Our own teachers and friends have not been suffered
to continue by reason of death. One by one they have passed from us; but Thou art the same, and Thy years shall
not fail.
Thou art the same, when contrasted with our own moods and impulses. - They are too fitful; like the morning dew;
like the evening wind. Sometimes we feel we could die for Thee; at other times we sleep amid Thy sorrows. Emotions,
resolutions, methods of thought and action, are permanent only in their changefulness. But Thou art the same -
changeless and timeless, our Rock of Ages, our impregnable Fortress and Home!
This was the import of the Burning Bush which flamed out on the hillside in the dark night, but did not burn to
the ground. Steadily, constantly, fiercely, the fire shone, but needed no fuel from the tree - symbol of the I
AM.
A merciful and faithful high priest. - Hebrews 2:17
The priesthood of Jesus stretches like the sky from the horizon of the past to that of the eternal future. It covers
all we know of Him.
In the days that preceded His incarnation. - We are told that the priesthood of Melchizedek was made like that
of the Son of God (Heb 7:3), from which it is clear that all the apparatus of priesthood within and without the
Jewish system was some faint imagining forth of the priestly mediation and intercession of the Saviour. The eternal
temple was reared, the incense of intercession ascended, the sacrifice of the Lamb was slain, before the first
thin spiral of smoke rose from Moriah's summit.
In the days of His earthly ministry. - At the Passover, when the High Priest had finished the sacred rites, he
came forth to the people, and said, "Now ye are clean." In Joh 15:3 Jesus addressed His disciples in
the same words. His authority to forgive sins; His quick sympathy, and likeness to His brethren; His frequent prayers;
His intercessions for sinners, as when He pleaded for His crucifiers 3 His intercessions for the tempted, as when
He prayed for Peter; His intercessions for His own, as in the matchless John 17; His reference to the shedding
of blood; the whole circumstances of His death-show His priestly attitude, which culminated in His passing within
the vail.
In the days of the present dispensation. - The divine apostle tells us that he saw Christ clothed in a vesture
to the foot, and employs this specific word for high-priestly dress. He saw Him engaged in priestly ministry; and
in a subsequent vision tells us that he saw Him mingle much incense with the prayer of saints, and present them
before God.
Consider . . . Jesus. - Hebrews 3:1
Who are to consider Him? - "Holy brethren." Because we are the brethren of Jesus, we must consider our
Brother. Because we are brethren with all, whom He brothers, we should emulate the saints of all ages in their
eager gaze at Christ. We must possess the holiness without which none can see the Lord, and we must live in holy
love with all who bear the name of Christ. Do you lack either of these? This is the reason why your eyes are blinded.
Step out of the mist into the clear prospect : -
"a step,
A single step, shall free you from the skirts
Of the blind vapor, and open to your view
Glory beyond all glory ever seen
By waking sense or by the dreaming soul."
What right have they to consider Him? - Because they are "partakers of a heavenly calling." They have
turned from the world, from the fascinations of the sin and the flesh; they are seeking the heavenly city, the
New Jerusalem. Surely such have a right, given them of grace, to live in daily personal vision of their King!
In what aspects should they consider Him? As Apostle, whom God has sent out of His bosom to man, and whom man sends
back to God. As Priest, who was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin, who bears our needs and
sins and sorrows on His heart. As the Son, compared with whom Moses was but a servant. As Creator, by whom all
things were made, and without whom was not anything made. As the Head of the household of those who believe. As
the All-faithful One, who will never resign His charge. Consider Jesus in each of these aspects, and rejoice in
Him.
There remaineth, therefore, a sabbath rest for the people of God. - Hebrews 4:9 (R. V.).
There is a rest for weary souls. - God speaks of it as His Rest. He entered it, we are told, when He had finished
His work, and beheld it to be very good; and ever since the door has been standing open for the travel-stained,
weary children of men to enter it. To every other creation-day there were evening and morning, but not to this;
it partakes of the nature of eternity in its timeless bliss.
Let us rejoice that this rest remaineth. - Of course, the Sabbath, which was and is a type of it, could not exhaust
it. And Canaan, with its sweet plains and cessation of the wilderness wanderings, could not completely fulfill
it; because centuries after it had been given through Joshua, in the Psalms God spoke of yet another day, as though
His rest were still future.
