JOY OF THE LORD'S ADVENT N. D. PENDLETON 1921
NEW CHURCH LIFE
VOL. XLI JANUARY, 1921 No. 1
"The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me; because the Lord hath anointed me to preach good tidings unto the meek;... to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord;... to appoint unto them that mourn in Zion, to give unto them a crown of beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness; that they might be called trees of righteousness, the planting of the Lord, that He might be glorified." (Isaiah 61:1-3.)
These things are predicated of " the acceptable year of the Lord," that is, of His coming into the world in the fulness of time to effect a plenary redemption. The "acceptable year " is the chosen time of the advent,-the period in the life-history of the race on earth when it was necessary that the Lord should be born into the world a man among men.
The necessity arose from the fact that the race had fallen, successively, into ways more and more evil, until at length no one could be saved by the power for good resident within him. The Divine in the heavens, and in men on earth, which beforetime was sufficient unto salvation, was now no longer adequate. By virtue of successive lapses, men had removed themselves so far from the Lord, and had suffered such a loss of the Divine power, that they could no longer raise themselves, as of themselves, out of the evils into which they had fallen.
A personal coming was the only means by which this condition could be remedied. By being born a man, the Lord could dwell with men as one among them; and, by personal contact, by precept and example, He could lead them. By being born a man, He could take upon Himself man's fallen nature, and, by Virtue of the Divine resident within Him, could re-create and even glorify that which was fallen. Thus, in His person as a man on earth, He could, by overcoming all evil, ascend through the heavens to the Father above, thereby opening anew the way of life for men. This He did, and thus was man redeemed.
This is the meaning of the coming of the Lord in the "acceptable year," or the appointed time,-the day of judgment so often referred to in the Word. That year was of moment to all creation,-to the whole race of man, to the past, present, and future. It was prophesied from the beginning, and the prophecy was repeated in every age, until the end. In the hope raised by that prophecy, mankind lived for countless generations. Its fulfillment was anticipated with a longing unspeakable. Men knew that their race was fallen, and was evermore to fall, until the end,-until the fulfillment of the Divine prophecy. Individuals could be and were saved, in all times; but men, especially the wise, perceived the racial decline that was under way, and that it was inevitable. Temporary reactions,-the formation of successive Churches,-delayed, but did not stop the downward trend. Church followed Church, but always on a lower grade of spiritual life. At length the ultimate plane was reached; no lower spiritual formation could be given. The final step was taken. A structure-not a Church-was built,-a mere outward representation. This was the last possible; and when this structure was broken, the end was at hand. Thus men, from being celestial, became spiritual, then natural, and at length sensual and merely formal. They could fall no lower, and continue men with the possibility of becoming angels.
From the beginning, the wise perceived the nature and meaning of the fall, and their hearts were inexpressibly saddened. But their sadness was relieved by, a glorious hope; and in this hope there was given them "a crown of beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, and a garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness." This was the hope of the coming of the Messiah, when the race should be redeemed to God, when the seed of woman should bruise the head of the serpent,-that old serpent which had tempted men to their fall.
This hope was the living thing in all the ancient religions,-the heart and the soul of them. The time of its fulfillment was not known.
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Could men have known the long delay, they must have despaired. Mercifully this was hidden. It might occur at any time; each generation thought it possible to them. Their ears were ever open, listening for the glad tidings; their eyes scanned the heavens for the new star. This hope was most alive and most potent for good in the earlier days after the fall. Gradually it weakened, at length was almost lost; but while it lasted,-so long as it throbbed in the hearts of men,-it was powerful to save; and so long, also, its fulfillment was delayed. But when this hope was all but gone, then the coming in fact became imperative.
It was like this with the hope of the Second Coming. Never was the Lord so ardently and so confidently expected as in the first generations after His departure from the world. But with the passing of time, the world grew weary, then doubtful, and at length more than doubtful. The minds of men turned aside, and ceased to think of such things.
When the Child was laid in the manger, Herod knew not where the Christ should be born. When the Lord came a second time, He came quietly, silently, " as a thief in the night."
"The Spirit of the Lord God is upon me; because the Lord hath anointed me to preach good tidings unto the meek;... to proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord ... to appoint unto them that mourn in Zion, to give unto them a crown of beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness; that they might be called trees of righteousness, the planting of the Lord, that He might be glorified." As the days of the ancient people were saddened by the sense of increasing evil, so was there a kindling of joy at the thought of the Advent, when evil would be overcome. Their prophets pictured the coming day, when the sorrows of evil would give place to the rejoicings of great joy, in words of marvelous beauty. This contrast is the phase of the subject our text presents. Then would be given "a crown of beauty for ashes," "the oil of joy for mourning," "the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness."
Two things touch the life of man at all points. Two states enter and qualify his every mood. As he is conceived in pleasure and born in pain, so do joy and sadness, the two extremes of human affections, run throughout and temper all his life's experiences.
