| The Ivory
Palaces of the King By The Rev. J. Wilbur Chapman, D.D. |
|
Chapter 1
THE PALACE HE LEFT When an Old Testament poet would give us a glimpse of
the beauty of the character of
Jesus Christ and press upon us some conception as to
what his incarnation meant to Him by way of
sacrifice and to us in the fullness of blessing, he
writes these words: "All Thy garments smell of
Myrrh and Aloes and Cassia, out of the Ivory Palaces."
These words form only one touch of a
master's hand in the almost perfect delineation of a
perfect character; for the forty-fifth psalm is a
picture of the Son of God, from the first verse almost
to the last. It is so presented that it appeals to
us in different ways. To the eye he is the most fair, to
the ear most gracious, and his garments are
so perfumed that even as he sweeps past us, by faith,
there comes to us a better fragrance than any
that has ever been borne on the wings of the summer
wind. It is the purpose of this little book, not
only to present the 'Ivory Palaces' from which he came
to be our Savior but also to present the
great Palace of a Christian's life; at the door of which
he stands today beckoning us on, saying, "I
am come, that they might have life and that they might
have it more abundantly." The very idea of a
Palace is that of splendor. There have been magnificent
palaces in this world like the Tuileries of
the French, the Windsor castle of the English and the
Alhambra of the Spanish; but they are not for
a moment, to be compared to the Palaces of Ivory from
whence He came to redeem the world.
The Old Testament poet then, could only have had this
thought in mind: that the Palaces of
Ivory were overwhelmingly beautiful, almost beyond the
power of words to describe, and yet,
God so loved the world, and His Son was so submissive to
His will, that the scene in Bethlehem
was enacted and the death on the cross was made real.
The most touching thing about it all to me is this; that
He came from such a place; to such a
place; from the company of the angels to this world
where His own received Him not: where He
was despised of men, a pilgrim without a home, a
wanderer without a friend; and yet He knew all
about it before. He came, and herein is seen His
marvelous love, for He was "the lamb slain from
the foundation of the world." Holman Hunt had the idea
in his master piece, "The Shadow of the
Cross," in which he represents Jesus of Nazareth as
standing at the carpenter's bench where he is
wearied with his work, and, as the day is dying, he
lifts Himself from the constrained position in
which He has been laboring, and seeking to relax His
muscles, He stretches forth his arms, and
stands thus for a moment while the sunlight is coming in
at one of the windows just at the proper
angle to cast at his back the shadow of a cross. The
artist caught this idea in his picture. The
shadow of the cross was on him at Bethlehem, in Egypt,
at Nazareth, in Gethsemane and at last
deepened into Calvary. And yet in the shadows ever
deepening he moved on to become our
Redeemer.
I am persuaded that if I could only make you feel all
that he endured as he came out from
the Ivory Palaces, to be your Savior, you could not
resist his power. Another thought about his
coming may be suggestive. From other palaces of earth,
there is a way that leads out to the greater
highway. Along this the friends make their journeys to
and from the mansion. Not infrequently they
may be seen at quite a distance, then at a bend in the
way, they are lost sight of, only to be seen a
little nearer, until at last their journey is completed
and with their friends they are united. As I think
of Him coming out of the Ivory Palaces, such a highway
springs to my mind. It is the Old
Testament: it is the grand avenue that leads up to the
gospel dispensation. There are very many
people who have turned away from the Old Testament, with
its sacrifices and burnt offerings, but
that man has not yet taken hold of the real sweetness of
God's book who has found it only in the
New Testament scriptures. The old couplet is true: "The
new is in the old contained; The old is by
the new explained."
The Old Testament becomes not only plain but convincing
when you make it point to
Christ. One of my friends took home a dissecting map to
his little children seeking thus to instruct
them in geography. They worked diligently to put it
together but failed. One girl lost her patience
and rose up from the floor where they were at work
saying, she would try no more. Her foot
touched one of the pieces of the map and turned it over
and she saw on the other side a part of a
man's hand. Turning over another piece she saw part of
his face and then to her great surprise she
found a part of the figure on every piece before her;
then she said to her sister, "let us put the man
together first." this they did, and when the map was
turned over behold every river, mountain and
sea was in its proper place. This is the secret of Bible
study. Put the man Christ Jesus together
first. Isaac bound on the faggots thus becomes a
representation of Christ, while Abraham points to
God. Jacob's Ladder rising up from Bethel is a type of
Jesus Christ. One side of the ladder is His
human nature, the other side of the ladder is His divine
nature; all the incidents in His life are the
rounds of the ladder, and as we stand and look up, we
hear His voice saying: "By me, if any man
enter in, he shall be saved." The smitten rock in the
Old Testament tells of Him who said on the
great day of the feast, "if any man thirst let him come
unto me and drink." The Brazen serpent is a
type of him who said, "and I if I be lifted up from the
earth will draw all men unto me."
Down the long avenue he comes. Types and figures get
plainer and plainer until
Bethlehem's gates swing open and shepherds are aroused
with the angel's song: "Unto you is born
this day in the city of David a Saviour which is Christ
the Lord," and from His first infant step to
the last one upon Calvary when, bearing His cross he
fainted beneath its load, His whole life was
a seeking after the lost. There is not only given to us
however, a hint of the splendor from which
He came; there is also a touch of a master's hand which
adds great tenderness to the fact of His
coming. In the cathedral at Notre Dame there is an old
chest which contains the robes worn on
great occasions in the ages past. It is said that there
is the robe worn by Pope Plus the VII., at the
crowning of the first Napoleon, and the robe that was
worn at the baptism of the Second Napoleon.