The rest may be a present experience. - The word "remaineth" has diverted the thoughts of commentators
who have supposed it referred to heaven. There is rest, sweet rest, there. But "remaineth" means "unexhausted,
unrealized, by aught which has taken place." The rest is for us here and now. ', We which have believed do
enter into rest." Where is it? In the bosom of Christ: "Come unto Me, and I will give you rest."
It is in ploughing the furrow of daily duty - " Take My yoke; . . . I find rest."
His rest is compatible with great activity. He that enters into the Divine rest is not reduced to quietism. On
the seventh day the Creator rested from creation; but He works in providence. Jesus, on the seventh day, rested
from Calvary; but He pleads in heaven. Cease from your own works, after a similar fashion; abandon your restless
planning and striving; by the grace of the Holy Spirit better service will be produced.
Senses exercised to discern good and evil. - Hebrews 5:14
It is difficult to exaggerate the value of the physical senses. Take, for instance, that of scent. It is the means
of exquisite enjoyment, conveying to us the perfume of garden or field; and it secures us against serious perils
that lie in wait for our unwary footsteps. By the order of God's providence, hurtful substances exhale noxious
and forbidding odors, by reason of which we are warned from going into their close proximity.
The soul also is endowed with senses. How important a part our spiritual senses may play in the regimen of the
inner life! If we are quick to discern good and evil, we may welcome the one and avoid the other with ever-increasing
readiness. We may receive the blessing of the one when still afar off, and avoid the curse of the other when only
threatening us.
The army which is ill served by its scouts stands a much worse chance than if it were forewarned when an attack
was advancing. The foremost ranks of the foe may be over the ramparts, and engaged in the heart of the fortress,
before there has been time for preparation. Oh, to detect temptation, when still it is only a thought, a suggestion,
a faint shadow on the sky!
We may sharpen our senses by use. When I was in the tea-trade, my sense of touch and taste and smell became acute
to discern quite minute differences. We need a similar acuteness in discerning good and evil. May our hearts become
most sensitive to all that might lead to temptation, so that we may deal with the tempter in the very earliest
suggestions of evil. Lord, make us quick of scent in the fear of the Lord (Isa 11:3) (R. V.).
It is impossible to renew again to repentance, the while . . . - Hebrews 6:6 (R. V. marg.)
The writer of this Epistle is eager to lead his readers from first principles to that strong meat which was befitting
for those of mature growth; and, as he proceeds to do so, it was as though he were arrested by a sudden thought
of some who had recently fallen away from the faith.
In the awful stress of trial which accompanied the fall of Jerusalem, the Hebrew Christians, who were still dwelling
in Palestine, were strongly tempted to apostatize. Some, indeed, had done so. But can we really consider that they
ever were true Christians? They went out, because they had never been truly of. They had been enlightened as to
the doctrines of Christianity; but the enlightenment had been of their head rather than of their heart. They had
tasted of the heavenly hopes, anticipations, and joys of the Gospel message, without really belonging to the Household
of Faith. But, notwithstanding all, they had gone back.
It is impossible to renew such to repentance, whilst they go on living as they do, crucifying the Son of God by
their vicious and cowardly course of action, and putting Him to an open shame. Notice that whilst, suggested by
Bishop Westcott, of the margin of the R. V. It is the solution of the great difficulty which has perplexed many
timid souls. The impossibility of renewal is only for those who persist in their evil ways. Abandon your sins,
and God will restore you to your old place.
It cannot be too clearly emphasized that this text does not say that backsliders cannot be restored to the favor
and forgiveness of God; but that they cannot be restored so long as they cling to the things which had been the
sources of their declension.
After the power of an indissoluble life. - Hebrews 7:16 (R. V marg.).
This chapter is a veritable Psalm of Life. It overflows with the message of the Easter morning. Throughout its
verses it is witnessed that He liveth; that He ever liveth; that He liveth after the power of an indissoluble life.
Remember all that was done to dissolve and loose it. Satan spoke to his chief captains, Sepulchre and Corruption,
and bade them hold his Prisoner fast. The Sanhedrim affixed their seal, set the watch, and made the grave as secure
as possible. But it was all in vain. His body could not see corruption. His life defied death. All through the
Greek mythology there is the wail of infinite sorrow. Laocoon and his sons strangled by the folds of the mighty
serpent: day always mastered by night: the year with its wealth of life descending to the abyss. Strive as man
might, he would be mastered at last, and primeval night reign once more. But all this is altered in Jesus. He is
Priest after the power of an indissoluble life.