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Each joyous state is tinged with something bitter, and every sorrow is relieved by a secret hope. Between these two are an indefinite variety of intermediate states, so that life moves, for the most part, between the extremes, among states seemingly neutral. Only on exceptional occasions are the extremes distinctly manifest. Only now and then is man gifted with a defined sensation of joy; only occasionally is he oppressed by sorrow; yet both are present in all that is seemingly neutral. There are continual joys unperceived and many sorrows not realized. For both are but the two extreme phases of love; and love is life.
Joy arises from the expansion of man's life's love, and sadness from its constriction. This pulsing of the life's love, while intermittent, is continual. It is a kind of animation of the soul, comparable with the heart-beat in the body. But its rhythmic stroke cannot be distinctly perceived, even by angelic minds. Yet herein is the high origin of every perceivable joy, and also of the sense of sadness. These two are, in fact, predicates of the mind; only their origin may be traced to the soul, while their effects are derived into the body.
The animation of the soul is a result of the influx of life from the Lord and its reception in man. This causes rhythmic vibrations, which are transformed into affections in the mind and into titillations in the body. The affections are perceived, and the titillations are felt; the one as joys and sorrows, the other as physical pleasures and pains.
Swedenborg testifies in the work on The Soul that joyous affections "expand the brain and diffuse the lower mind;" "they exhilarate and refresh;" "they restore the brain with new heat and the lower mind with new life." "They are so many heatings of the brain and consequently of the body, and so many resuscitations of the life of the lower mind, and consequently of the sensations and actions of the body; while unpleasant affections compress the brain and confine the lower mind." "They wound and sadden;" "they destroy the brain and extinguish the lower mind;" "they are so many torpors and frigidities of the brain and body."
Again, it is said that joy of mind extends the cortical substances, so that the animal spirits and the bloods flow freely; and in excessive joy, even the pores of the bones are opened.
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Thus by joy all ways of communication are opened from highest to lowest. It is felt as a pleasing tremor, a vital heat, a lively trembling, which so clears, restores, and vivifies the brain that that organ in a moment falls back into the state of its first innocence and youth. On the other hand, sadness of mind compresses the brain, constrains the cortical substances, so that the animal spirits and bloods do not flow freely; this, if continued, ends in melancholy and many diseases. Deep sadness affects even the little vessels entering the bones, so that by it all ways of communication from highest to lowest are constricted, and if closed, the mind and body fall into a premature old age.
Joy and sorrow, pleasure and pain,-these are the two extreme phases of life. The one is every man's heaven, and the other his hell. The one is universally sought, the other avoided. The promise of the text opens to view a heaven of delight, an abundance of every blessing-"To give unto them a crown of beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness." Words could not better picture the delights of man-his heaven; and therefore the state of spiritual men on the occasion of the coming of the Lord-His coming in the flesh-after so many world-weary ages of waiting-of expectations disappointed, until the certainty of faith became but a hope, and the hope a doubt, and the doubt more than doubtful.
Yet, even so, He finally came amid the rejoicing of the angels. He came, and in His coming He changed the course of all things in the world of human affairs-the destiny of the ages. He accomplished the wonderful work, of which Revelation tells. He redeemed the race from death and the world from destruction, and planted in the hearts of men a new love, and in their minds a new faith, and in both heart and mind He put a new spirit,-the Christmas Spirit of rejoicing because of the birth of the Lord. By this new spirit of rejoicing, the " ashes " of a dead hope were exchanged for a " crown of beauty,"-the "spirit of heaviness " was transformed into a " garment of praise."
Christmas stands as the symbol for this new spirit of rejoicing. It is, therefore, the incomparable day, especially for the innocent and the believing,-for the children, and for the child in each one. To appreciate its wonderful and abiding charm, we must go back and enter sympathetically into childish states of innocence and joy.
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The affections cluster around the thought of the Lord's birth,-the babe in the manger. This is central; but accompanying it, in the child's mind, is the wonderful shower of blessings received, the good gifts given from a happy heart and a glad mind. To the little child, not yet wise to the ways of the world, these gifts are blessings, and they seem to be endless-as if eternal. This is significant of the true Christmas perception; it is felt only by the little ones, who have not yet eaten of the tree of knowledge. All too soon, knowledge begins to constrain, the child begins to measure and forecast. A little thought of self, a little disappointment, creeps in, and there is a touch of sadness. The charm,-alas!-begins to fade. The early, the celestial Christmas spirit, passes. No longer is there a wonderful, a mysterious happiness. The endless day is now ever, the numberless gifts are all counted-often discounted beforehand-for the child is becoming worldly-wise.
The state changes, indeed, but the meaning and the memory of this day, its early celestial mysteries and wonders,-are never lost. Its spiritual meaning, its Divine significance, is indeed eternal; and the early seeming to the child, of a veritable shower of blessings,-the countless multitude of gifts, the mysteries and the wonders,-all these are a rare and rich forecast, a recurrent annual prophecy of the end, which is heaven,-heaven for all the children of God, after they have passed through the world-weary training here on earth, and made the great exchange, and have received "a crown of beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, and the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness." Amen.
Lessons: Isaiah 61. Luke 4:14-32. A. C. 2523.
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