A friend of mine said that as these garments were before
him, there came a perfect rush of
historical memories to his mind, and so it has seemed to
me in order that the heart of the beholder
might be made very tender and the picture of Jesus
Christ Himself most impressive, the poet not
only tells us of His coming incarnation but holds up
before us the garments He wore.
Passing through the hall of my own home one day, I
beheld on the couch in one of the rooms
an old garment I had not seen for years. It was made
after the fashion of twenty-five years ago. If
one should put it on today, it would be only to provoke
mirth, but as my eyes rested upon it, there
came to my mind one of the tenderest scenes in a
person's life. It was the last dress I had seen my
mother wear. I stood alone in that room for half an hour
with my hand upon the garment; the very
touch of it seeming to bring before me, with ever
increasing tenderness, the face of one who had
been for twenty-three years in heaven. The very sight of
the garment made the tears flow like rain I
am sure the Old Testament poet himself must have wanted
us to have some such conception of
Jesus Christ when he said there was myrrh in his
garments. He must have had some reference to the
very sweetness of His life, for myrrh is always fragrant
-- the smallest piece of it will fill a room
with perfume. It was the first thing they gave Him at
His birth -- almost the last thing they offered
Him upon His cross.
Did not His garments smell of myrrh, because of the
sweetness of His influence? You
cannot wear Him out. Put upon him all your burdens.
Afflict Him with all your griefs and He is
ever the same. If we could but tell the story of His
sweetness and if we could but live His life, we
could charm the drunkard from his cups, the prodigal
from his wanderings, and the sinner from his
sins.
One of my friends owns the two master pieces of
Munkasky's "Christ before Pilate" and
"Christ on Calvary." When the former picture was on
exhibition in the lower part of Canada, it is
said a rough looking man came to the door of the tent
and said to the attendant, "is Jesus Christ
here?" When informed that the picture was there, he
asked the price of admission. Throwing down
a piece of silver, he passed in and stood in the
presence of the masterpiece. He kept his hat on, sat
down on the chair before the painting and brushed off
the catalogue. The one having the picture in
charge had a desire to see how such a picture would move
such a man. The man sat for a moment
and then reverently removed his hat, stooped and picked
up the catalogue, and, looking first at it
and then at that marvelous face which seemed to throb
with life; tears started from his eyes and
rolled down his cheeks; he sat for an hour, then he left
the tent and as he went out said: "I am a
rough sailor from the lakes but I promised my mother
before I went on this last cruise, that I would
go and see Jesus Christ. I .never believed in such
things before, but a man who could paint a
picture like that, must believe in them, and there is
something in the picture that makes me believe
in them too."
It is a marvelous thing that there is power in a canvass
when touched by a master hand to
save a soul, It is also marvelous that your life and
mine may be so transformed that people can see
in us Jesus Christ; and when they behold in us His
sweetness there is a power before which they
must surrender. One of the best things therefore to
represent Him in His sweetness, is myrrh.
There is another touch given to the picture which adds
both tenderness and pathos. David
detected aloes in His garments. Very frequently aloes
mean bitterness. It was a bitter life for
Christ. The nights on the mountain, on the sea, and in
the desert were nights of bitterness. His
bosom was the resting place for John, and yet He had no
place to lay His own head. He fed the
five thousand, yet ofttimes He was an hungered and no
man gave unto Him. Bitter betrayal, bitter
pain, bitter bereavement stung its way through his
brain, his hands, his heart.
There was one family that seemed to be very near him.
They lived at Bethany, and one day
as he visited them, behold Lazarus was dead. He knows
what it is to miss one from the family
circle. Lonely and afflicted, his eyes filled with tears
which flowed down his cheeks, upon his
breast, and then fell to the ground. Aloes in His very
garments. Oh, ye who have done naught but
reject Him, how do you feel in His presence -- who to
save you, left the Ivory Palaces to endure
all this?
There is still another touch to the picture, for Cassia
is found in his garments. Cassia grows
in India, and has healing power, and what could it mean
but that He is the great physician? When
He was on earth, mothers lifted their little children to
Him that He might bless them, and fathers
brought their suffering boys that He might set them
free. Lepers rat crying after Him, that He might
drive away their uncleanness. Blind men reached out to
Him in their blindness that He might open
their eyes.
When I was in Hartford at one time with Mr. and Mrs.
Stebbins we were asked to visit the
Deaf and Dumb asylum, and speak and sing to the children
who never had heard a human voice. It
was a very novel experience, and yet as my friends sang,
"Shall you? Shall I?" and the interpreter
told them the song, it so touched their hearts that
tears flowed down their cheeks. But what moved
me more than anything else, was one little boy who had
been born deaf and dumb, and who at an
early age had by sickness lost first his eye sight, then
the sense of taste and the sense of smell; but
as they introduced him to us, they also presented his
teacher, a young, frail, beautiful girl, who,
when the boy was brought to the institution, said that
she would give her life to bring him to the
understanding of some language. She taught him the
language of touch, and I saw her fingers move
rapidly in the palms of his hands, and the boy's
sightless eyes flashed with intelligence as he
hurried over the building to do her bidding. And I said
to myself that was what Christ did for me. I
was blind and He opened my eyes; deaf, and He unstopped
my ears and poured into my very soul
the harmony of heaven; dumb, and He unsealed my lips and
pressed upon them the language of the
skies. The great physician is a great Saviour, and He
will help you whatever your need may be.
He came into the world becoming incarnate, dwelling in
the flesh, a seeking, sorrowing,
suffering Saviour, crying out with a tenderness which
should touch every heart "By me, if ally man
enter, he shall be saved." And yet with all that Jesus
Christ has done there is still something for every one of us to do before we may enter into the Ivory Palaces of a
Christian experience. |