PREFACE
In the hearts of all mankind, of whatever race or station in life, there
are inexpressible longings for something they do not now possess. This
longing is implanted in the very constitution of man by a merciful God,
that man may not be satisfied with his present conditions or
attainments, whether bad, or good, or better. God desires that the human
shall seek the best, and find it to the eternal blessing of his soul.
Satan, by wily scheme and craft, has perverted these longings of the
human heart. He makes men believe that this desire may be satisfied by
pleasure, by wealth, by ease, by fame, by power; but those who have been
thus deceived by him (and they number myriads) find all these things
pall upon the sense, leaving the soul as barren and unsatisfied as
before.
It is God's design that this longing of the human heart should lead
to the One who alone is able to satisfy it. The desire is of Him
that it may lead to Him, the fullness and fulfillment of that
desire. That fullness is found in Jesus the Christ, the Son of the
Eternal God. "For it was the good pleasure of the Father that in
Him should all the fullness dwell;" "for in Him dwelleth all
the fullness of the Godhead bodily." And it is also true that
"in Him ye are made full" with respect to every desire
divinely implanted and normally followed.
Haggai calls Him "the Desire of all nations," and we may
well call Him "the Desire of all ages," even as He is
"the King of ages."
It is the purpose of this book to set forth Jesus Christ as the One
in whom every longing may be satisfied. There is many a "life of
Christ" written, excellent books, large funds of information,
elaborate essays on chronology and contemporaneous history, customs, and
events, with much of the teaching and many glimpses of the many-sided
life of Jesus of Nazareth. Yet it may be truly said, "the half has
never been told."
It is not, however, the purpose of this work to set forth a harmony
of the Gospels, or even to give in strictly chronological order the
important events and wonderful lessons of the life of Christ; its
purpose is to present the love of God as revealed in His Son, the divine
beauty of the life of Christ, of which all may partake, and not to
satisfy the desires of the merely curious nor the questionings of
critics. But even as by the attraction of His own goodness of character
Jesus drew His disciples unto Himself, and by His personal presence, by
His sympathetic touch and feeling in all their infirmities and needs,
and by His constant association, transformed their characters from the
earthly to the heavenly, from the selfish to the sacrificing, from
smallhearted ignorance and prejudice to largehearted knowledge and
profound love for souls of all nations and races, even so it is the
purpose of this book so to present the blessed Redeemer as to help the
reader to come to Him face to face, heart to heart, and find in Him,
even as did the disciples of old, Jesus the Mighty One, who saves
"to the uttermost," and transforms to His own divine image all
those who come unto God by Him. Yet how impossible it is to reveal His
life! It is like attempting to put upon canvas the living rainbow; into
characters of black and white the sweetest music.
In the following pages the author, a woman of large and deep and long
experience in the things of God, has set forth new beauties from the
life of Jesus. She has brought many new gems from the precious casket.
She opens before the reader undreamed-of riches from this infinite
treasure house. New and glorious light flashes forth from many a
familiar passage, the depth of which the reader supposed he had long
before fathomed. To state it in brief, Jesus Christ is revealed as the
fullness of the Godhead, the infinitely merciful Saviour of sinners, the
Sun of Righteousness, the merciful High Priest, the Healer of all human
maladies and diseases, the tender, compassionate Friend, the constant,
ever-present and helpful Companion, the Prince of the House of David,
the Shield of His people, the Prince of Peace, the Coming King, the
Everlasting Father, the culmination and fruition of the desires and
hopes of all the ages.
Under the blessing of God this book is given to the world with the
prayer that the Lord by His Spirit will make the words of this book
words of life to many souls whose longings and desires are yet
unsatisfied; that they "may know Him, and the power of His
resurrection, and the fellowship of His sufferings," and finally,
throughout a blessed eternity, at His right hand, share in "that
fullness of joy," and "pleasures forevermore," which will
be the ripened fruitage of all those who find in Him the all in all,
"the Chiefest among ten thousand," and "the One
altogether lovely."
Publishers.
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