And, what is more, that life may be communicated to us by the Holy Spirit. It is not only true that He ever liveth;
but also that because He lives, and as He lives, we shall live also. In the first creation God breathed into Adam
the breath of his life, and he became a living soul; but in the second creation Christ breathes into us the spirit
of His life, and our spirit is filled with a property which it had not previously, and in which the sons of men
have no share. "The first man Adam became a living soul. The last Adam became a life-giving spirit."
"He that is joined to the Lord is one spirit." See to it that you deny your own life, so that His life
may become evermore regnant within you.
In that he saith, a new covenant, he hath made the first old. - Hebrews 8:13
There had been a manifest decay and vanishing away of the first Tabernacle or Temple with its rites and services.
At the time when these words were written there were evident symptoms of the approaching collapse of the whole
system of which pious Jews had been wont to boast. But the Holy Spirit reassures their failing hearts.
It is well, He seems to say, that these should vanish from the earth; that men may be certified that the old covenant,
of which they were the sign and seal, has also gone - gone never to be recalled. Thereupon, the very natural enquiry
was suggested: If the old covenant has decayed and vanished away, what is the agreement or arrangement under which
we are living now? To this enquiry the present chapter is an answer.
Those who believe in Christ are still in covenant relationship with God. A new covenant has been set up, which
indeed is as old as the everlasting hills. It is the covenant of love; the covenant which says very little of what
man does, and much of the I WILLS of Jehovah; a covenant which was entered into between God and His Son, standing
as Mediator; a covenant which has been sealed with priceless blood.
The provisions of that covenant are enumerated in the foregoing verses: that God will engrave His law on mind and
heart, and take us to be His people and be our God, and remember our sins no more. As the decay of the symbols
of the Old Testament indicated that it was vanishing, so the ever-fresh beauty of the supper of our Lord, as it
was practiced in the first Church, witnessed to the permanence of the New Testament.
Unto them that look for him shall he appear. - Hebrews 9:28
There is an evident parallel intended between the first and second Advent, and especially in the manner of looking
for it. At the first Advent there were many who were definitely looking for and hastening to that day. Simeon was
waiting for the consolation of Israel; and Anna spoke of the infant Lord to those who were expecting redemption
in Israel. To look for the consolation and to look for the redemption were the two articles in that early creed.
And presently this quiet, patient waiting broke out into the rapturous song of the Nunc Dimittis.
But all Jews were not looking for that blessed Hope, the appearance of the Grace of God. When our Lord came, the
leading teacher of Judaism was Philo, and he not only had no Messianic hopes of his own, but discouraged them in
other people. He conceded that there might be a return of Jewish national life; but he had no expectation of it
being under the leadership of the Christ.
It has been truly remarked that this eager looking for the Advent has always been the mark of the living Church.
"Ye turned," said the apostle, "unto God from idols . . . to wait for His Son from heaven."
And again he said, "A crown of righteousness which the Lord, the righteous Judge, shall give unto me in that
day; and not to me only, but to all them that love His appearing."
As it was with the first Advent it shall be with the second. The Son of God will come at a time and in a manner
for which men are not prepared; and only the elect, who may have been contemned and despised by the world at large,
will discern Him, and go forth to meet Him in the air.
He taketh away the first, that he may establish the second. - Hebrews 10:9
The meaning of this is clear. In the old covenant the stress was laid on the outward rite; but in the new covenant,
for burnt-offerings and sacrifices for sin are substituted first the entire devotion and consecration of the blessed
Lord to His Father's will; and next, ours in Him.
It is very noticeable that by the offering of the cross, in which the Saviour's yielded will culminated, we are
said to have been sanctified, consecrated, or set apart once for all (Heb 10:10). The thought there is, evidently,
that our Saviour's death has implicated us forevermore; and that His Church, whom He represented in that supreme
act, is forever pledged to be dead unto the world and sin.
But still later we learn that He hath perfected forever them that are sanctified (Heb 10:14). The change of tense
surely indicates that what was accomplished for us in the purpose of God when Jesus died, must be accomplished
in us by the operation of the Holy Spirit. Every time, therefore, our will is brought into more perfect union with
that of God, a further step is taken toward that glorious elevation which Jesus made ours in the death of the cross.
And if you would have an incentive to this, remember how Jesus promised that all who would do the will of God should
be reckoned members of the holy family (Mat 12:46-50). Are you a member of that family? You may be, and sit only
on the outer circle, for the constituent members are always altering their position toward the central Christ;
now advancing toward the inner heart, now receding. Oh, see to it that you are not only within the holy circle
of the will of God, but that you are near the golden centre where Jesus is seated.
They without us should not be made perfect. - Hebrews 11:40
This chapter proves that the saints of all ages are essentially one. There is a link which unites them; a thrill
which passes from hand to hand around the circle. One theme for many voices; one attitude for many faces; one inspiration
for many hearts. The saints that lived before the Advent and those that have lived since are one in their faith
in the living God, making the unseen visible, the distant near, and seeing the eternal through the transient and
ephemeral.
And now heaven waits. Its joys are not complete; its rapture not full. The blessed are blessed; but there is yet
a margin between what they are and what they will be - between what they enjoy, and what they may enjoy. The choir
is not full, and the anthem cannot be fully rendered till our voices blend in it. There is a pause, a halt, an
expectancy, an incompleteness, till we come. Your dear ones want you to be there. They have not gone far into the
heart of God's bliss, but are lingering near the gate till you have joined them.
From Switzerland your friends write you to say it is perfectly beautiful, but "it will be better when you
join us; we are reserving the best excursions till you arrive; we are incomplete without you; make haste."
It is thus that the blessed await us. The spirit of Heaven is well represented by the courtesy of the old prophet,
who would not sit down to meat with Jesse and his sons, till David, the youngest, had come thither also. And when
the whole family is gathered, there will be a perfecting indeed, from which no element shall be wanting.
Oh rapture of eternal joy! We stretch out our hands in yearning desire, and doing so touch other hands reached
toward ours!
Ye are come unto Mount Sion. - Hebrews 12:22
These poor Hebrew Christians, outcast from their Temple, and soon to see their beloved city vanish from the earth,
were sore at heart. What a contrast was presented by the bare room in which they celebrated the simple supper and
the splendid Temple with its magnificent rites! What a tiny rill their hymns were, compared with the mighty torrent
of Temple psalmody! What a handful of worshippers, compared with the multitudes that congregated from all the world!
Sometimes it seemed as though the contrast were unbearable.
Then said the Holy Ghost, lift up your eyes and see. Ye are not the lonely, isolated handful ye suppose. Every
time you offer your prayer and sing your hymns ye are joining with the spirits of the perfected just, with numberless
holy angels, and with vast multitudes in heaven and on earth who are ever adoring Christ. You climb the temple
of Worship, of which the steps are prayers and the gates praise, and as you do so, on either hand go myriads of
happy and holy spirits; and those surely are specially near whom you "have loved long since and lost awhile."
What special blessing these thoughts will bring to the bedridden, who for many years have not entered the courts
of God's house; to the aged, and lonely, and exiled! We never worship God alone. As soon as we begin to pray, we
say, Our Father which art in heaven, forgive our sins; give us our daily bread. We need not die to pass within
thy gates, O Jerusalem, city of God! Already we tread thy golden pavement, and hear the music of the waters of
life, and press to our wounds the leaves of thy tree.
Make you perfect in every good work to do his will. - Hebrews 13:21
To perfect is to adjust, to put in joint, to articulate us with the living Saviour. It may be described as a surgical
operation. Too many of those who are in the Body of Christ are not in living articulate union with Him. Hence the
writer asks that we may be properly jointed with Christ.
The Agent of this process. - The God of Peace. Let us not be afraid of Him, as though He must use some terrible
anguish, some heartrending grief. He will not shrink from this, if all other methods fail; but He prefers to achieve
His purpose by gentle, tender, peaceful means. He is the God of the summer evening; of the bursting spring; of
the slumber of the little babe.
The Guarantee that He will perform this process. - He brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that Great Shepherd
of the sheep; and surely the power which achieved that bringing again is capable of any demand that may be made
on it. Will He do so much for the Shepherd, and neglect the flock? Will He give Him the victory, and forsake those
for whom He won it? In bringing the Shepherd did He not pledge Himself by the most solemn sanctions to do all that
needed doing for the weakest of His sheep?
The Object of this process. - He adjusts us, that all which is well pleasing in His sight may be readily fulfilled
in and through our yielded natures. When the helmsman is right with the captain, the boat will naturally take the
course that the captain selects. When the machinery is adjusted with the motive power, the pulse of the piston
will be felt away at the furthest loom, with the smallest amount of leakage and the largest of result.